
Mornington Peninsula
Ringed by two bays and the Southern Ocean, the Mornington Peninsula is where Melbourne's winemakers built a cool-climate world 90 minutes from the CBD: the closest thing Victoria has to Burgundy by the sea.
Experiences
8 itineraries matching your filters
Dreamscape Tours
Dreamscape Tours
Group winery tours across Melbourne's four wine regions — party bus, host and lunch sorted.
Duration
Full day
Wine Compass
Wine Compass
Tailored private and small-group wine tours — Heathcote, Yarra Valley and Mornington.
Duration
Full day
Epicurean Tours
Epicurean Tours
Premium small-group Yarra Valley and Mornington food and wine tours.
Duration
Full day
Wine Hop and Coastal Tours
Wine Hop and Coastal Tours
Family-owned, locally rooted — 8 hours across the Peninsula's best cellar doors, lunch included.
Duration
Full day
Great Private Tours
Great Private Tours
Private winery tours from Melbourne in a Mercedes — Mornington Peninsula, Yarra Valley, and beyond.
Duration
Full day
Elite Day Tours
Elite Day Tours
Helicopter winery lunches, luxury yacht tours, and private wine experiences across Victoria.
Duration
Full day
Winery Day Tours
Winery Day Tours
Driver only, tastings included, or the full food and wine package — the Yarra Valley at three price points.
Duration
Full day
Capacity
Max 60
Red Carpet Wine Tours
Red Carpet Wine Tours
Five Yarra Valley wineries, all tastings covered, $109 — daily from Federation Square.
Duration
Full day
The Dossier
The Peninsula is 90 minutes south of Melbourne via the Mornington Peninsula Freeway, or a leisurely ferry ride from Docklands on a summer weekend. Red Hill is the unofficial hub; the ridge road between Red Hill and Main Ridge passes more cellar doors per kilometre than almost anywhere in Australia. Accommodation is strong and a two-day visit starts to feel like the minimum once you arrive.
Summer (December to February) is hectic with beach traffic; experienced visitors come in March and April when harvest is on, the crowds thin, and the light turns golden over the bay. October and November are the Peninsula at its most photogenic: flowering orchards alongside budbursting vines. July and August are the insiders' months: oysters from the bay, open fireplaces, and cellar door staff who actually have time to talk.
Pinot Noir is the prestige varietal: the Peninsula's maritime influence and volcanic soils produce examples that regularly outperform wines twice their price internationally. Pinot Gris and Chardonnay are strong supporting acts. The food and produce scene is exceptional: the Red Hill markets, a string of hatted restaurants sourcing from vineyards next door, and a general sense that this is a peninsula that takes its eating seriously. Cellar doors here are polished; the tasting experiences tend to match the quality of the wine.