Regions › Arizona

Arizona Wine Country

90+ wineries across five distinct regions — from the high-desert grasslands of Sonoita's acclaimed AVA to the red-rock country of Verde Valley and the emerging powerhouse of Willcox. Tempranillo, Grenache, and Syrah find their American high-desert home here.

90+Wineries
3AVAs
5Regions
4,000–5,000 ftElevation
TempranilloSignature

Premier Regions

Arizona's most celebrated wine regions — the essential destinations for any wine country visit.

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🤓 Did You Know?
Callaghan Vineyards in Sonoita has been cited as one of the top Tempranillo producers in the entire United States.

About Arizona Wine Country

Arizona wine country defies every assumption visitors bring to it. At 4,000 to 5,200 feet elevation, the state's vineyards sit above the desert heat that defines Arizona in the popular imagination — in growing conditions more comparable to Spain's Rioja or the Rhône Valley than to the Sonoran lowlands. The combination of intense solar radiation, monsoon summer rains, wide diurnal temperature swings, and volcanic/clay soils has created a viticultural environment that genuinely suits Mediterranean and Spanish grape varieties.

The Sonoita / Elgin AVA is Arizona's original and most celebrated wine region — Tempranillo, Grenache, and Malvasia Bianca from grassland vineyards an hour south of Tucson. The Verde Valley near Sedona offers the most scenic tasting experience, with a walkable Old Town corridor in Cottonwood. Willcox is the state's fastest-growing region and now produces more grapes than any other area in Arizona.

Scottsdale and Phoenix provide urban tasting rooms for visitors who want Arizona wine without the cross-state drive, while Central and Northern Arizona around Prescott offer a pine-forest wine experience unlike anything in the desert regions.

At a Glance
Total Wineries90+
AVAsSonoita, Willcox, Verde Valley (pending)
Signature GrapeTempranillo
Elevation Range3,300–5,200 ft
ClimateHigh desert, monsoon rains
Avg Tasting Fee$15–$30
Peak SeasonOctober–May
Nearest AirportsPhoenix (PHX), Tucson (TUS)

More Arizona Wine Regions

Scottsdale's urban wine culture and Northern Arizona's mountain estates — the rest of Arizona's growing wine scene.

Phoenix & Scottsdale wine country
🏙 Urban Scene
Phoenix & Scottsdale
17 wineries · Urban · $15–$25
Arizona's urban wine front door — Scottsdale Old Town tasting rooms serving metro Phoenix's 5+ million residents.
Arizona AVA sourced; diverse varietals
Notable: Aridus, Arizona Stronghold, LDV Winery
Explore Phoenix & Scottsdale →
Central & Northern AZ wine country
🌲 Mountain
Central & Northern AZ
6 wineries · Non-AVA · $12–$25
Prescott and Chino Valley — Arizona's mountain wine frontier in ponderosa pine country at 5,000–7,000 feet.
Cabernet Franc, Riesling, Syrah
Notable: Granite Creek Vineyards
Explore Central & Northern AZ →

Frequently Asked Questions

How many wineries does Arizona have?
90+ wineries across 5 regions. The Verde Valley near Sedona has the most tasting rooms, while Sonoita/Elgin has the most critically acclaimed estates.
What wines is Arizona known for?
Tempranillo is the signature grape — it thrives in high-desert conditions. Malvasia Bianca, Grenache, Petite Sirah, and Syrah are also standouts.
Best time to visit Arizona wine country?
October through May — avoiding the intense summer heat. Spring and fall are ideal for Sonoita and Willcox; Verde Valley is pleasant year-round.
Which Arizona wine region should I visit first?
Verde Valley near Cottonwood — the most walkable and accessible, with 12+ tasting rooms in Old Town plus Sedona's red rock scenery 20 minutes north.