Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice

REVIEW · VENICE

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice

  • 5.07 reviews
  • From $340.65
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Operated by Green Italy srl · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 5.0 (7)Price from$340.65Operated byGreen Italy srlBook viaViator

This is a Prosecco day trip that actually makes sense. You get the chaffeured ride out of Venice, then spend the day in Valdobbiadene, the hills where Italy’s best sparkling wine comes from. I like that the format is focused: two wineries and vineyards, tastings with real context, and a light Veneto lunch so you’re not just “drinking and hoping.”

I also like that you can taste without driving after. The tour handles transport in an air-conditioned vehicle, and the schedule gives you time to look at villages and countryside, not just sit in a bus. The one caution: at this price, you’ll want to be sure you’re into guided wine tasting and Prosecco variety, because this is not a fast sightseeing tour.

Key Points at a Glance

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Key Points at a Glance

  • Private, group-only tour for your party, with personalized attention
  • Two winery visits in the Valdobbiadene area with Prosecco tastings
  • Veneto lunch and snacks included, so the tastings feel paced
  • Chauffeured transportation from Piazzale Roma in Venice at 10:00 am
  • Countryside and village viewing around Valdobbiadene, including spots like Refrontolo and Santa Maria di Follina
  • Mobile ticket and the option for free cancellation up to 24 hours before start

Why Valdobbiadene Turns Prosecco Into a Real Day Out

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Why Valdobbiadene Turns Prosecco Into a Real Day Out
If you’ve ever tried to do Prosecco as a DIY day from Venice, you already know the problem: getting to the growing hills takes time, and then you’re stuck trying to line up tastings and rides. This tour solves that with a simple idea: get you north in comfort, keep you on a guided path, and let you drink with zero stress about traffic.

Valdobbiadene is outside Venice, in the Veneto countryside, and it’s known for Prosecco at a serious level. On this kind of day trip, you’re not just buying a bottle in the city. You’re learning how the wine is made, why this DOC/DOCG zone matters, and how the local hills shape the final bottle. That makes the tastings more than a souvenir hunt.

I also like the “two stops” plan. One winery can be great, but it can also blur together. Two different vineyards give you a clearer sense of style differences, the logic behind the production steps, and how families run their land and hospitality.

One more plus: you’re getting more Italy than you would on a short bar crawl in Venice. You’ll move through small towns and viewpoints around the Valdobbiadene area, including places like san Pietro di Feletto, Refrontolo, Abbazia di Santa Maria di Follina, and Castelbrando. Even with the tastings, the day keeps a travel rhythm.

You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Venice

The 7-Hour Plan From Piazzale Roma (and Why the Timing Works)

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - The 7-Hour Plan From Piazzale Roma (and Why the Timing Works)
The tour starts in Venice at Piazzale Roma at 10:00 am and runs for about 7 hours, returning you to the same meeting point. That matters. Mid-morning departures often feel like you’re getting the “bus day” out of the way early, and you’re still back before the late-evening chaos.

This schedule is built around three needs:

  1. Travel time north to Valdobbiadene
  2. Time to taste and learn at two different places
  3. A paced lunch so the day doesn’t feel like a sprint

Because the tour is private and uses a chauffeured vehicle, you don’t waste time negotiating with taxis or hunting parking. You also don’t have to worry about getting left behind if your Venice morning includes the usual last-minute detours.

You should plan on a full-day energy level. Expect some time on the road, then longer moments at wineries where you’ll be standing, tasting, and listening. It’s not just a quick handshake and a pour-and-go.

Two Wineries and Vineyards: Tastings With Actual Production Context

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Two Wineries and Vineyards: Tastings With Actual Production Context
The heart of this experience is visiting two wineries and vineyards in the Valdobbiadene region. The value isn’t only the number of tastings. It’s how the tour explains the process of making Prosecco, then gives you multiple samples so you can connect what you learn to what you taste.

In the tasting portion, you’ll sample several types of Prosecco. The goal is to help you understand differences in style and approach, not just collect glasses. In past trips, the guides have explained the DOC and DOCG area in a way that makes the labels feel less like bureaucracy and more like a map of quality and geography.

At the first stop, the tone tends to set the day: welcoming hosts, snacks, and tastings paired with explanations. One highlight from guest experiences was the feel of family-run wineries, where you’re not shuffled through a commercial room. You get to see how the people behind the wine talk about their land and their choices.

The second winery helps you compare. One review noted that the first visit felt like the stronger experience, especially in the setting and service pacing, while the second stop felt a bit less comfortable mainly because of where you could sit for tastings. That’s a useful reminder: the exact feel can depend on conditions and the winery layout, even when the wine is excellent.

Either way, you’ll come away with a clearer sense of what you like. Some people start the day with a general love of Prosecco and leave with a short list of which styles they want to buy back home. Others go in thinking they’ll learn the basics and end up paying attention to details like how the production story connects to the glass.

Veneto Countryside Stops: Towns and Abbey Views Between Tastings

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Veneto Countryside Stops: Towns and Abbey Views Between Tastings
The tour doesn’t confine you to tasting rooms. You’ll also spend time admiring the Veneto countryside and visiting places tied to the Valdobbiadene area, including Refrontolo, san Pietro di Feletto, Abbazia di Santa Maria di Follina, and Castelbrando.

This is more than scenic filler. When you’re learning about wine, the land matters. Seeing the towns and the valley areas helps you understand why producers talk about slope, climate, and the “feel” of the region. Even if you’re not a horticulture nerd, it makes the tasting lessons stick.

Keep expectations practical. This is still a wine day trip, so you won’t expect an hour-long sit-down in every village. Think of these stops as time to look, photograph, and take in the atmosphere between wineries.

Also, weather can change how much you can enjoy outdoor moments. One guest commented on the difference between having the option to sit outside for tastings versus not, due to bad weather. If you care about outdoor sipping, pack accordingly: a light layer and a small umbrella can make a big difference.

Lunch, Snacks, and That Second Aftertaste Problem

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Lunch, Snacks, and That Second Aftertaste Problem
You’ll get a light lunch of Veneto dishes plus snacks throughout the day. Alcoholic beverages are included, which is part of why this tour works as an all-in-one experience. You’re not doing a “pay again” lunch, then hoping the tastings come with food that can keep things comfortable.

One detail that stood out from real guest notes was the quality of the dessert, including tiramisu that made an impression. Even if desserts aren’t your priority, a solid lunch matters here because you’re tasting multiple Prosecco styles.

A few practical tips:

  • Eat the lunch like you’re fueling a long afternoon, not just catching a bite.
  • Pace yourself during tastings. It’s easy to speed-run when the wine is good.
  • If you’re sensitive to alcohol, ask the guide about how to pace the pours (you can usually slow things down in a private setting).

Snacks between tastings also help you stay present. You’ll be listening to explanations, and having food nearby makes that easier than you might expect.

Price and Value: Why $340.65 Can Still Be a Good Deal

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Price and Value: Why $340.65 Can Still Be a Good Deal
At $340.65 per person, this isn’t a budget day trip. The question is whether the value matches the day you want.

Here’s what you’re paying for, in plain terms:

  • A private tour (your group only)
  • Private transportation from Venice in an air-conditioned vehicle
  • Two winery visits with winetastings
  • Lunch plus snacks
  • Alcoholic beverages included
  • A guide to interpret what you’re tasting so you actually learn something

If you tried to DIY this, you’d likely spend money on transport, then still have to book tastings and coordinate timing. You’d also risk ending up with the wrong tasting rooms or awkward schedules. This tour bundles the hard parts: getting there, keeping you on schedule, and building a day around taste and context.

Also, this tour is often booked around 83 days in advance. That’s a quiet sign it’s popular and not always easy to snag at the last minute. If you want a specific date, plan ahead.

My balanced take: if you’re going mainly for countryside photos, this may feel pricey. If you’re going for guided tasting, two winery stops, and a no-driving-needed format, it can feel fair.

Guide Style Matters: Riccardo, Patrice, and the Pace of Learning

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Guide Style Matters: Riccardo, Patrice, and the Pace of Learning
The guides are a big part of why the day works. One recurring theme from guest experiences was how professional and knowledgeable the guide felt, with a good sense of humor that kept the group relaxed. Named examples include Riccardo and Patrice, who have led tours with a mix of wine education and warm hospitality.

In a wine tour, I care less about impressive vocabulary and more about whether the guide makes the wine understandable. When someone ties DOC/DOCG area details to the way Prosecco tastes, it changes how you taste for the rest of the day.

The private nature also helps. You’re not trying to hear around a big crowd. The pacing can adjust to your interests—more time on one tasting flight, or extra explanation if you’re curious.

Who This Prosecco Day Trip Fits Best

Prosecco Wine Tour. Full day from Venice - Who This Prosecco Day Trip Fits Best
This tour fits best if you:

  • Like Prosecco and want to learn what you’re buying
  • Prefer a guided plan over DIY logistics from Venice
  • Want a full-day outing without having to drive after tastings
  • Enjoy countryside travel plus structured stops

It’s also a good match for groups who want a smoother day: couples, friends, and small parties who don’t want to wrangle schedules. If you’re traveling with limited time in the region, this is a strong use of your day because it combines transport, wineries, lunch, and sightseeing in about 7 hours.

If you only want quick tastings and you don’t care about the production explanation, this could feel like more structure than you need. But if learning and tasting together sounds like your thing, you’ll likely enjoy the rhythm.

Quick Practical Notes Before You Go

You’ll pick up and drop off at Piazzale Roma, and the tour uses a mobile ticket. Service animals are allowed. The tour requires a minimum of 2 participants, which can matter if you’re booking as a solo traveler.

One extra detail worth knowing: on certain dates, visitors staying outside Venice may need to pay a €5 access fee, with exemptions on specific days. It’s not part of the core tour price, so check your travel dates and factor it in.

Also note what’s not included: bicycle use. So if you were imagining a bike-and-wine route, this isn’t that style.

Should You Book This Prosecco Wine Tour From Venice?

I’d book it if you want a guided Prosecco day that feels organized, comfortable, and educational. The combination of two winery visits, multiple tastings, Veneto lunch, and chauffeured transport turns a hard-to-reach region into a smooth, enjoyable day.

I’d think twice if Prosecco is just a casual interest and you’d rather spend the day in Venice. This tour is about Valdobbiadene, not about Venice sightseeing.

If you’re the type who likes to come home with a better sense of what you like and why, this is a strong choice. Just keep your expectations aligned: it’s a structured tasting day with countryside stops, not a free-form wandering weekend.

FAQ

How long is the Prosecco wine tour from Venice?

The tour is approximately 7 hours.

What time does the tour start?

The start time is 10:00 am.

Where do we meet in Venice?

The meeting point is Piazzale Roma, 30135 Venezia VE, Italy.

What does the tour include?

It includes lunch, winetasting, snacks, alcoholic beverages, and private transportation in an air-conditioned vehicle.

Do we visit more than one winery?

Yes. The tour includes visits to two wineries and vineyards in the Valdobbiadene wine region.

Is this a private tour?

Yes. It is private, meaning only your group participates.

Is the tour ticket mobile?

Yes. It includes a mobile ticket.

Are there any extra fees to plan for?

On certain dates, people staying outside Venice who are visiting for the day may be required to pay a €5 access fee. Check the applicable dates and exemptions.

What is the cancellation policy?

You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience starts.

Is bicycle use included?

No. Use of a bicycle is not included.

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