New Hampshire's 30 estate wineries dot the Lakes Region, Monadnock foothills, Seacoast, and White Mountain foothills β producing estate fruit wines, cold-hardy hybrids, and New England cider in a compact state where every wine country drive is a covered bridge postcard.
New Hampshire's most celebrated wine regions β the essential destinations for any wine country visit.
New Hampshire wine country is New England at its most characteristically New England: stone walls, covered bridges, White Mountain views, and tasting rooms housed in converted barns. Thirty estate producers scattered from the Seacoast near Portsmouth to the White Mountain foothills make fruit wines, cold-hardy hybrid wines, and hard cider that visitors discover while leaf-peeping, skiing, or lake-vacationing.
Averill House Vineyard in Brookline is the standard-bearer for New Hampshire vinifera: a hilltop estate with south-facing vineyards, Chardonnay that holds its own against New York peers, and a tasting room that embodies what thoughtful New England winemaking looks like. It proves the state can make wines of genuine quality, not just novelty.
The Lakes Region around Lake Winnipesaukee is New Hampshire's most popular wine tourism corridor, where summer vacation traffic sustains a cluster of tasting rooms in Meredith, Center Harbor, and the surrounding lake towns. The combination of beautiful lake scenery, abundant summer visitors, and genuine craft production has created one of New England's most commercially successful small wine trails.
Every corner of New Hampshire wine country β from the most visited to the hidden gems.
Browse all New Hampshire wineries on Wino Notion. Click any card to visit the full page.