Italy Wine Itinerary, 7 Days 2026: Three Regions, a Driver, No Rush

Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com

Last updated: June 2026.

Two rules make an Italian wine trip great and safe: pick two or three regions rather than racing across all twenty, and never drink and drive, use a tour or a hired driver. This 7-day route links three of the giants: Barolo in Piedmont, Chianti and Montalcino in Tuscany, and Valpolicella by Verona. Each is a world of its own, and a few unhurried days in each beats a frantic dash.

Base in one town per region and let a driver or a small-group tour handle the country roads and the cellar visits. Book tastings ahead, as the best estates require reservations, and go slow; this is a trip about pleasure, not mileage.

7-Day Italy Wine Itinerary

Days 1-2: Piedmont and Barolo

The Langhe hills around Alba: the powerful Nebbiolo reds of Barolo and Barbaresco, with white truffles in fall. Base in Alba and tour the cellars with a driver. Big, serious, age-worthy wines.

Days 3-5: Tuscany

Down to Tuscany for Sangiovese: the Chianti Classico hills between Florence and Siena, and a day for the prized Brunello di Montalcino. Vineyards, hill towns, and long lunches.

Days 6-7: Verona and Valpolicella

To the Veneto for the rich Amarone and Valpolicella in the hills above Verona, with the city itself for an evening. A plush, fitting finish before flying home.

Q&A: Wine Touring in Italy

How many wine regions should I do in a week?

Two or three at most. Each region is large with many estates, and the joy is in slowing down. Trying to hit five means hours in the car and rushed tastings; depth beats breadth here.

Should I drive myself?

No. Tastings mean drinking, the roads are winding, and the police do check. Use a hired driver or join small-group cellar tours; it is safer, and you actually enjoy the wine.

Do I need to book tastings?

At the better estates, yes, often days ahead; many are working farms that only receive booked visitors. A local guide or driver can arrange the right cellars for your taste.

What are the signature wines?

Barolo and Barbaresco (Nebbiolo) in Piedmont, Chianti Classico and Brunello (Sangiovese) in Tuscany, and Amarone and Valpolicella in the Veneto. Each is distinct; tasting them in place is the point.

When should I go?

September and October for the harvest buzz and, in Piedmont, white truffle season, though estates are busy then. Spring is quieter and lovely; winter is sleepy with some cellars closed.

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