
The cellar was carved straight into the rock beneath a tower that has been standing since 1280. Barrels lined both walls. The winemaker pulled the bung out of one, held a glass underneath, and let a thin stream of pale gold Vernaccia run into it. “This grape,” he said, tapping the barrel, “doesn’t grow anywhere else.” He wasn’t exaggerating. Vernaccia di San Gimignano is the only white DOCG in all of Tuscany, and it has been produced on these same slopes since the 1200s. Dante mentioned it. Popes demanded it.

Most visitors blow through San Gimignano on a bus tour. They walk the main street, buy a bag of saffron, eat the famous gelato at Piazza della Cisterna, and leave. That’s fine. But this town sits on top of one of Italy’s most interesting wine stories, and you miss all of it unless you slow down and actually visit a vineyard.

I’ve looked through the wine tours that include San Gimignano — from full-day trips out of Florence to small tastings you can do while you’re already in town. Here are the ones worth your time and money, what they actually include, and which one makes sense depending on how you’re planning your day.

In a Hurry? My Top Picks
- Best full-day from Florence: Tuscany Wine Tour & San Gimignano — $230 per person. Two premium wineries plus free time in town. Worth every cent if you’re combining wine with sightseeing. Book this tour
- Best full-day with lunch: Chianti Wineries Tour with Tuscan Lunch and San Gimignano — $230 per person. Eight hours of Chianti estates and San Gimignano with a proper sit-down lunch included. Book this tour
- Best if you’re already in town: San Gimignano: Wine and Oil Tasting with Tuscan Appetizers — $46 per person. One hour, four Vernaccia tastings, olive oil, and local appetizers. Perfect afternoon stop. Book this tour
- In a Hurry? My Top Picks
- What San Gimignano Wine Tours Actually Include
- Best San Gimignano Wine Tours
- 1. Tuscany Wine Tour & San Gimignano from Florence — 0
- 2. Chianti Wineries Tour with Tuscan Lunch and San Gimignano — 0
- 3. San Gimignano: Wine and Oil Tasting with Tuscan Appetizers —
- 4. San Gimignano: Vineyard and Cellar Tour with Wine Tasting —
- When to Visit San Gimignano for Wine
- Tips for Booking a San Gimignano Wine Tour
- More Tuscany Guides
What San Gimignano Wine Tours Actually Include

Two very different types of tours exist here, and mixing them up leads to disappointment.
Full-day tours from Florence treat San Gimignano as one stop on a bigger Tuscan itinerary. You’ll typically hit one or two Chianti wineries on the way, get 60 to 90 minutes of free time in San Gimignano itself, and maybe squeeze in a Vernaccia tasting if the tour includes it. The wine focus is on Chianti Classico and Sangiovese — the reds. San Gimignano is there for the scenery and the medieval streets, not necessarily for deep wine exploration.
Local tastings in San Gimignano are the opposite. These are usually one to two hours, focused entirely on Vernaccia and local olive oil, held at estates within walking distance of the town walls or sometimes inside the town itself. You sit down, a producer walks you through four or five wines, and you eat local cheese and crostini between pours. No bus. No itinerary. Just wine.
The price difference tells the story. Full-day tours run $80 to $250 depending on group size, lunch inclusion, and how many wineries you visit. Local tastings cost $46 to $65 for an hour or two. If you’re already spending a day in San Gimignano — say, after a Tuscany day trip from Florence — the local tasting is the move.

Here’s what to expect at a typical tasting:
- Vernaccia di San Gimignano DOCG: The star. A dry, minerally white with citrus and almond notes. The young versions are crisp and easy. The riserva wines, aged in oak, develop a richness that surprises people who think Italian whites are all Pinot Grigio.
- Olive oil: Every estate produces their own. The Tuscan stuff is peppery and green, nothing like the mild oils you get at the supermarket. They pour it on bread and let you taste the difference between early-harvest and late-harvest oils.
- Local food pairings: Pecorino cheese (the aged stuff, not the mild grocery store version), salami, bruschetta with fresh tomatoes, and sometimes saffron-laced dishes — San Gimignano has been growing saffron since the Middle Ages.
- Cellar or vineyard tour: Some include a walk through the vineyard rows or down into the aging cellar. The underground cellars are the highlight — centuries-old stone passages that stay at a perfect 14 degrees year-round.
Best San Gimignano Wine Tours

1. Tuscany Wine Tour & San Gimignano from Florence — $230

Duration: 7 hours | Group size: Small group | From: Florence
This is my top pick for anyone who wants the full package: serious wine and a real visit to San Gimignano, not just a photo stop. The tour hits two quality Chianti estates with guided tastings and cellar tours before heading to San Gimignano for free time in the afternoon.
The wineries on this route aren’t the mass-tourism operations. You’re visiting smaller estates where the person explaining the wine has actual dirt under their fingernails from working the vineyard. The Chianti Classico tastings include olive oil, and the explanations go deep enough to be interesting without turning into a lecture.
In San Gimignano, you get about 90 minutes of free time. Enough to walk the main streets, climb the Torre Grossa for the panoramic view, grab a Vernaccia by the glass at a bar, and still make it back to the meeting point without sprinting. Some people use the free time for a quick local tasting on top of the tour — it’s doable if you skip the tower.
At $230, it’s not cheap. But you’re getting a full day with premium winery access, small group size, and a guide who knows the region. If you’re already planning to do a Tuscany wine tour from Florence, this version adds San Gimignano without cutting corners on the wine.

2. Chianti Wineries Tour with Tuscan Lunch and San Gimignano — $230

Duration: 8 hours | Group size: Small group | From: Florence
Same price as the first option, but a different structure. This one spends more time at the wineries and includes a proper sit-down Tuscan lunch with wine pairings at one of the estates. If eating well is as important to you as drinking well — and in Tuscany, it should be — this is the stronger choice.
The itinerary focuses on Chianti first. You visit estates where they produce Chianti Classico and the lunch is a multi-course affair: antipasti, a pasta course, usually a meat dish, and dessert, all paired with the estate’s own wines. The kind of meal that makes you want to loosen your belt and take a nap in the vineyard.
San Gimignano comes after lunch, which means you arrive in a very good mood. The free time here is similar to the first tour — enough to walk around, take photos of the towers, and maybe try a scoop of the award-winning gelato at Gelateria Dondoli in the main piazza.
The difference between this and the first option comes down to food. If you want more wine focus and a tighter schedule, go with the 7-hour tour. If you want the extended lunch experience with the extra hour to digest it, this one delivers.
3. San Gimignano: Wine and Oil Tasting with Tuscan Appetizers — $46

Duration: 1 hour | Group size: Small group | Location: San Gimignano (local)
This is the one I recommend if you’re already in San Gimignano and want to understand what makes the local wine special. No bus, no itinerary — just show up, sit down, and spend an hour tasting Vernaccia with someone who can explain why this particular hillside produces a white wine unlike anything else in Tuscany.
You taste four wines: typically a young Vernaccia, a riserva, and a couple of reds from the same estate. The olive oil tasting runs alongside it, and the appetizers are local — pecorino, salami, bruschetta, and sometimes dishes made with San Gimignano’s famous saffron. For $46, you’re getting genuine producer-level access without the markup of a Florence-based tour.
The downside is obvious: it’s local only. You need to get yourself to San Gimignano first, which means either driving, taking the bus from Poggibonsi (about 25 minutes), or arriving on a Tuscany day trip that gives you enough free time to slip away for an hour. But if you can make it work, this is the most authentic wine experience on this list.

4. San Gimignano: Vineyard and Cellar Tour with Wine Tasting — $53

Duration: 1.5 hours | Group size: Small group | Location: San Gimignano (local)
If you want more depth than the quick tasting above, this adds a proper vineyard walk and cellar visit to the experience. You spend 90 minutes at an estate just outside town, starting in the vineyard rows where they explain the Vernaccia grape, the soil composition, and why this particular hillside matters. Then you go underground into the aging cellar before sitting down for the tasting itself.
The cellar tour is the highlight. These are not modern stainless-steel facilities — you’re walking through stone passages that have been used for wine storage since the medieval period. The temperature drops as you descend, the air smells like damp stone and oak, and the barrels are stacked in alcoves that were hand-carved centuries ago. It gives the tasting afterwards a sense of place that the quick, in-town options cannot match.
For $53 and an extra 30 minutes beyond the basic tasting, you get a dramatically better understanding of what makes Vernaccia di San Gimignano different from every other white wine in Italy. Worth the small premium, especially if wine is more than just a drink to you.
When to Visit San Gimignano for Wine

April through June is the sweet spot. The vineyards are green and growing, temperatures sit in the low 20s Celsius, and the tour buses have not reached peak intensity yet. May is particularly good — wildflowers everywhere, the light is soft, and the town has breathing room between the morning and afternoon bus arrivals.
September and October bring the harvest. Vernaccia grapes are typically picked in the first weeks of September, so if you time it right, you’ll see (and maybe even participate in) the actual grape harvest at some estates. The riserva wines from the previous year are usually released around this time too. October has the added bonus of fall colors in the vineyards — golden and copper leaves against the stone towers.
July and August are honestly tough. Temperatures push past 35 degrees, the town is packed with day-trippers, and the vineyards look their worst — everything goes dry and brown between the vine rows. The wine itself is fine year-round, obviously, but standing in a crowded medieval town in 38-degree heat with a glass of wine is less romantic than it sounds.
Winter (November through March) is quiet. Most of the local tasting rooms stay open, but some of the vineyard tours shut down when the vines are dormant. The upside: you’ll practically have the town to yourself. If you’re visiting Tuscany in winter and don’t mind cooler weather, it’s a surprisingly peaceful time to taste wine without any crowds.

Tips for Booking a San Gimignano Wine Tour

Book the local tastings the day before, not the day of. The small estates run limited sessions and they fill up, especially in peak season. The full-day tours from Florence should be booked at least a few days ahead — a week in summer.
If you’re choosing between the Florence-based tours and the local tastings, do both. They are completely different experiences. Take the full-day tour for the Chianti wineries and the scenic drive, then carve out an hour on a separate day (or during your free time in town) for a dedicated Vernaccia tasting. The combination gives you the best of both worlds.
Eat before the full-day tours that don’t include lunch. Seven hours in the Tuscan sun with only bread and olive oil between wine tastings is a recipe for a headache by 3 PM. The tours that include lunch are worth the extra cost for this reason alone.
Ask about Vernaccia Riserva specifically. Many tastings default to the young, easy-drinking Vernaccia. The riserva wines, aged 12 to 18 months in oak, are a completely different animal — richer, more complex, with notes of honey and toasted almonds. Some estates charge a small supplement for the riserva tasting. Pay it.
Buy wine at the estate, not in town. The wine shops on San Gimignano’s main street charge a markup because they can. At the wineries, you’re buying direct from the producer at cellar prices. A bottle of Vernaccia Riserva that costs 18 euros at the estate might run you 25 or 30 in town.

Getting to San Gimignano without a tour: There’s no train station. From Florence, take the train to Poggibonsi (about an hour, around 8 euros) and then the 130 bus to San Gimignano (25 minutes, about 2.50 euros). From Siena, buses run direct. If you’re driving, there’s a large parking lot outside the Porta San Giovanni gate — arrive before 10 AM in summer or you’ll be circling. Once you’re in town, the Leaning Tower of Pisa is about 90 minutes west by car, making it an easy combination if you’re road-tripping through Tuscany.


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More Tuscany Guides
San Gimignano is a common stop on broader Tuscany tours. My Tuscany day trip guide compares eight tours from Florence, several of which include San Gimignano alongside Siena and the Chianti hills. For a wine-focused day that covers more ground, the Tuscany wine tour guide has five options including an off-road Chianti safari. Back in Florence, the Uffizi Gallery and Accademia Gallery are the two museums to book tickets for in advance.
