Pour Trail

United States · Wine Travel

Texas Wine Festivals & Events

97 listings · 56 festivals · 41 events · Peak April–May

Texas has 97 wine festival listings in our database — 60 large-scale festivals and 37 smaller events like wine walks and winery dinners — spread across cities from Houston and Dallas to smaller towns like Salado, McKinney, and Saint Jo. General admission prices run from free to $340, with an average around $50. The season is sharply concentrated: April alone accounts for 33 events, May adds another 19, and the remaining months combined contribute fewer than 10. If you're planning a Texas wine festival trip, the window is essentially a two-month sprint in spring.

The Texas wine industry itself is centered on the Texas Hill Country AVA west of Austin, along with the High Plains AVA near Lubbock, which supplies a significant share of the state's grape tonnage. Producers work with Tempranillo, Viognier, Mourvèdre, and Roussanne alongside Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, and the best examples hold their own in any regional conversation. That said, Texas wine is still building its national reputation, and festival lineups often mix estate-grown Texas bottles with wines from other states or international producers — worth knowing before you assume every pour is local.

Houston leads the city count with 12 listings, and the range there is wide. The Tastebuds "Ultimate Food, Beer, Spirits and Wine Festival" on May 27, 2026 carries the state's highest general admission at $340 — it's a multi-category event, not a pure wine festival, which explains the premium. On the more accessible end, the Mother's Day Houston Wine Festival on May 10 offers 40-plus wine varieties for $24 general admission, making it one of the better value propositions in the database. The Aperitivo Italiano Wine Tasting featuring Antinori on May 12 ($35) is a tighter, more focused tasting format for people who want depth over breadth.

Dallas has 8 listings, anchored by the Uncorked series — both the Spring Perfect Pairing on April 25 and Cold and Bold on May 2 price at $55 — and the Drink North Texas Wine Festival on May 30 at $28, which leans into regional producers specifically. McKinney, just north of Dallas, has 5 listings of its own and is worth considering as a base if you want a smaller-town feel without straying far from DFW Airport.

Austin's 5 listings include Austin Wine Week's Sip Texas event on April 26 ($60), which is explicitly focused on Texas-made wines and tends to draw producers from Hill Country and the High Plains in one place — a practical option if you want a concentrated introduction to the state's wine identity without driving between wineries. San Antonio adds the Wine Fest at Tower of the Americas on May 2 ($55), a ticketed event with an obvious landmark backdrop that works well for visitors already in the city.

For something different in scale and atmosphere, the Saint Jo Wine Walk on April 11 ($35) takes place in a small North Texas town of fewer than 1,000 people. Salado, a historic village on I-35 between Austin and Waco, has 4 listings and tends toward the intimate end — winery dinners and boutique tastings rather than large festival grounds.

Logistically, most Texas wine festivals don't require much advance planning beyond buying tickets, which for the $24–$65 range rarely sell out weeks in advance. The $340 Tastebuds event is the exception. Fly into Houston (IAH or HOU), Dallas (DFW or DAL), Austin (AUS), or San Antonio (SAT) depending on your itinerary — all four cities have direct flights from most major US hubs. April and early May weather in Texas can be genuinely pleasant, but late May starts pushing into heat, and outdoor festival comfort drops noticeably. If you're sensitive to that, target the first three weeks of April. Parking at urban venues like Houston's festival circuit or the Tower of the Americas in San Antonio can add friction; rideshare is the practical call for anything ticketed and multi-pour.

This season in Texas

View all 56 festivals →

Also happening: wine walks, dinners & tastings

View all 41 events →

Frequently asked questions

When is the best time of year to attend wine festivals in Texas?
April is by far the peak month, with 33 of Texas's 97 listed events falling in that single month. May adds 19 more. After that the calendar thins out dramatically — June through November combined accounts for fewer than 10 events. Plan for April if you want the widest selection; early May if you want slightly cooler crowds and still-reasonable weather.
Are Texas wine festivals actually focused on Texas wines, or do they pour wines from other states?
It varies significantly by event. Austin Wine Week's Sip Texas festival and the Drink North Texas Wine Festival are both explicitly built around Texas producers, making them the clearest choices if local wine is your priority. Many of the larger multi-category festivals in Houston and Dallas mix Texas bottles with national and international selections, so it's worth checking the event description before assuming a regional focus.
What's a realistic budget for a Texas wine festival weekend?
General admission across the database averages $50, with most ticketed events falling between $24 and $65. The outlier is the Tastebuds festival in Houston at $340, which is a multi-category food and beverage event rather than a pure wine festival. For a weekend hitting two or three events, budget $100–$150 in tickets plus standard Houston or Dallas hotel and rideshare costs.
Which city is the best base for attending multiple Texas wine festivals in one trip?
Houston has the most listings at 12 and is worth anchoring a trip around if you're visiting in May. Dallas with 8 listings is the better base for April, especially if you add a day trip to McKinney (5 listings) just to the north. Austin makes sense if your focus is specifically on Texas-made wines, given the Sip Texas event and its proximity to Hill Country wineries.
Are there any smaller, low-key wine events in Texas beyond the big city festivals?
Yes — the Saint Jo Wine Walk in North Texas ($35, April 11) takes place in a small town setting and is a distinct change of pace from the urban festival circuit. Salado, a historic village between Austin and Waco, has 4 listings that tend toward intimate dinners and boutique tastings. These smaller events often sell out quietly, so booking early matters more than it does for the larger city events.

Browse by city

Also worth a trip

Join The Pour

Get the best upcoming wine festivals, seasonal picks, and planning guides in your inbox each week.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.