10 Florida Wineries Worth a Weekend Visit (Yes, Florida Has Wineries)
Florida has wineries—and not the “cute novelty” kind. We’re talking rooftop pours in St. Augustine, tropical fruit vintages in Homestead, and rolling rows of vines just outside Orlando where you can actually hear the cicadas while you swirl.
The Sunshine State does wine its own way: muscadines, citrus, berries, a little experimentation, and a lot of scenery you won’t find in Napa. The best part?
These places make easy weekend anchors—pair a tasting with beaches, springs, old towns, or a farm-to-table lunch you didn’t plan but absolutely won’t regret. Here are 10 Florida wineries that prove you can sip locally and still get that “we escaped” feeling.
1. Lakeridge Winery & Vineyards (Clermont)
A few minutes into Lake County, the landscape starts looking suspiciously like “wine country,” and that’s the magic here. You’ll pull up to rows of vines, wide-open views, and a tasting room that’s built for lingering.
Go for a guided tour if it’s running—Florida wine is its own creature, and the behind-the-scenes context makes the pours more fun. Expect a mix of sweeter and drier options, plus seasonal releases that locals actually get excited about.
Weekends can feel like a mini festival, especially when there’s live music on the lawn; bring sunglasses and embrace the outdoor energy.
Clermont’s a great base, too—easy access from Orlando, plus lakeside parks and low-key restaurants for the post-tasting snack mission.
2. San Sebastian Winery (St. Augustine)
Old Town exploring hits different when you’ve got a tasting plan waiting in the wings. This spot layers wine with history—part tasting room, part tour stop, part “let’s stay for one more” rooftop hang.
Start downstairs with a flight so you can figure out your lane, then take the tour if you want the full story of how they do it here.
The real move is timing your visit for late afternoon and heading up top afterward; the rooftop bar has that breezy, end-of-day momentum that makes St. Augustine weekends feel longer.
You’re also perfectly placed for a walkable follow-up: cobblestone streets, a quick coffee, maybe a ghost tour if you’re feeling theatrical.
3. Schnebly Redland’s Winery (Homestead)
This is Florida distilled into a winery day. Expect lush gardens, water features, and tropical fruit wines that taste like vacation.
Mango, lychee, and other local flavors turn the tasting into an adventure. The property invites wandering between sips, with shaded nooks that make you forget you are close to Miami.
If you want a break from city pace, this is the reset button.
Go early to enjoy cooler temps, then plan a long lunch on-site or at nearby farm stands. Flights help you decide your sweet-to-dry comfort zone, since fruit wines span both.
Bring a camera because the grounds love golden hour. If you are planning more weekend fun, pair Schnebly with Everglades airboat time or a Coral Castle curiosity stop.
It is an easy way to give your weekend a Florida-core throughline without driving far.
4. Keel Farms / Keel & Curley (Plant City)
Some winery visits are a quick hour; this one wants your whole afternoon. The setting feels like a farm hangout with a wine habit—open space, lots of movement, and the kind of crowd that looks like they planned “one drink” and stayed through dinner.
Tastings here are easygoing, and the lineup often includes fruit-driven options that make Florida proud. If you’re traveling with friends who have wildly different tastes, that’s a plus: someone always finds a favorite.
Keep an eye on the event schedule because this place loves a good theme night. Plant City is also a sneaky-good weekend base—close to Tampa for nightlife, close to Lakeland for quieter mornings, and far enough from both to feel like a getaway.
5. Fiorelli Winery (Bradenton area)
Gulf Coast weekends already come with a built-in mood, and this winery slides right into it—relaxed, local, and not trying to impress anyone.
The tasting room feels friendly, the pace is unhurried, and it’s the kind of place where you can actually hear your friends talk without yelling over a DJ.
Their wines tend to be approachable, with plenty that play well in Florida’s heat. If you’re the “pair it with a beach day” type, you’re in the right area; Bradenton and nearby barrier islands make it easy to stack a tasting with sand and a sunset.
Check for live music or small events that turn a simple stop into an evening plan, then head out for seafood when the cravings hit.
6. Strong Tower Vineyard & Winery (Spring Hill)
If your idea of a perfect winery visit involves fewer crowds and more porch-sitting, this one delivers. The setting is calm and slightly tucked away, with a vineyard feel that encourages you to slow down and actually taste what’s in the glass.
Tastings are the main event, but the experience is really about the atmosphere—quiet enough to catch the breeze, casual enough to feel comfortable in flip-flops.
The wine selection often includes both classic-style pours and Florida-leaning sweet or fruit-friendly options, so it works for mixed groups.
Make it part of a Spring Hill weekend and you’ve got a great one-two punch: wineries in the afternoon, then nearby springs and river spots earlier in the day for a cold-water reset.
7. Island Grove Wine Company at Formosa Gardens (Kissimmee area)
Some places feel designed for photos, but here it’s more like the gardens naturally stole the show and wine just showed up with excellent timing.
The setting is the hook: landscaped paths, greenery everywhere, and enough scenery to make a tasting feel like an outing instead of an errand.
The wine list leans into Florida personality, so don’t be surprised if fruit-forward pours steal your attention.
It’s also close enough to Orlando that you can do a “theme parks optional” weekend—stay in Kissimmee, sleep in, hit the gardens midday, then let the evening unfold.
Go when the light’s softer if you can; late afternoon makes the whole place glow, and suddenly you’re lingering over your last sip like a local who knows the trick.
8. Florida Orange Groves Winery (St. Petersburg)
St. Pete already has strong “weekend energy,” and this winery matches it with wines that don’t pretend to be something they’re not. The lineup is fruit-forward and fun—think citrus, berries, tropical notes—built for people who want flavor without the lecture.
Tastings move quickly, which is perfect if you’ve got a packed itinerary of murals, coffee stops, and a sunset plan at the pier. The best way to enjoy it is with curiosity: try a few you wouldn’t normally order and see what surprises you.
This is also a smart pick for groups where half the crew claims they “don’t like wine,” because the styles here tend to win over the skeptics. Afterwards, you’re minutes from St. Pete’s best wandering.
9. Summer Crush Vineyard & Winery (Fort Pierce)
Summer Crush feels built for weekends. Think open-air pavilions, a steady roll of live music, and tastings that suit beach-town tempo.
The decor nods to surf culture, which sets a casual mood the minute you arrive. It is easy to anchor a day here, hopping between sips and sets.
If you want a headliner-style hang without the hassle, this scratches the itch.
Check the event calendar, because it drives everything. For bigger shows, bring foldable chairs, sunscreen, and cash for quick concessions.
Hydration matters in Florida heat, so alternate water with pours. If you are making a weekend of it, add a morning at the Fort Pierce Inlet and fresh seafood after.
Aim for golden hour for photos, then decide which bottle follows you to the hotel patio. Low stress, high vibes.
10. Flagler Beachfront Winery (Flagler Beach)
Ocean views change the whole tasting equation, and that’s the flex here. You’re not trekking into the countryside; you’re sipping with salt in the air and the beach basically doing the background music.
The space feels casual and coastal, perfect for a stop between a morning walk on the sand and an afternoon of exploring Flagler’s little strip of shops and cafés.
Expect wines that pair well with a beach-town mindset—easygoing, not fussy, and best enjoyed while you’re watching the light shift outside.
This is a great pick for travelers who want wine without giving up their beach time. Time it for golden hour if you can; the view earns its keep, and suddenly the weekend feels longer.










