Guebwiller
Guebwiller, home of the four-Grand-Cru Schlumberger estate, runs its wine fair in late August in the town centre. Growers pour Kessler, Kitterle, Saering and Spiegel Grand Cru flights alongside Cremant cuvees.
Tip: Pair the fair with a Schlumberger cellar visit if you can land one; Guebwiller's four Grand Crus are all worked by the Schlumberger estate.
Wettolsheim
The Wettolsheim wine fair takes the small village just south of Colmar through August with a marquee on the central square. Growers from Hengst and Steingrubler Grand Cru parcels pour alongside the village cooperative.
Tip: Wettolsheim makes a quieter alternative base to crowded Colmar in August; cycle in across the vineyards via Wintzenheim or Eguisheim.
Eguisheim
Eguisheim, the circular medieval village south of Colmar, hosts the Fete des Vignerons on the last August weekend, with growers pouring along the colombages. Eichberg and Pfersigberg Grands Crus lead the lineup.
Tip: Eguisheim is classified among the Plus Beaux Villages de France; arrive early to wander the rings of the medieval centre before the festival fills the streets.
Wine route villages
Across August to October weekends, villages from Bennwihr to Mittelbergheim, Eguisheim and Kaysersberg run sentiers gourmands, timed walks through the vines with successive courses and matched glasses at each grower stop.
Tip: Book ahead since spots are capped; Mittelbergheim's run through the Zotzenberg Grand Cru is one of the steeper and more sought-after walks in the season.
Kaysersberg-Vignoble
Kaysersberg holds its grower festival in early September around the old town centre and the Albert Schweitzer house. Producers from Kaysersberg, Kientzheim and Ammerschwihr pour Schlossberg Grand Cru flights and Pinot Noir.
Tip: Schlossberg was France's first Alsace Grand Cru in 1975, so this is the festival to taste a side-by-side of producers working the same historic vineyard.
Dambach-la-Ville to Bergheim
On the first Sunday of June, 38 km of the wine route between Dambach-la-Ville and Bergheim closes to motorised traffic. Over 40,000 cyclists ride the loop with 13 festive stops, tastings and food stands.
Tip: The 2026 edition is on 7 June, the 12th running of the event; it is free to ride but bring a sensible bike since the route includes vineyard climbs.