Rome Wine Tours

5 Best Wine Tastings in Rome (2026)

Wine tasting Rome group enjoying a toast with glasses of Italian wine in a cozy restaurant setting
5 Best Wine Tastings in Rome (2026)

Wine tasting Rome is one of those experiences that sounds straightforward until you actually do it, and then you realize how much variation exists between a rushed tourist pour and a genuinely well-curated session.

I’ve done this route twice, once in November when the enotecas were quiet and the guides had real time to talk, and once in spring when bookings were tight and quality was uneven.

Five tastings. Two neighborhoods. One clear spread in experience quality.

This guide cuts through the noise. What follows is a breakdown of the best options available right now, organized by how they actually deliver.

Responsive Editor’s Pick
Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato

πŸ† Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato

A 1.5–3.5-hour wine and food experience in Trastevere covering 2 Italian wines, 10 local product tastings, and gelato β€” rated 4.9β˜… across 199 verified reviews.

⏱ 1.5–3.5 Hours | πŸ“ Trastevere, Rome | πŸ’¬ 4.9 Stars | βœ… Free Cancellation

Rome is a city best explored through all your senses, and that starts with what’s in your glass.

If you want to take your Roman adventure further, discovering the city on a 5 Best Rome Vespa Food Tours (2026) is an unforgettable way to soak up the streets.

Or if food is just as important as wine on your trip, our guide to the 7 Best Rome Food Tours (2026 Reviews) has everything you need.

Best Wine Tastings in Rome Compared

These wine tastings were compared specifically for Rome, balancing wine selection, location, guide quality, and overall experience.

Compare Top Tours: 1. Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato, 2. Rome: Wine Tasting and Food Pairing with gelato in Trastevere, and 3. Rome: Fine Wine Tasting & Food Pairing with Dinner Option
1. Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato 2. Rome: Wine Tasting and Food Pairing with gelato in Trastevere 3. Rome: Fine Wine Tasting & Food Pairing with Dinner Option
Tour image for Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato
Tour image for Rome: Wine Tasting and Food Pairing with gelato in Trastevere
Tour image for Rome: Fine Wine Tasting & Food Pairing with Dinner Option
Duration: 1.5–3.5 hours Duration: 2 hours (approx.) Duration: 2–4 hours
Pickup: Trapizzino or Essenza Wine Bar, Trastevere Pickup: Essenza Wine Bar, Via della Scala 27a, Trastevere Pickup: Meeting point varies by option booked
Cancellation: Free up to 24 hours in advance Cancellation: Free up to 24 hours in advance Cancellation: Free up to 24 hours in advance
Includes: 2 wine tastings, 10 Italian product tastings, gelato, walking tour, guide Includes: 5 wines (Barolo, Prosecco, Frascati, Cesanese, Cacchione), food pairings, gelato, hotel pickup Includes: 5 classic Italian fine wines, food pairings, expert tips, top-ups offered
Buffalo mozzarella, truffle honey, aged balsamic, pesto Genovese, Asiago, gelato Pecorino Romano, 30-year balsamic, truffles, fried cod, Filettuccio Barolo, gelato 30-year balsamic over Parmigiano, Prosciutto di Parma, truffle cream, bruschette, Barolo
πŸ‘‰ Reserve Now πŸ‘‰ Reserve Now πŸ‘‰ Reserve Now

Best Rome Wine Tasting Picks

Short on time? These are the standout options, curated for wine quality, atmosphere, and overall value.

  1. Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato
  2. Rome: Wine Tasting and Food Pairing with gelato in Trastevere
  3. Rome: Fine Wine Tasting & Food Pairing with Dinner Option
  4. Wine Tasting & Food Pairing in Underground Cellar in Rome
  5. Private Wine Tasting in Rome with Delectable Meats and Cheeses
Traveler’s Tip Β· Travel Insurance

Booking tours for your Rome trip? Wine tasting in Rome fills up fast, and illness or delays can cost you a non-refundable spot. Travel protection keeps your plans intact.

Wine Tasting Rome, Rome Wine Tasting: 5 Reviews

Each experience below gets a full breakdown, wines included, setting, guide quality, and whether it’s worth your time.

Tour 1: Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato

πŸ”΄ Meeting Point: Trapizzino or Essenza Wine Bar, Trastevere (2 starting location options)
πŸ”΄ Departure Time: See booking details
πŸ”΄ Duration: 1.5–3.5 hours
πŸ”΄ Guide: Live, English
πŸ”΄ Free Cancellation: Yes, up to 24 hours in advance
πŸ”΄ Includes: Walking tour, guide, 2 Italian wine tastings, 10 Italian product tastings (cheeses, meats, bruschettas), Italian gelato tasting, hotel pickup and drop-off

This is the one to book if you want range without commitment. The Trastevere wine tasting covers genuine ground: two Italian wines, ten local products, and gelato at the end, all within a flexible 1.5 to 3.5 hour window depending on the option you choose.

It suits first-time visitors well. You’re not expected to know anything walking in, and the format rewards curiosity more than expertise.

The experience starts in Trastevere, one of Rome’s most honest neighborhoods. That matters. You’re not in a tourist trap basement or a staged tasting room. The Essenza Wine Bar is an actual working wine bar, and that context changes how the whole session feels.

Guides named across verified reviews include Fran, Sylvia, Marta, Freya, and Fiareretta. That rotation is worth noting. A multi-guide roster can mean inconsistency, but the 4.9 rating across 199 reviews suggests the operator maintains a real standard regardless of who’s running your session. Fran is generous with pours. Marta gets repeat mentions for energy. The pattern holds.

The food spread is specific enough to be worth listing: buffalo mozzarella, sun-dried tomatoes, truffle-infused honey, pesto Genovese, Asiago, and 30-year aged balsamic vinegar. That last one tends to surprise people. It should.

Couples and solo travelers do particularly well here. The format is relaxed enough that strangers end up talking, and the gelato stop at the end gives the whole thing a natural closing beat rather than an abrupt finish.

The walk between stops is around ten minutes on foot, which is light but worth knowing if mobility is a concern.


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Tour 2: Rome: Wine Tasting and Food Pairing with gelato in Trastevere

πŸ”΄ Meeting Point: Essenza Wine Bar Trastevere, Via della Scala, 27a, 00153 Roma RM, Italy
πŸ”΄ Departure Time: See booking details
πŸ”΄ Duration: 2 hours (approx.)
πŸ”΄ Guide: Live, English
πŸ”΄ Free Cancellation: Yes, up to 24 hours in advance
πŸ”΄ Includes: Barolo, Frascati superiore, Cesanese, Cacchione and Prosecco Belta; food pairings including Pecorino Romano, Filettuccio Barolo, 30-year aged balsamic vinegar, truffles, fried cod fish; hotel pickup; gelato

Five wines in two hours is a different proposition than Tour 1’s broader walk-and-taste format. This one stays seated, stays focused, and goes deeper on the glass.

The same Essenza Wine Bar on Via della Scala anchors both experiences, but the wine list here is more deliberate. Barolo, Frascati superiore, Cesanese, Cacchione, and Prosecco Belta is a lineup that covers real ground across Lazio and beyond. The food pairings match that ambition: fried cod, truffles, 30-year balsamic, Pecorino Romano. These are not afterthoughts.

Small group maximum of 12 keeps it workable. Several reviewers noted arriving to find only one or two other guests, which shifted the feel toward something close to private. That’s not a flaw.

Guides named include Miguel, Patrick, and others across the verified review pool. Patrick draws specific praise for explaining not just what each wine is but why it pairs with the food beside it. That instructional layer is what separates a good tasting from a forgettable one. It shows up consistently here.

The Rome wine tasting ends back at the meeting point, so there’s no navigating back from a second location. Clean and practical.

One honest note: the activity listing flags this as not recommended for pregnant travelers, and the format is entirely seated, which suits anyone who’d rather skip the walking component of Tour 1.

Food lovers and wine-curious travelers who want a structured two-hour education rather than a neighborhood wander will get more from this one.

Travelers learning phrases
3 Italian phrases wine bar staff love to hear
“Che abbinamento consigli?” (What pairing do you recommend?)
“Questo vino Γ¨ della regione?” (Is this wine from the region?)
“Posso avere ancora un po’?” (Can I have a little more?)
Say these β†’ get better pours, better stories, and a warmer welcome.

Tour 3: Rome: Fine Wine Tasting & Food Pairing with Dinner Option

πŸ”΄ Meeting Point: Meeting point varies depending on option booked
πŸ”΄ Departure Time: See booking details
πŸ”΄ Duration: 2–4 hours
πŸ”΄ Guide: Live, English
πŸ”΄ Free Cancellation: Yes, up to 24 hours in advance
πŸ”΄ Includes: 5 classic Italian fine wines including Barolo and Frascati superiore, perfect food pairings, expert tips, top-ups offered

The dinner option changes the calculus here. Most wine tastings in Rome wrap up and send you back out onto the street. This one offers a path straight into a three-course meal if you want it, which makes it the only experience in this article that can anchor an entire evening rather than just fill a slot in one.

The base tasting runs two hours. Add the dinner option and you’re looking at up to four. That flexibility is genuinely useful, particularly for travelers who haven’t locked down evening plans or who want one booking to carry the night.

The food list is precise and high-spec: 30-year balsamic vinegar drizzled over Parmigiano Reggiano DOP aged 36 months, Prosciutto di Parma aged 24 months, bruschette with extra virgin olive oil DOP, cream of Parmigiano with truffle. These are labeled products with provenance, not generic charcuterie boards. That distinction matters if you’re paying attention to what you’re eating.

Guides named across verified reviews include Sylvie, Leila, Vincenzo, and Miguel. Justine’s review of Sylvie is direct: “informative and personable,” with the experience exceeding expectations. Leila draws similar notes for warmth and knowledge. The guide quality appears consistent with Tours 1 and 2, which makes sense given the shared operator.

The Fine Wine Tasting with dinner option also notes that top-ups are offered during the session, which Tour 2’s listing does not explicitly state. Small detail. Not irrelevant.

Only book this if you’re prepared to commit the time. The two-to-four hour window is real, and the dinner extension requires appetite and pace. If you’re already booked elsewhere for dinner, Tour 1 or Tour 2 fits cleaner.

Tour 4: Wine Tasting & Food Pairing in Underground Cellar in Rome

πŸ”΄ Meeting Point: Taste’Accio, Testaccio district (look for building number 91, next to tattoo shop sign, large cactus vase at entrance)
πŸ”΄ Departure Time: See booking details
πŸ”΄ Duration: 1 hour
πŸ”΄ Guide: Live, Italian and English
πŸ”΄ Free Cancellation: Yes, up to 24 hours in advance
πŸ”΄ Includes: 4 regional wines from Lazio, cured meat and cheese board with artisanal products, visit inside the natural aging cave, artistic installations on site

Different neighborhood. Different philosophy. Different experience entirely.

Every other tour in this article operates in or near Trastevere. This one is in Testaccio, beneath Monte dei Cocci, inside a cave system originally carved in the late 1500s to exploit the hill’s natural temperature. That temperature, hovering between 10 and 15 degrees Celsius year-round, is still doing the work today, aging the cheeses and meats you’ll eat during the session.

The one-hour format is the tightest in this article. It works because nothing is wasted. Four regional Lazio wines, varieties including Cesanese, Grechetto, Bellone, and Malvasia Puntinata, are paired against a board of cave-aged products sourced from local farms.

The Conciato di San Vittore, aged with wild herbs from the Aurunci Mountains, and the Caciottina from Amaseno, matured in clay pots, are not wines-and-cheese-board filler. They are the point.

Groups are capped at 10 participants. That limit is enforced, and it shows in the atmosphere reviewers describe.

Antonio is the guide name that appears most frequently across verified reviews, drawing consistent praise for knowledge, humor, and the ability to make the cave’s history feel immediate rather than academic. Walter’s review puts it plainly: “Amazing guide provided a great narrative tying the wine to the region to history. A highlight of our entire trip.” Lawrence echoes the same: “come ready for laughs and fun.”

The underground cellar wine tasting is reachable by public transport, and the venue’s entrance instructions are specific enough that getting lost is unlikely if you read them before you leave.

The trade-off is this: one hour is genuinely short, and the experience does not include gelato, a walking component, or a dinner extension. What it offers instead is setting and specificity that the Trastevere options cannot replicate. If those qualities matter more to you than duration, this is the one.

Tour 5: Private Wine Tasting in Rome with Delectable Meats and Cheeses

πŸ”΄ Meeting Point: Enoteca Bortone, Via di Monserrato, 4, 00186 Roma RM, Italy (steps from Campo de’ Fiori and Piazza Navona)
πŸ”΄ Departure Time: 5:30 pm
πŸ”΄ Duration: 2 hours (approx.)
πŸ”΄ Guide: Live, English and 1 more language
πŸ”΄ Free Cancellation: Yes, up to 24 hours in advance
πŸ”΄ Includes: 6 fine wine tastings (1 sparkling, 1 rosΓ¨, 2 white, 2 red), selection of Italian salami, cured meats, cheeses, olives, bread and taralli

Six wines is more than any other tour in this article. That alone sets the terms.

Enoteca Bortone sits in Rome’s historic center, a short walk from Campo de’ Fiori and Piazza Navona, which puts it in a different part of the city entirely from the Trastevere cluster.

The location is a genuine enoteca, a working wine shop, and that context is central to what makes this experience distinct. You’re tasting in a place where wine is the actual business, not a curated side room designed to look the part.

The lineup covers real range: Prosecco or Franciacorta for sparkling, Rosato di Negroamaro or Malvasia Puntinata for rosΓ¨, Vermentino, Verdicchio or Pecorino for whites, and Chianti, Montepulciano, Brunello di Montalcino or Amarone for reds. Four boards of food pairings accompany the progression. The breadth is intentional, designed to move across Italy’s wine regions without leaving the table.

This is a private tour. Only your group participates. That structure appealed strongly to couples in the review pool, and Alfred’s account from Canada captures the atmosphere accurately: the most romantic experience, wines spectacular, worth every cent. Emil’s extended Danish review recommends setting aside three to four hours if you want to take it slowly. That instinct is right.

Patrizia, named across multiple reviews as the owner and host, draws consistent praise for knowledge, warmth, and flexibility. She adjusted wine selections mid-session for one reviewer who flagged preferences. That kind of responsiveness is harder to find than it sounds.

The private wine tasting at Enoteca Bortone starts at 5:30 pm, which locks the timing in a way the other tours don’t. One reviewer noted arriving to find only themselves and the owner, which some found intimate and others found less social than expected.

If a group dynamic matters to you, the Trastevere options deliver that more reliably. If privacy and depth across six wines is the priority, nothing else in this article matches it.

FAQs (5 Best Wine Tastings in Rome)

What is included in a typical wine tasting in Rome?

Most Rome wine tastings include multiple wine pours paired with local food products such as cheese, cured meats, and bruschette.

The specific inclusions vary by tour. The Trastevere options in this article include between two and five wines alongside ten or more Italian food products, with gelato offered at the end of some sessions. The underground cellar experience focuses on four regional Lazio wines paired with cave-aged cheeses and meats.

The private enoteca tour covers six wines across sparkling, rosè, white, and red categories, each accompanied by a dedicated food board. Always check the inclusions list before booking, as some tours offer top-ups while others do not.

How long do wine tasting experiences in Rome last?

Most Rome wine tastings run between one and two hours, though some options extend to four hours with a dinner addition.

The underground cellar tour in Testaccio is the most compact at one hour. The Trastevere sessions typically run 1.5 to 2 hours for the tasting component. The Fine Wine Tasting with Dinner Option can extend up to four hours if you add the three-course meal.

The private enoteca experience starts at 5:30 pm and runs approximately two hours, though reviewers suggest budgeting extra time if you prefer a relaxed pace.

Do I need wine knowledge to enjoy a Rome wine tasting tour?

No prior wine knowledge is required for any of the tours in this article.

All five experiences are led by live English-speaking guides who explain each wine, its regional origin, and why it pairs with the food beside it. Guides across these tours consistently draw praise for making the educational component accessible without being condescending.

First-time wine tasters and experienced enthusiasts tend to get equal value from the format, though those with some background may appreciate the depth of the Lazio-focused underground cellar session or the six-wine progression at Enoteca Bortone.

What neighborhoods are Rome wine tastings held in?

Most Rome wine tastings are concentrated in Trastevere, with one notable option in the Testaccio district and one in the historic center near Campo de’ Fiori.

Trastevere is the most common setting, with three of the five tours in this article based at or near Essenza Wine Bar on Via della Scala. The underground cellar experience is in Testaccio, beneath Monte dei Cocci, reachable by public transport.

The private enoteca tour takes place at Enoteca Bortone on Via di Monserrato, steps from Campo de’ Fiori and Piazza Navona. Each neighborhood offers a different atmosphere, and the location is worth factoring into your choice alongside the wine list and format.

Can I cancel a Rome wine tasting if my plans change?

Yes. All five tours in this article offer free cancellation up to 24 hours before the experience starts.

This is standard across both GetYourGuide and Viator bookings represented here. Cancellations made within 24 hours of the start time are generally not eligible for a refund, so if your schedule is uncertain, book as early as possible to keep your options open.

The Reserve Now, Pay Later feature available on several listings allows you to secure a spot without immediate payment, which adds further flexibility for travelers still finalizing their itinerary.

Are Rome wine tastings suitable for small groups or solo travelers?

Yes. Several tours in this article are well-suited to solo travelers and small groups, and some are exclusively private.

The Trastevere sessions run with a relaxed group dynamic that reviewers consistently describe as social and easy to enjoy alone. The private enoteca tour at Enoteca Bortone is by design a private experience, meaning only your group participates, which suits couples and small parties particularly well.

The underground cellar in Testaccio caps attendance at 10 participants. Most tours in Rome offer a private group option at a separate rate if you prefer exclusive access regardless of the base format.

How much do wine tastings in Rome typically cost?

Rome wine tasting experiences generally range from around $30 to $160 per person depending on duration, inclusions, and whether the session is private or shared.

Shorter one to two hour tastings with two to four wines tend to sit at the lower end of that range. Longer sessions with five or six wines, premium food pairings, and private access generally fall higher.

The tours in this article cover that full spectrum. Broad price ranges are intended as general guidance only. Check current pricing directly on the booking platform, as rates vary by date, group size, and availability.

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Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato Rating & Criteria

Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato is the #1 Ranked Tour in 5 Best Wine Tastings in Rome based on a dynamic blend of category-specific criteria.

Rome: Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato Review by Steve Rickers -- Eat Drink Travel

Food Quality: Sourced Italian products β€” balsamic, mozzarella, truffle honey.
Guide Storytelling: Named guides, consistent standard across 199 reviews.
Group Atmosphere: Walk-and-taste format encourages natural conversation.
Local Ingredients: Neighborhood-rooted products plus a local gelato stop.
Value for Money: Rated 4.9 for value across 199 verified reviews.

Trastevere Wine Tasting with Food Pairing and Gelato

A flexible 1.5 to 3.5 hour wine and food tasting in Trastevere covering two Italian wines, ten local product tastings, and gelato, rated 4.9 across 199 verified reviews.

Steve Rickers

I’m a passionate travel writer chasing vivid adventures, hidden gems, and unforgettable moments around the world. I love cycling through storybook European cities, lingering over food and wine tours, and discovering places the way locals do. Travel boldly, eat well, ride often and let’s explore together.
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