Montepulciano Wine Tasting and Cellar Tour
Step off the sloping Corso and down into a centuries-old cellar carved beneath the old town, where the noble red of Montepulciano ages quietly among oak barrels. This one-hour tasting pours the town's flagship Vino Nobile alongside bruschetta, local pecorino, and Tuscan olive oil, all guided by someone who knows the wine's story. It is the most-booked and best-value way to start here, though you can compare every Montepulciano tasting before you commit.
About This Tasting at a Glance
About one hour underground among the barrels
From $38 per person, best value in town
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, guided pours
Bruschetta, crostini, and aged pecorino cheeses
A historic in-town cellar near Piazza Grande
Small-group, host-led through the cellar's history
Check Live Availability & Prices
See open time slots and current pricing for the cellar tasting, with free cancellation if plans change.
Why Book the Cellar Tasting
Montepulciano hides its best rooms below street level. The cellars run under the old town in cool, damp galleries where the wine rests undisturbed, and stepping into one is the difference between drinking Vino Nobile and understanding it. A host walks you past the oak barrels, explains how the local Prugnolo Gentile grape becomes the town's signature red, and pours as you go.
At around $38 for roughly an hour, this is the easiest and most affordable introduction to the area. It is the most-booked tasting for a reason: short enough to fit any afternoon, generous with food, and set in exactly the kind of atmospheric space most visitors hope to find but rarely book in advance.
What You'll Taste
The pours center on Montepulciano's noble reds, paired with a spread of Tuscan bites:
- Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, the town's flagship Sangiovese-based red
- A younger Rosso di Montepulciano for contrast, when available
- Bruschetta topped with estate Tuscan extra-virgin olive oil
- Crostini with local spreads
- A selection of pecorino cheeses aged from fresh to mature
- Simple accompaniments that balance the wine's structure
What's Included (and What Isn't)
What's Included
- Guided visit to a historic underground wine cellar
- Tasting of Vino Nobile di Montepulciano and local wines
- Bruschetta with Tuscan extra-virgin olive oil and crostini
- A selection of pecorino cheeses of various ages
- A small-group, host-led session lasting about one hour
Not Included
- Hotel pickup or transport to Montepulciano
- Additional bottles or full glasses purchased after the tasting
- Gratuities for your host
- Meals beyond the paired snacks
How the Hour Unfolds
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0:00
Meet at the cellar
Gather at the entrance near Piazza Grande and step down into the cool underground galleries.
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0:10
Cellar walk
Your host walks you past the oak barrels and explains how Vino Nobile is made and aged beneath the town.
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0:25
First pours
Taste the noble red and compare it with a younger local wine, learning what to notice in each.
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0:40
Food pairing
Bruschetta, crostini, and aged pecorino arrive to show how the wine changes alongside Tuscan food.
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0:55
Questions and buying
Finish with time to ask about the estate and pick up any bottles you loved to take home.
Important Things to Know Before You Go
A few practical notes to make the visit smooth:
- The old town is a limited-traffic zone; cars are banned roughly 7am to 7pm, so park in an edge lot near the Fortezza and walk up.
- The climb up the Corso to Piazza Grande is steep and cobbled. What to bring: comfortable, flat-soled walking shoes and a light layer, since cellars stay cool year-round.
- What to leave behind: heavy bags or strong perfume, which can interfere with tasting the wine.
- Arrive a few minutes early, as the cellar entrance can be easy to miss among the shopfronts.
- The tasting includes food, but it is a snack rather than a meal, so plan lunch or dinner separately.
Insider Tips for the Montepulciano Cellar Tasting
Local knowledge that makes the most of your visit:
- Park near the Fortezza and walk up Via di Gracciano nel Corso to Via Ricci, which climbs to Piazza Grande at the top of town.
- Vino Nobile is mostly Prugnolo Gentile, a Sangiovese clone that must be at least 70%; the wine ages two years minimum and three for Riserva, so ask which you are pouring.
- Do not confuse it with Montepulciano d'Abruzzo, a different grape from a different region entirely.
- If you want more cellars, Contucci on Piazza Grande offers free walk-in tastings, while the vaulted De' Ricci cellars date to around 1150 and reward pre-booking.
- Come late May to June or late September to October for the best weather; the harvest in late September and October is the liveliest time, while July and August are hottest and busiest.
- Build a day around it: Montalcino for Brunello, Pienza for pecorino, and the UNESCO Val d'Orcia are all close by.
Where the Cellar Tasting Meets
Who This Tour Is For
This tasting suits a wide range of visitors:
- First-timers who want a short, affordable introduction to Vino Nobile
- Couples and friends looking for an atmospheric hour off the busy Corso
- Curious travelers who want to see a real underground cellar, not a shop counter
- Anyone pairing a Tuscany road trip with a relaxed local tasting
Not ideal for
- Travelers hoping for a full sit-down meal rather than paired snacks
- Those with limited mobility who cannot manage steep cobbled streets and cellar stairs
- Anyone expecting a vineyard walk, since this visit is inside the town
Frequently Asked Questions
What wine do you taste on the cellar tour?
You taste Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, the town's flagship red made mostly from Prugnolo Gentile, alongside a younger local wine when available. If you want to see other cellar and vineyard options, compare every Montepulciano tasting before you book.
How long does the tasting last and how much does it cost?
It runs about one hour and starts from $38 per person, which makes it the best-value tasting in town. It also offers free cancellation, so you can hold a time and adjust later.
Is food included with the wine?
Yes. The tasting is paired with bruschetta dressed in Tuscan extra-virgin olive oil, crostini, and a selection of pecorino cheeses of different ages. It is a snack spread rather than a full meal.
How is this different from other cellar tours in town?
This is the most-booked and most affordable option, set in a single historic in-town cellar. For a deeper cellar walk see the Montepulciano wine cellar tour, or focus on the grape itself with the Vino Nobile di Montepulciano wine tour.
Where do we meet and can I drive there?
You meet at a historic cellar near Piazza Grande at the top of the old town. The center is a limited-traffic zone with cars banned roughly 7am to 7pm, so park near the Fortezza and walk up. You can see all tour meeting points and options if you are planning several tastings.
What Recent Guests Say
The cellar was cooler and older than I expected, and our host really knew his Vino Nobile. The pecorino pairing with the bruschetta was the highlight of our day in Tuscany.
Great value for an hour underground. We tasted two reds among the barrels and left with two bottles. Easy to fit in after walking up the Corso.
Loved learning the difference between this and Montepulciano d'Abruzzo. Small group, relaxed pace, and the olive oil on the bruschetta was incredible.