
Mendoza
Plan your Mendoza wine trip — tastings from 0 at Catena Zapata or Zuccardi, best March for Vendimia or Oct–Nov shoulder. Book winery restaurants 3–6 weeks ahead.
Our Mendoza guide draws on on-the-ground research across Maipú, Luján de Cuyo, and Valle de Uco, last updated April 2026. The region accounts for 70% of Argentina's total wine production across 146,000 hectares — yet it manages to feel nothing like an industrial wine zone. The scale is vast, the Andes backdrop is operatic, and the combination of high altitude, desert sun, and glacial-melt irrigation produces some of the most distinctive red wines in the southern hemisphere.
Mendoza's Terroir: Why Altitude Changes Everything

Mendoza sits at 700 to 1,100 metres above sea level in its classic zones — and climbs to 2,000 metres in the highest Uco Valley vineyards, making them among the most elevated commercial plantings on the planet. That altitude is the engine of quality here. Days are intensely sunny (over 300 days of sunshine per year), but temperatures drop sharply after sunset. The diurnal range — sometimes 20°C between afternoon and midnight — allows grapes to build ripe fruit flavours while retaining the acidity that keeps wines from tasting flat or overblown.
Annual rainfall is a mere 200 millimetres — this is effectively a desert. Vines survive and thrive only through a centuries-old irrigation system fed by snowmelt from the Andes. Canals called acequias channel glacial water to every vineyard, and the dry air means phylloxera and fungal disease are rare, which is why many old vines here still grow on their own ungrafted roots. The combination of UV intensity at altitude and minimal humidity drives thick grape skins — which, in Malbec, translates directly into the deep purple colour and concentrated tannin that defines the variety's Argentine identity.
Mendoza's Sub-Regions: Where to Go and Why
Mendoza is not one place. The province stretches south from the city for over 150 kilometres, encompassing zones that differ dramatically in altitude, soil, and character. Plan your visit around where you want to spend the most time — because doing all four sub-regions justice in a single trip is optimistic.
Luján de Cuyo — Argentina's First Wine DO
Twenty kilometres south of Mendoza city, Luján de Cuyo was granted Argentina's first wine Denominación de Origen in 1993 — a recognition of what vignerons here had known for a century. The zone sits at 900 to 1,050 metres, with alluvial soils over clay and calcium carbonate that deliver structure and mineral backbone to the wines. This is traditional Mendoza: established family bodegas, old-vine Malbec plots, and estates that have been producing for three or four generations.
Key producers: Viña Cobos (a collaboration between California winemaker Paul Hobbs and Argentine partners, producing one of the region's most celebrated Malbecs), Achaval-Ferrer (known for single-vineyard Malbecs from century-old vines), and Susana Balbo (Argentina's first female winemaker, with an excellent visitor experience and on-site restaurant). The vibe is serious but welcoming — book ahead for any restaurant dining, and expect polished tasting rooms rather than rustic cellars.
Maipú — The Bike Wine Route
Fifteen minutes by bus from Mendoza city, Maipú is the most visitor-accessible sub-region and the best introduction to the winery landscape for first-timers. The terrain is flatter and the altitude lower (700 to 900 metres), which means wines are generally richer and less structured than Luján — approachable, generous, good for the glass rather than the cellar. The star attraction is the bike route: rent a bicycle from one of several operators near the bus stop and spend a lazy afternoon pedalling between bodegas, olive groves, and olive-oil producers. Most wineries here are walk-in friendly or require only a quick call ahead.
Notable stops include Bodega La Rural (home to Museo del Vino, free with tasting), Tempus Alba (boutique Malbec, walk-in welcome), and the olive oil producer Familia Di Tommaso for a mid-route break. Bike hire typically costs $5–10 per day from operators like Mr. Hugo's or Bicicletas Maipu.
Valle de Uco — High-Altitude, High Ambition
Valle de Uco is where Mendoza's ambitions currently peak. Lying 90 to 100 kilometres south of Mendoza city, this valley climbs to 1,500 metres and beyond in its highest plantings (Gualtallary reaches 1,800 metres), producing wines with a cooler, more structured character than anything from the classical zones. The Andes loom so close here that the snow-capped peaks feel within reach on clear mornings. Nights are cold enough to require a jacket even in summer.
The wineries here compete for attention at a different level: Bodega Zuccardi Valle de Uco (repeatedly voted the world's best winery, with a striking stone-and-concrete building by architect Fernando Raganato and a restaurant that books out three to six weeks in advance), Salentein (Dutch-owned, with an art gallery, cross-shaped underground cellar, and sweeping Andes views), and Clos de los Sietes (a seven-bodega complex assembled by Bordeaux consultant Michel Rolland). Plan at least a full day here — ideally two nights if budget allows. The drive from Mendoza city takes 1 hour 15 minutes on good road.
Chacras de Coria — Bohemian Village Base
Chacras de Coria is a leafy village 15 minutes south of Mendoza city, and it deserves an evening. The streets are lined with wine bars, galleries, and restaurants operating out of colonial homes — a far more manageable and intimate scale than the city centre. It functions as a natural gathering point for visitors staying in Luján de Cuyo, sitting at the northern edge of the wine zone with easy access to the bodegas to the south. Several boutique guesthouses operate here, and the wine bars on Avenida San Martín pour glasses from small-production local wineries you won't find on any tour itinerary.
Top Wineries to Visit in Mendoza
Booking requirements: Unlike many European wine regions where showing up at a tasting room is the norm, Mendoza operates on a reservation culture. Walk-ins are possible at some bodegas in Maipú, but for any winery restaurant, premium tasting, or top estate, you need to book ahead — ideally 1–2 weeks in advance for standard experiences, and 3–6 weeks for the best winery dining. During the Vendimia harvest festival in March, book everything 2–3 months in advance. Arriving unannounced at Catena Zapata or Zuccardi and hoping for a table is not a strategy.
Catena Zapata — Luján de Cuyo
The Mayan pyramid-inspired bodega is one of the most photographed in South America — and the wines inside justify the landmark status. The Adrian Vineyard Malbec ($55–75 per bottle at the cellar door) represents some of the finest Malbec produced anywhere. Tasting experiences run from a standard 3-wine flight ($20–30) to premium single-vineyard comparisons ($50+). Book 2–4 weeks ahead. Tours include a walk through the winery museum and a primer on Nicolas Catena's pioneering work mapping Mendoza's altitude zones.
Bodega Zuccardi Valle de Uco — Uco Valley (San Pablo)

Repeatedly named the world's best winery by critics and trade associations, Zuccardi Valle de Uco is worth the 90-minute drive from Mendoza city. The architecture — rough stone rising from the valley floor — frames views of Tupungato volcano that are genuinely arresting. The restaurant books out 3–6 weeks ahead for lunch (the only service); the 6-course tasting menu paired with single-parcel wines runs around $120–150 per person. If you can't get a restaurant reservation, the tasting room (book 1–2 weeks ahead) offers an exceptional guided flight for $35–50.
Achaval-Ferrer — Luján de Cuyo
Achaval-Ferrer specialises in single-vineyard Malbecs from old-vine plots — Finca Altamira, Finca Bella Vista, and Finca Mirador are the names to look for. The tasting experience is intimate and the winemaking team genuinely engaged with visitors. Their restaurant is excellent for lunch; book the tasting + dining experience together 2–4 weeks ahead. Tasting-only visits run around $25–40 and can often be arranged within a week.
Bodegas Salentein — Uco Valley (Tunuyán)
Dutch-owned but deeply Argentine in spirit, Salentein is one of the most visitor-friendly estates in the Uco Valley. The cross-shaped underground barrel hall is architecturally striking; the Killka art gallery next door shows Argentine contemporary art. Tasting flights ($15–30) are available without reservations most days — making this a practical option for Uco Valley visitors who haven't pre-booked extensively. Their Malbec Reserve and Primus red blend are the standout bottles to try.
Viña Cobos — Luján de Cuyo (Perdriel)
Paul Hobbs' Argentine collaboration produces some of Mendoza's most internationally acclaimed Malbecs — the Marchiori Vineyard bottling is a regular reference point for critics evaluating the variety globally. The visitor experience is focused and unhurried, with small-group tastings ($30–50) that walk through their tiered lineup from the accessible Bramare range to the top-tier Cobos Marchiori. Book at least 1–2 weeks ahead. Located in Perdriel, just south of the Luján de Cuyo village centre.
Clos de los Sietes — Uco Valley (Vista Flores)
A seven-bodega complex assembled by Bordeaux flying winemaker Michel Rolland, Clos de los Sietes covers 850 hectares at 1,050 metres in Vista Flores. The estate wine — a Malbec-led blend — is one of the Uco Valley's benchmark bottlings at $20–35 retail. Visiting gives you a sense of estate-scale viticulture that smaller bodegas can't match. The Rolland & Galarreta tasting room is the entry point; book 1–2 weeks ahead for a guided visit.
Dominio del Plata (Susana Balbo) — Luján de Cuyo
Susana Balbo — Argentina's first female winemaker and a genuine industry icon — runs a tightly managed visitor experience that many professionals cite as the best introduction to the region. The tasting room is modern and the staff knowledgeable. Her Signature Malbec and BenMarco Expresivo are excellent value at $18–35. The on-site restaurant is excellent for lunch. Walk-in tastings are sometimes possible; restaurant reservations need 1–2 weeks. A practical choice if your Uco Valley plans fall through.
Best Time to Visit Mendoza
The harvest window — March through early April — is the most dramatic time to be in Mendoza, and the hardest to book. Malbec hits peak ripeness in the first two weeks of March (see the harvest calendar for variety-by-variety timing), and the Fiesta Nacional de la Vendimia runs across the first two weeks of the month: half a million people, outdoor theatre in the Frank Romero Day Amphitheatre, neighbourhood grape-treading parades, and the crowning of the Harvest Queen. Temperatures in March average around 26–28°C during the day, dropping to a comfortable 14–16°C at night. If this is the trip you're planning, sort accommodation and winery reservations three months out.
October and November offer what locals call the sweet spot: spring wildflowers on the Andean foothills, temperatures warming to 22–25°C, and far thinner crowds than harvest season. Winery restaurants are easier to book, accommodation prices run 20–30% lower, and the vineyard landscapes are vivid green rather than gold. This is the best window for visitors who want full access without the festival logistics.
The contrarian month most wine guides skip: July. Mendoza in winter is cold (nights drop below 5°C) but clear — the Andes are snow-covered and the air is crystalline. Bodegas are quiet, accommodation is cheap, and the ski resort at Las Leñas (220 kilometres south) is in full operation. A combined ski-and-wine itinerary built around July is one of the most underrated trips in South America. January and February are the hottest months (peaks of 31–33°C) and the least comfortable for touring — avoid unless Vendimia is the specific draw.
Getting to Mendoza and Around the Region
Getting There
Mendoza Governor Francisco Gabrielli International Airport (MDZ) sits 15 minutes from the city centre by remis or taxi ($8–12). Aerolíneas Argentinas operates the most frequent domestic routes from Buenos Aires Aeroparque (AEP), with LATAM, Flybondi, and JetSMART offering competitive pricing — expect to pay $50–120 return, and the flight takes 1 hour 40 minutes. From Santiago de Chile, the Andes crossing by bus via the Paso Los Libertadores is genuinely spectacular: six hours through some of the most dramatic mountain scenery in the world, operated by Turbus and Cata Internacional, with fares around $20–35. International flights with connections through Buenos Aires Ezeiza (EZE) are available from Europe, North America, and Australia.
The overnight bus from Buenos Aires is 13–14 hours and an authentic Argentine long-haul experience — semi-cama (reclining seat) costs $30–50, cama ejecutivo (flat bed) around $70–90. Comfortable enough, but the flight is genuinely worth the marginal extra cost when time is the constraint.
Getting Around

Public transport in Mendoza is limited and not practical for winery touring. The primary option for independent visitors is the remis — a private taxi booked by the hour or trip, widely used by locals and far cheaper than European equivalents. A half-day remis for two people touring Luján de Cuyo costs $60–90; full-day Uco Valley trips run $100–150. Uber operates in Mendoza city (Cabify as backup) and is useful for city-to-winery transfers, but not always available in the valley zones.
For Maipú, take the bus from Terminal del Sol in Mendoza city (Route 10, runs every 20–30 minutes, $1–2) and rent a bicycle on arrival — bike hire is $5–10 per day and this is genuinely the best way to experience the zone. Car rental is recommended for the Uco Valley, where the distances between bodegas require your own transport; rates start around $40–60 per day from operators at MDZ airport. Argentina's drink-driving limit is 0.05% BAC — the same as most of continental Europe, and strictly enforced. If you're drinking seriously, book a guided tour or remis and don't get behind the wheel.
How to Plan Your Mendoza Trip: 3 Days vs 5 Days
Three days is the realistic minimum to cover Mendoza's main zones without feeling rushed. Five gives you space for the Uco Valley at its own pace and a proper evening in Chacras de Coria. Ten days or more is a different trip entirely — one for people serious about spending time in vineyards and eating at every restaurant they've read about. Use the trip planner at /plan to build a customised itinerary.
3-Day Itinerary
Day 1 — Maipú by bicycle. Catch the bus from Mendoza city, rent a bike, and spend the afternoon pedalling between three or four bodegas. Keep the pace relaxed and finish with a late lunch at one of the winery restaurants before heading back to the city. Evening: walk the arboladas (tree-lined avenues) and eat at a parrilla in the city centre.
Day 2 — Luján de Cuyo luxury estates. Book a remis for the day. Morning: Catena Zapata (pre-booked guided tour and tasting). Lunch: Susana Balbo restaurant or Achaval-Ferrer (book ahead). Afternoon: Viña Cobos for a focused tasting. This day requires bookings at least 1–2 weeks ahead.
Day 3 — Uco Valley day trip. Leave early (8am) and drive or take a remis south. Lunch at Zuccardi Valle de Uco (pre-booked 3–6 weeks ahead) or a tasting flight if the restaurant is full. Afternoon: Salentein for a walkthrough of the barrel hall and art gallery. Return to Mendoza city by evening.
What the Extra 2 Days Add
A fifth day frees you to sleep in the Uco Valley rather than treating it as a day trip — the difference in experience is significant. Base yourself at The Vines Resort or Entre Cielos for a night, and you wake to vineyard views and can visit wineries in the morning when tasting rooms are quietest. Day 4 adds Chacras de Coria for a relaxed evening of wine bars and local restaurants. Day 5 opens up non-wine Mendoza: the Aconcagua viewpoint at Horcones Lake (a 2.5-hour drive into the Andes), white-water rafting on the Mendoza River at Potrerillos ($35–50 half-day), or a morning horseback ride through vineyards before your flight out.
Mendoza Wine Region: Common Questions
How many days do you need in Mendoza wine country?
Three days is the practical minimum to cover Maipú, Luján de Cuyo, and at least a day trip to the Uco Valley without feeling rushed. Five days is the sweet spot for visitors who want to eat at winery restaurants, explore the sub-regions at their own pace, and spend a night in the valley. Ten or more days is a different category of trip — for the seriously wine-obsessed. If you only have two days, focus on Luján de Cuyo and skip Maipú or Uco Valley rather than trying to sprint through all three.
Do you need to book Mendoza wineries in advance?
Yes — for any quality experience at a premium winery, advance booking is non-negotiable. Winery restaurants (Zuccardi, Achaval-Ferrer, Susana Balbo) require reservations 1–6 weeks ahead depending on the estate and season. Standard tasting flights can sometimes be arranged with 48 hours' notice or same-day in quieter periods, but Catena Zapata rarely accepts walk-ins and Zuccardi almost never does. The Maipú bike-wine route is the exception: bodegas there are generally more flexible and some operate walk-in tastings daily.
What is the best month to visit Mendoza wine region?
March is the most spectacular month if you want the harvest experience and Vendimia festival — but book everything at least three months ahead. October and November offer the best balance of good weather, open wineries, and manageable crowds. May is an underrated shoulder month: autumn colours in the vineyards, temperatures around 20°C, and prices 20–30% lower than peak. July works well for ski-plus-wine itineraries, with Las Leñas in full operation and bodegas virtually empty.
What grape is Mendoza famous for?
Malbec. Originally a Bordeaux blending grape, Malbec was brought to Argentina in the 1850s and found its spiritual home in Mendoza's high-altitude soils. Here it grows with thicker skins, deeper colour, and more concentrated fruit than anywhere in France, producing wines that typically show dark plum, violet, and chocolate — with a velvety texture that makes them approachable young. Mendoza accounts for the majority of the world's premium Malbec production. Cabernet Sauvignon, Bonarda, and Torrontés (white) are also grown in quantity, but Malbec is the identity of the region.
Is Mendoza worth visiting for wine?
Unreservedly yes — and it competes on value in a way that European regions cannot. Tastings that would cost €50–80 at a comparable estate in Bordeaux or Burgundy run $20–40 here. Winery restaurant lunches that rival anything in Europe in quality cost $60–100 per person including wine pairings. The Andes backdrop adds a visual drama that no European wine landscape can match, and the culture of hospitality at Argentine bodegas is genuinely warm. The caveats: advance booking is more important than in many regions, and getting between sub-regions requires planning since public transport is limited.
Mendoza's Best Bodegas: What to Expect
With over 1,500 wineries spread across Mendoza's subregions, knowing where to start is half the challenge. The estates below represent the full range — from iconic pyramidal architecture to family-run boutique bodegas — and have been selected for their visitor experience as much as their wine quality. Most require advance reservations; plan at least two weeks ahead outside harvest season, and two to three months for March visits.
Achaval Ferrer — San Martin, Lujan de Cuyo
Achaval Ferrer has become the reference point for Mendoza single-vineyard Malbec. Located in San Martin within Lujan de Cuyo, the bodega produces wines from three named parcels — Quimera, Finca Altamira and Finca Bella Vista — that regularly rank among Argentina's best. Tastings run approximately USD 30-50 and must be booked in advance. Horseback rides through the estate vineyards can be arranged for groups.
Zuccardi Valle de Uco — San Pablo, Uco Valley
Voted Best Winery in the World at the World's Best Vineyards awards, Zuccardi is the benchmark for sustainable, altitude-driven winemaking. The estate sits at 1,100m in the Uco Valley, with a remarkable stone-and-earth visitor centre designed to showcase the terroir. The restaurant (book separately, 3-6 weeks ahead) uses produce grown on-site. Tasting fees: USD 40-80. Advance booking required — walk-ins are not accepted.
Catena Zapata — Lujan de Cuyo
The Mayan-pyramid winery is arguably Mendoza's most photographed building, and the wines produced inside are equally striking. Nicolas Catena Zapata pioneered high-altitude Malbec and his flagship Adrianna Vineyard (2,980m) changed how the world understood Argentine wine. Book 2-4 weeks ahead. Tasting fees: USD 30-60, with library and vertical experiences available at higher price points. No walk-ins.
Clos de los Siete — Lujan de Cuyo
Assembled by Michel Rolland with six Argentine partners in the late 1990s, Clos de los Siete is a 900-hectare estate shared among seven properties including Monteviejo, Clos des Andes and Diamandes. The scale gives visitors an unusual perspective on wine production — you can tour multiple cellars within one property. Tasting fees: USD 20-35. Booking required.
Pulenta Estate — Lujan de Cuyo
A family-owned bodega from the Pulenta family — original founders of Trapiche — who returned to produce their own label after selling the Trapiche business. The flagship Grand Malbec (from vines over 60 years old in Lujan de Cuyo) is a wine to seek out. Tasting fees: USD 25-45. The bodega is relatively intimate and appointments are easier to secure here than at the bigger estates. Booking required.
Caro — Lujan de Cuyo (Lafite Rothschild x Catena)
The joint venture between Domaines Barons de Rothschild (Lafite) and Nicolas Catena is one of the wine world's most prestigious partnerships. Caro produces Malbec-dominant Bordeaux blends that carry the DNA of both houses. Visits are by appointment only and focused on collectors — expect a serious tasting rather than a casual drop-in. Tasting fees: USD 50-80. Book 3-4 weeks ahead minimum.
Practical note: bodegas in Mendoza City and Chacras de Coria are reachable by remis (private taxi) or bike. Valle de Uco estates require a car or organised transport — it is 1 hour 15 minutes from the city and most estates sit off unsealed roads. If you are combining multiple Uco Valley visits in a day, hire a driver or book a tour.
Beyond the Bodega: Adventure in Mendoza
Mendoza sits at the foot of the highest mountain range outside Asia, which means the same trip that takes you through world-class Malbec country can also deliver serious outdoor adventure. This combination — wine in the valley, adrenaline in the Andes — is unique to Mendoza among major wine regions.
Rafting on the Rio Mendoza: The river running from the Andes through Potrerillos offers Grade III-IV white water, making it one of the best accessible rafting routes in South America. The season runs April to September when snowmelt keeps water levels high. Half-day trips depart from Potrerillos (1 hour from Mendoza City) and cost approximately USD 40-60. Book via operators clustered on Avenida San Martin in the city centre.
Horseback riding through the vineyards: Several bodegas offer guided horse rides through their estates — Achaval Ferrer and Finca Decero are two of the best-known. Riding between vine rows at golden hour with the Andes behind you is one of those rare travel experiences that earns its cliche. Most rides are 1.5-2 hours and include a wine tasting at the end. Book directly with the estate.
Mountain biking and cycling: The flat roads of Maipu are the easiest introduction — hire a bike in town and visit 6-8 bodegas in a day along a 25km loop. For more technical riding, the gravel roads of Valle de Uco and Lujan de Cuyo offer multi-hour routes through vine-flanked landscapes at altitude. Several tour companies run guided bike and wine days across these routes.
Cerro Aconcagua (6,962m): The highest peak outside Asia is 180km from Mendoza City. Non-climbing visitors can drive to the Plaza de Mulas base camp trailhead for a half-day excursion. Serious climbers require a permit (December-February season) and 2-3 weeks on the mountain. This is the highest commercially trekked peak in the Western Hemisphere — even a day trip to the lower slopes delivers extraordinary Andean scenery.
Skiing at Las Lenas and Los Penitentes: Both ski resorts are within 4 hours of Mendoza City and operate June through September. Las Lenas (2,240m-3,430m) is the flagship — a proper resort with challenging runs and a party reputation. Los Penitentes is smaller, more family-friendly and closer (2.5 hours). A ski morning followed by a bodega visit in the afternoon is an entirely viable itinerary.
Wine and adventure combo tours: Both Viator and GetYourGuide list half-day and full-day combinations — wine tasting plus rafting, bike plus bodega, Uco Valley plus Aconcagua viewpoint. These are the most efficient option if time is short. Adventure operators concentrate around Avenida San Martin in Mendoza City, where you can walk in and book for the next day.
Getting There
MDZ — Mendoza (Governor Francisco Gabrielli)
15min drive
2h flight from Buenos Aires; buses available (14h) but fly instead
noneCar rental recommended
Where to Eat
Argentine — Mendocino
- $$$$
Restaurante 1884 — Francis Mallmann
fine dining
- $$$$
Siete Fuegos — The Vines Resort
winery restaurant
Where to Stay in Mendoza
- Luján de Cuyo$$-$$$
Classic Malbec zone, many wineries with restaurants
- Uco Valley$$$
High-altitude premium wines, stunning Andes backdrop
- Mendoza city$-$$
Tree-lined avenues, parrillas, and nightlife
Harvest Festival (Vendimia, March) is a spectacular celebration — book 3+ months ahead
Booking.com
Tours & Experiences
Mendoza, Argentina
Mendoza Malbec experience
Visit 3 bodegas in Luján de Cuyo tasting Argentina's signature grape
Uco Valley high-altitude wine tour
Explore premium high-altitude vineyards with Andes views
Wine Experiences
Visiting Wineries
Winery restaurant reservations (Zuccardi Valle de Uco, Achaval Ferrer) are strongly advised. Standard tastings at many bodegas are available same-day. The harvest festival in March is extremely busy — book everything 2–3 months ahead.
Book ahead: 1–2 weeks for winery restaurants, same-day often OK for basic tastings · Top estates: Catena Zapata, Achaval Ferrer restaurant: 2–4 weeks. Zuccardi Valle de Uco: 3–6 weeks for dining.
Planning tools & local info
Getting There
MDZ — Mendoza (Governor Francisco Gabrielli)
15min drive
2h flight from Buenos Aires; buses available (14h) but fly instead
noneCar rental recommended
Where to Eat
Argentine — Mendocino
- $$$$
Restaurante 1884 — Francis Mallmann
fine dining
- $$$$
Siete Fuegos — The Vines Resort
winery restaurant
Where to Stay in Mendoza
- Luján de Cuyo$$-$$$
Classic Malbec zone, many wineries with restaurants
- Uco Valley$$$
High-altitude premium wines, stunning Andes backdrop
- Mendoza city$-$$
Tree-lined avenues, parrillas, and nightlife
Harvest Festival (Vendimia, March) is a spectacular celebration — book 3+ months ahead
Booking.com
Tours & Experiences
Mendoza, Argentina
Mendoza Malbec experience
Visit 3 bodegas in Luján de Cuyo tasting Argentina's signature grape
Uco Valley high-altitude wine tour
Explore premium high-altitude vineyards with Andes views
Wine Experiences
Visiting Wineries
Winery restaurant reservations (Zuccardi Valle de Uco, Achaval Ferrer) are strongly advised. Standard tastings at many bodegas are available same-day. The harvest festival in March is extremely busy — book everything 2–3 months ahead.
Book ahead: 1–2 weeks for winery restaurants, same-day often OK for basic tastings · Top estates: Catena Zapata, Achaval Ferrer restaurant: 2–4 weeks. Zuccardi Valle de Uco: 3–6 weeks for dining.
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Best Time to Visit Mendoza (Argentina)
February-April
February-April
High during harvest (Mar-Apr), moderate otherwise
Average Monthly High (°C)
Very low (200mm/year)Wines of Mendoza (Argentina)
Key grape varieties and wine styles produced in the region
Primary Grape Varieties
Wine Styles
Food & Dining in Mendoza
Argentine — MendocinoMust-Try Dishes
- Asado (whole-animal barbecue)
- Empanadas mendocinas
- Humita en chala
Where to Eat
- $$$$
Restaurante 1884 — Francis Mallmann
Celebrity chef Francis Mallmann's flagship in a restored Bodega Escorihuela, wood-fire cooking
- $$$$
Siete Fuegos — The Vines Resort
Francis Mallmann's open-fire restaurant at The Vines of Mendoza in Uco Valley
Winery restaurants require reservations, often as part of a tasting experience. Harvest (Feb–Apr) is busiest.
Upcoming Wine Festivals in Regions
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Top areas to stay
- Luján de Cuyo$$-$$$
Classic Malbec zone, many wineries with restaurants
- Uco Valley$$$
High-altitude premium wines, stunning Andes backdrop
- Mendoza city$-$$
Tree-lined avenues, parrillas, and nightlife
Harvest Festival (Vendimia, March) is a spectacular celebration — book 3+ months ahead
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