REVIEW · LAS VEGAS
Las Vegas Wine Tour Experience
Book on Viator →Operated by Las Vegas Wine Tours · Bookable on Viator
Wine touring beats another casino loop. This Las Vegas wine tour mixes Strip glitz with real instruction: you kick off with a luxury bus start and then get sommelier-led tastings that follow a wine-region theme at each stop. It is a fun way to learn what you are drinking without turning the night into a classroom.
I also like how the tour plans food around the wine. You get light sharable bites paired with the pours, and the pacing makes it easier to taste and compare instead of just collecting drinks. The whole thing feels designed for celebration nights, with hosts like Matthew-Lorèn Lindsey (and team members such as Billie and Travis) who pay attention to how the group is doing.
One possible drawback: at $399 per person, it is a splurge. And since the tour includes alcoholic beverages throughout, you will want to pace yourself if you are not a big drinker, or if you simply prefer a lighter evening.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Watch For Before You Go
- Red-Carpet Pickup on the Strip: Champagne and Caviar
- Wine Tastings by Region: The Party Bus Turns Into a Mini Tour Map
- Food Pairings You Can Actually Enjoy: Light Bites, Steak, and Vegan-Friendly Options
- Your Sommelier Host: Learning Without the Pressure
- Timing, Group Size, and Getting Around in About 4 Hours
- Souvenir, Included Drinks, and What $399 Really Covers
- Should You Book This Las Vegas Wine Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Las Vegas wine tour?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- What is included in the $399 per person price?
- Does the tour offer pickup?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What is the group size limit?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key Things I’d Watch For Before You Go

- Red-carpet style bus pickup at the Four Seasons Las Vegas, plus champagne and caviar right away
- Wine-region themed stops where each segment pairs wine with food bites
- Sommelier host guidance as you taste, with options noted for vegan-friendly pairings
- Small group size with a maximum of 24 people
- Souvenir wine tumbler to take home from the experience
- A 4-hour plan starting at 5:00 pm that keeps the night focused and moving
Red-Carpet Pickup on the Strip: Champagne and Caviar
The start is pure Vegas theater, and that matters more than you might think. The tour meets at the Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas (3960 S Las Vegas Blvd) and begins at 5:00 pm, where you head out past the red ropes for a red-carpet moment before boarding a luxury party bus. It is the kind of beginning that turns an ordinary evening into an event.
Once you are on board, you get champagne and caviar. This is not just a prop pour either. It sets the tone, and it gives you a quick sense of what the night’s pace will feel like: relaxed, celebratory, and guided.
Pickup is offered, and the starting point is near public transportation, so you are not totally dependent on a private ride. Still, most people find it easiest to plan to be at the Four Seasons a few minutes early so you are not stressed when the bus departs.
Dress smart-casual. You do not need a tux, but you will feel more comfortable in something that works for a city night and a bus ride. And since you are drinking during the tour, it helps to wear comfortable shoes.
You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Las Vegas
Wine Tastings by Region: The Party Bus Turns Into a Mini Tour Map

Here is the core idea: the tour organizes wine tastings around wine regions, not random “guess what this is” pours. At each stop, you get a themed pairing that connects the wine style to the food bite. The tour description even gives examples of what that can look like: a French-style pairing (like Burgundy), then an Italian varietal paired with Italian fare, and then a bold California Cabernet Sauvignon paired with a steak at a classic American spot.
What I like about this setup for your actual experience is that you can make comparisons in your head. You are not just tasting one wine in isolation. You are seeing how region, varietal style, and food pairing change the flavor story. That makes it easier to remember what you liked and why.
And the wines are part of the package. Alcoholic beverages are included, so you should expect to taste more than a sip. Some reviews mention specific memorable combinations, like a Pino Noir pairing with American Wagyu steak, and a Verduno Pelaverga-related moment that sounded especially special. Use those as inspiration for the kind of quality and pairing focus this tour aims for, not as a guarantee that every bottle will match your exact example.
Each stop also includes light sharable bites. The bites keep things moving and keep your palate from getting overloaded. You get the fun of trying new tastes without needing to commit to a full multi-course dinner plan on your own.
Food Pairings You Can Actually Enjoy: Light Bites, Steak, and Vegan-Friendly Options

Food pairing is where a wine tour can either feel slick or feel real. This one leans toward real: you are eating small, shareable bites designed to match the pours at that moment. In practice, that means each tasting tends to land with a purpose—salt, fat, or savory flavor to support the wine.
The descriptions mention light sharable snacks, and the reviews add a useful detail: vegan options are available. That is a big deal if you are traveling with anyone who does not eat meat, because it reduces the chance that someone gets stuck with bread and water while others get a proper pairing.
You might also get a standout restaurant setting during the route. One review calls out a stop with a view overlooking the Bellagio Fountains, describing it like a once-in-a-lifetime moment. The exact venue can vary by night, but the broader promise is consistent: you are not just hitting generic bars. You are going to restaurants and wine bars that match the tour’s themed, sit-down vibe.
If you love steak pairings, you are likely in luck. The tour plan includes examples like Cabernet with steak, and at least one review highlights American Wagyu as part of a satisfying pairing.
Still, the meals are not meant to replace dinner plans in the usual sense. Think of them as a sequence of tasting bites that add up to a full tasting evening. So if you have a huge appetite, you may want a light meal or snack before the 5:00 pm start, then let the tour carry you from tasting to tasting.
Your Sommelier Host: Learning Without the Pressure

The guide experience is one of the strongest reasons to book. A sommelier host guides every tasting, so you get context as you taste. That is important because wine can get intimidating fast if someone just hands you a glass and says good luck.
Hosts mentioned in reviews include Matthew-Lorèn Lindsey, plus team support like Billie and Travis. What stands out is the tone: warm, personable, and focused on keeping the group engaged and laughing. One birthday story in the feedback mentions Billie singing happy birthday, which tells you the team treats special occasions with real care.
You do not have to be a wine expert. The tour structure does the heavy lifting by pairing wine with food and tying each stop to a region theme. The guidance then helps you notice what changes—how acidity feels with certain bites, how bold reds interact with savory flavors, and why specific varietals work in that moment.
A practical tip: pay attention to what you like early on. If you find a style you enjoy—like a fuller red with steak, or something lighter and food-friendly—remember it. As the night progresses, the comparisons across regions help you narrow down your favorites fast, and that makes the souvenir wine tumbler more than just a random take-home item.
Timing, Group Size, and Getting Around in About 4 Hours

This is an approximate 4-hour experience with a 5:00 pm start, finishing back at the meeting point. That timing is convenient if you are already planning a Strip evening. You can go in early, do this as your main event, and then decide afterward if you want to continue exploring on your own.
Group size is capped at a maximum of 24. In my book, that is a sweet spot: small enough to keep things personal, large enough that the bus and restaurant stops still feel lively.
Because you are moving around the Strip, you should expect normal city timing. You are in a party bus, which helps. The bus acts like a rolling lounge, and the champagne-and-caviar start makes the early minutes feel like a party rather than a transit shuffle.
Also note the tour is offered in English. Mobile tickets are used, which reduces the hassle of printing and helps you stay organized on a busy night.
If you have a tight schedule—like you must be somewhere at a certain time after the tour—build in a buffer. Even though it ends back at the meeting point, you still want time to disembark, walk, and get a ride back.
Souvenir, Included Drinks, and What $399 Really Covers

Let’s talk value, because $399 is not pocket change. Here is what you actually get for that price: light sharable bites, a guide and sommelier host, and wine plus other alcoholic beverages during the tour. You also get a commemorative wine tumbler to take home, which is a nice physical reminder that the night was more than just a quick tasting stop.
You also get transport via the luxury party bus experience, plus the guided structure that takes you to multiple restaurants and wine bars without you having to plan every reservation and pairing. In Las Vegas, that last part is huge. Coordinating drinks, food, and timing on your own can turn into chaos fast.
If you are the type of person who likes to learn, this tour helps you do it in a practical way. You are not studying labels for fun. You are tasting with explanations and then moving to the next region-based pairing.
One more value note: the tour is commonly booked about 20 days in advance on average. That suggests demand is real, especially for evenings that line up with birthdays and anniversaries. If you are aiming for a specific date, try not to wait until the last week.
If you want a low-alcohol or strictly non-drinking experience, this may not be the best match, because alcoholic beverages are included and the tour is built around tasting wine through the evening.
Should You Book This Las Vegas Wine Tour?

Book it if you want a guided, food-and-wine focused night that feels special from the moment you arrive. The red-carpet bus start, the champagne and caviar opener, and the region-themed tastings led by a sommelier host create a clear reason to spend your evening beyond walking the Strip.
It is also a strong choice for celebrations. Reviews mention birthdays and anniversaries, and the hosts appear to treat those moments with extra attention, not just a generic check-in.
Skip or rethink if $399 per person feels too steep for your style, or if you do not want an alcohol-forward plan. And if you prefer solo, unstructured exploring where you set your own pace and stop wherever you want, this tour will feel more like a planned night than a free-for-all.
If you fall into the sweet spot—wine curiosity, a taste for good pairing food, and a desire for a polished Vegas night—this is one of the easier ways to do it without turning your trip into a logistics project.
FAQ

How long is the Las Vegas wine tour?
The tour is about 4 hours.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas, 3960 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89119, USA and ends back at the meeting point.
What is included in the $399 per person price?
It includes a guide and sommelier host, light sharable snacks paired with the wines, and alcoholic beverages (wines) on the tour, plus a commemorative wine tumbler souvenir.
Does the tour offer pickup?
Yes, pickup is offered.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, it is offered in English.
What is the group size limit?
The tour has a maximum of 24 people.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.




























