Regions β€Ί Vermont

Vermont Wine Country

Vermont's 38 estate wineries and cideries span the Champlain Valley's lake-moderated wine terroir, the Green Mountain foothills fruit wine corridor, and the Northeast Kingdom's cold-climate pioneers β€” producing estate Marquette, La Crescent, and fruit wines in the country's most authentic farm-to-table wine state.

38+Producers
Champlain ValleyTop Wine Region
MarquetteSignature Grape
Farm WineryCulture

Premier Regions

Vermont's most celebrated wine regions β€” the essential destinations for any wine country visit.

πŸ‡
πŸ€“ Did You Know?
Shelburne Vineyard in Shelburne is Vermont's most celebrated vinifera producer, growing Marquette, La Crescent, Frontenac Gris, and Aromella in the Lake Champlain basin β€” where the lake's 400-square-mile thermal mass moderates temperatures enough for genuine grape viticulture.

About Vermont Wine Country

Vermont wine country is New England at its most authentically itself. Thirty-eight estate wineries and cideries in a state of 650,000 people operate within a farm-to-table culture that takes local food and drink more seriously than almost anywhere else in America. Shelburne Vineyard and Lincoln Peak Vineyard have established that the Champlain Valley can make world-class cold-climate wines; the question for Vermont winemakers is no longer whether to make wine, but how to make it better.

The Champlain Valley is where Vermont wine reaches its highest expression. Lake Champlain's enormous thermal mass β€” 400 square miles of water β€” moderates temperatures enough to extend the growing season by 4–6 weeks compared to inland Vermont sites. Shelburne Vineyard's Marquette and La Crescent, Lincoln Peak's Marquette, Snow Farm's Frontenac Gris from its Lake Champlain island vineyard β€” these are wines of genuine quality, not just regional curiosity.

Vermont's apple orchard heritage feeds naturally into its craft cider industry, which has now grown larger than wine by volume. Many estate wineries offer both: a glass of Marquette alongside a flight of heritage ciders from Roxbury, Cox's Orange Pippin, and Northern Spy apples. The combination is quintessentially Vermont, and quintessentially delicious.

At a Glance
Total Producers38+
Top RegionChamplain Valley
Signature GrapeMarquette
Other VarietalsLa Crescent, Frontenac Gris, Aromella
ClimateHumid continental, lake-moderated
Avg Tasting Fee$10–$22
Peak SeasonJune–October (Foliage: Sept–Oct)
Nearest AirportBTV (Burlington)

More Vermont Wine Regions

Every corner of Vermont wine country β€” from the most visited to the hidden gems.

Lake Champlain Island Wine Trail wine country
🌊 Lake Islands
Lake Champlain Island Wine Trail
5 wineries Β· Non-AVA Β· $10–$20
Snow Farm Vineyard on South Hero Island and Lake Champlain Island estates enjoying the most lake-moderated growing conditions in Vermont.
Marquette, La Crescent, Frontenac Gris
Notable: Snow Farm Vineyard, Lake Champlain Island producers
Explore Lake Champlain Island Wine Trail β†’
Stowe & Northern Green Mountains wine country
🎿 Ski Country
Stowe & Northern Green Mountains
6 wineries Β· Non-AVA Β· $8–$18
Ski resort wine country: Boyden Valley Winery and Green Mountain producers making estate wines and premium cider near Stowe and Burlington.
Apple, fruit wines, hybrid reds
Notable: Boyden Valley Winery, Stowe area producers
Explore Stowe & Northern Green Mountains β†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Vermont have wineries?
Yes β€” 38 estate wineries and cideries, with Shelburne Vineyard and Lincoln Peak Vineyard being the benchmark cold-climate producers. The Champlain Valley wine trail is New England's most serious.
What wine is Vermont known for?
Marquette, La Crescent, and Frontenac Gris β€” cold-hardy hybrids from the University of Minnesota that thrive in the Champlain Valley's lake-moderated climate. Shelburne Vineyard is the flagship.
Is Vermont wine country a good fall foliage destination?
Absolutely β€” Vermont's fall foliage (late September to mid-October) combined with the Champlain Valley wine trail makes for one of New England's most beautiful weekend trips.
Are Vermont cideries worth visiting?
Yes β€” Vermont hard cider is world-class. Many wineries also produce premium cider from heritage apple varieties. Boyden Valley near Stowe and Snow Farm on Lake Champlain Island are must-visits.
Browse All Vermont Wineries β†’

Vermont Wineries

Browse all Vermont wineries on Wino Notion. Click any card to visit the full page.

Explore Vermont on the Map