Weekend Guide to Livermore Valley Wine Region

Plan the perfect weekend wine tasting trip to Livermore Valley Wine Region. Wino Notion covers the best itineraries, must-visit wineries, where to eat, and where to stay.

Planning Your Livermore Valley Wine Region Weekend

A weekend in Livermore Valley Wine Region wine country is one of the best ways to experience the region at a pace that lets you actually enjoy it. Too many visitors try to cram in six or seven wineries a day and end up exhausted, palate-fatigued, and unable to remember which wine they liked at which stop. The sweet spot is three to four wineries per day, with generous gaps between them for meals, scenery, and the kind of spontaneous discoveries that make wine country travel memorable.

Start each morning early, ideally arriving at your first winery by 10:30 or 11:00 when the tasting rooms are uncrowded and the staff have time to really talk you through what they are pouring. This is when you get the best service and the most thoughtful pours. Save your afternoons for a longer, seated tasting experience or a vineyard tour, and leave evenings for dinner at a local restaurant where you can try wines by the glass from producers you did not have time to visit.

The Livermore Wineries

All 48 wineries we track in Livermore, each with its own Wino Notion page, visitor details, and community ratings.

Planning a weekend here? These are the wineries to build it around.

3 Steves Winery
Livermore
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3 Wishes Winery
Livermore
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Bent Creek Winery
Livermore
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Big White House Winery
Livermore
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Bonomasso Cellars
Livermore
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Campos Family Vineyards
Livermore
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Cedar Mountain Winery
Livermore
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Concannon Vineyard
Livermore
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Crooked Vine Winery
Livermore
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Cuda Ridge Wines
Livermore
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D.H. Gustafson Family Vineyards
Livermore
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Dante Robere Vineyards
Livermore
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Darcie Kent Estate Winery
Livermore
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Del Valle Winery
Livermore
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Ehrenberg Cellars
Livermore
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Fenestra Winery
Livermore
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Garre Vineyard Winery
Livermore
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Hendricks Cellars
Livermore
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John Evan Cellars
Livermore
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Las Positas Vineyards
Livermore
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Leisure Street Winery
Livermore
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Livermore Valley Wine Studios
Livermore
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Longevity Wines
Livermore
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Mcgrail Vineyards Winery
Livermore
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Mitchell Katz Winery
Livermore
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Murrieta's Well
Livermore
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Murriettas Well Winery
Livermore
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Nottingham Cellars
Livermore
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Occasio Winery
Livermore
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Page Mill Winery
Livermore
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Palm Winery
Livermore
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Peregrine Ridge Cellars
Livermore
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Retzlaff Organic Vineyards
Livermore
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Retzlaff Vineyards
Livermore
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Rock Wall Wine Company
Livermore
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Rodrigue Molyneaux Winery
Livermore
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Rubino Estates Winery
Livermore
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Ruby Hill Winery
Livermore
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Steven Kent Winery
Livermore
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Stony Ridge Winery
Livermore
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Tesla Vintners
Livermore
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Tessera Wines
Livermore
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Torchiana Winery
Livermore
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Wente Family Vineyards
Livermore
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Wente Morning Fog
Livermore
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Wente Vineyards
Livermore
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Westover Vineyards
Livermore
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Wood Family Vineyards
Livermore
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Day One: Arrival and First Impressions

Arrive in Livermore Valley Wine Region by late morning if you can, check into your accommodation, and head straight to a welcoming, walk-in-friendly winery. Your first stop sets the tone for the weekend, so choose somewhere with a relaxed outdoor setting and a friendly pour. Do not overthink it. After your first tasting, visit one more winery nearby, then break for a proper lunch.

The afternoon is for one more tasting, ideally somewhere with a different style than your morning stops. If you started at a large estate, try a small family operation. If you opened with big reds, look for a winery that does excellent whites or roses. Variety keeps your palate fresh and gives you a broader picture of what Livermore Valley Wine Region can do. End the day with dinner and an early night so you are ready for a full day two.

Day Two: Going Deeper

With a full day ahead, this is your chance to visit the wineries you have been most looking forward to. If you enjoy Cabernet Sauvignon, make sure at least one stop focuses on that varietal, because Livermore Valley Wine Region is known for producing some of the best examples you will find anywhere. But do not make every stop about the same grape. Mix in a winery known for something unexpected and let the region surprise you.

Consider booking one special experience for day two: a cave tasting, a vineyard hike, a blending session, or a food and wine pairing. These deeper experiences tend to be the most memorable part of any wine country trip, and they give you stories to tell when you get home. End the afternoon with a glass at a winery with great views, and spend your last evening reflecting on your favorites over dinner.

Where to Eat and Stay

Dining in Livermore Valley Wine Region wine country goes far beyond tasting room snacks. The region has developed a food culture that rivals its wine, with farm-to-table restaurants, gourmet food trucks, and casual bistros that take local ingredients seriously. Ask your tasting room hosts for their personal restaurant recommendations, because the best spots are often the ones locals love rather than the ones with the biggest reputation.

For lodging, you have options at every price point. Boutique hotels and luxury resorts offer the full wine country experience, but vacation rentals and well-located inns can be just as comfortable at a fraction of the cost, especially midweek. Book early for weekends, and consider staying somewhere central so you can reach wineries in multiple directions without long drives.

Insider Tips for Your Weekend

Book your must-visit wineries at least a week ahead. Designate a driver or hire a car service so everyone can taste freely. Wear comfortable shoes since vineyard paths, gravel driveways, and outdoor patios are the norm. Bring layers because mornings and evenings can be surprisingly cool even in summer. Pack a cooler in the car for any bottles you buy. And most importantly, do not try to see everything. The best Livermore Valley Wine Region weekends are the ones where you slow down, talk to the people making the wine, and let the region unfold at its own pace.

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