Paso Robles Wineries

The Best Family-Friendly Wineries in Paso Robles

family-friendly-wineries-paso-robles

Paso Robles doesn’t force you to choose between wine tasting and having your kids with you. Here are the wineries that genuinely welcome families.

When people imagine wine country, they often picture a scenario that feels exclusive to adults — quiet tasting rooms, whispered wine conversations, and zero tolerance for the sound of a child asking “how much longer?” But Paso Robles wasn’t built by exclusivity. It was built on community, and that community includes families.

The good news: several of Paso’s most distinctive wineries have created legitimate family experiences. Not “tolerate the kids in the corner” setups. Real experiences where children have space to move, spaces that appeals to them, and options that feel thoughtful rather than like an afterthought. Some have sprawling estates with lawns perfect for running. Others sit beside vineyard settings where kids can understand where grapes grow. A few have created entire activity programs that consider what families actually want.

This guide highlights the wineries where your kids won’t be the awkward addition to your afternoon — they’ll be part of why you chose that stop.

What Makes a Winery Family-Friendly (Beyond “Kids Welcome”)

Before we get to the list, let’s define what we mean. A family-friendly winery in Paso isn’t just one that doesn’t ask you to leave. It’s one that actively thinks about the family experience:

The wineries below deliver most or all of these. Hours and policies change seasonally, so when you plan your visit, call ahead or check their website for current details.

Sculpterra
Courtesy of Sculpterra

Sculpterra Winery & Sculpture Garden

When it comes to genuine family experiences in Paso Robles wine country, Sculpterra Winery & Sculpture Garden stands in a category of its own. Set on a 260-acre estate on Paso’s Eastside, Sculpterra has designed their grounds with families front and center — not as an afterthought.

The outdoor sculpture garden is the main event for kids: oversized bronze and granite sculptures invite hands-on exploration, and the winery runs a self-guided scavenger hunt that sends children hunting through the grounds while parents settle in with a glass. The dedicated outdoor activity area adds bocce ball, foosball, table tennis, a giant kaleidoscope, and sidewalk chalk. On weekends, rotating food trucks set up on the property and live music fills the open-air space — which means a full afternoon destination, not just a tasting room stop.

The wines are genuinely worth your attention, too. Sculpterra produces a broad portfolio of estate-grown varieties from Cabernet Sauvignon and Zinfandel to Tempranillo and Grenache, all crafted with a direct, fruit-forward style that works well for visitors who aren’t wine insiders.

Must-Try for Families:
Time your visit for a weekend when food trucks and live music are on — it transforms the stop from a tasting into an afternoon. The sculpture scavenger hunt keeps kids occupied long enough for parents to actually taste wine thoughtfully.

Address: 5015 Linne Rd, Paso Robles, CA 93446
Hours: Daily 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Tasting Fee: $25 per person, complimentary tastings for club members
Kid-Friendly Notes: Dedicated sculpture garden and play areas, weekend food trucks, weekend live music, dog-friendly. Widely regarded as Paso’s most family-friendly winery experience. Walk-ins welcome.

CASS Winery & Cafe

Cass Winery

Cass Winery occupies a beautiful estate along the rural backroads of Paso’s Geneseo District — a 145-acre working vineyard with a Spanish hacienda-style barn and a tasting room that’s spacious, contemporary, and genuinely welcoming to families. The CASS Café serves a full lunch menu daily, including wood-fired pizzas, salads, and artisan charcuterie boards — making it easy to turn your wine tasting into a proper afternoon out.

What sets Cass apart for active families is their Camp CASS program: archery and axe throwing classes run Friday through Sunday (ages 13+, $75/person), alongside e-bike tours, cooking classes, wine blending sessions, and horseback riding. If your crew has different energy levels, some can dive into the activities while others settle in with a glass of estate Rhône on the patio. Cass specializes in Rhône varietals — Syrah, Grenache, Mourvèdre, Viognier, and Roussanne — grown from 145 sustainably farmed acres. The style is expressive and approachable, which works well for mixed-experience groups.

Must-Try for Families:
Book an archery or axe throwing session in advance to guarantee a spot — these classes fill up on weekends. While you’re at it, grab a pizza at the CASS Café and make a proper afternoon of it.

Address: 7350 Linne Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446
Hours: Daily 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Tasting Fee: $25 per person, waived with 2-bottle purchase
Kid-Friendly Notes: Camp CASS activities (archery, axe throwing, e-bikes, more), full on-site café, open estate grounds, dog-friendly, family-welcoming. Activity reservations recommended for weekends.

Pear Valley Estate

Pear Valley Estate

Pear Valley Estate is a 113-acre hilltop estate in the Geneseo District, and the panoramic views from the tasting room alone are worth the drive down Union Road. The family behind Pear Valley has specifically thought about what it takes to make wine tasting work with children. They have a picnic area, welcome outside food, and genuinely don’t treat kids as distractions. The grounds are open and unhurried, which matters when you’re trying to enjoy both a wine flight and the family you brought along.

What makes Pear Valley truly distinctive is its wine program: they grow an extraordinary 28+ estate grape varieties spanning Rhône, Bordeaux, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish traditions. For adults, this means wines you genuinely won’t find anywhere else in the region — think Charbono, Aglianico, Nero d’Avola, and Tinta Cao alongside Cabernet Sauvignon and Grenache. They’ve been named Central Coast Winery of the Year twice, which tells you the quality is real. For families, it means there’s always something new to talk about and discover across multiple visits.

Must-Try for Families:
Ask the tasting room staff for their most unusual varietals — the Italian and Portuguese grapes are conversation starters even for experienced wine drinkers. The picnic grounds make a natural lunch stop if you’re making a day of the Eastside.

Address: 4900 Union Road, Paso Robles, CA 93446
Hours: Daily 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM
Tasting Fee: $20 per person, waived with wine purchase
Kid-Friendly Notes: Picnic-friendly setting, outside food welcome, panoramic hilltop grounds, low-key and welcoming atmosphere, 28+ varietals to explore across repeat visits.

Lone Madrone

Lone Madrone

Lone Madrone is a family winery in the truest sense: founded by acclaimed winemaker Neil Collins and his wife Marci in 1996, and now a multigenerational operation with his son Jordan making wine and sister Jackie Meisinger handling sales. That family-run spirit shows up in how they treat visitors — warmly, without pretense, and with genuine interest in people who show up curious about wine.

Located off Highway 46 West in Templeton’s Willow Creek District, the winery partners exclusively with storied Paso Robles Westside vineyards — including Klau Mine Vineyards (farmed by the Dodd family for over 140 years) and the historic Osgood Vineyards. The result is wines with real terroir character: Zinfandel, Cabernet, and Syrah made in a style that prioritizes drinkability and authenticity over showmanship.

Kitchen 46, Chef Jeffery Scott’s on-site kitchen, serves lunch Saturday and Sunday (11 AM–3 PM), Happy Hour Fridays (4–7 PM), and popular monthly events including Burger Sundays (one Sunday per month, March through November) and Frites Night (first Wednesday of the month, May through November).

Must-Try for Families:
Time your visit for a Burger Sunday — the combination of excellent food, relaxed outdoor seating, and approachable wines makes it one of Paso’s genuinely great family afternoons. Check their events calendar before you go.

Address: 3750 Hwy 46 West, Templeton, CA 93465
Hours: Thursday–Sunday 10:30 AM – 5:00 PM
Tasting Fee: $10–$15 range
Kid-Friendly Notes: Relaxed family-run atmosphere, on-site kitchen with weekend lunch and monthly events, Adirondack chairs and outdoor seating, dog-friendly. Call ahead to confirm Burger Sunday dates.

Copia Vineyards – Walking Tour

Copia Vineyards & Winery

Copia Vineyards sits on the Adelaida District’s rolling terrain, and the setting itself is part of the appeal for families. The estate has open grounds and a panoramic patio tasting room that feels spacious and relaxed. The family behind Copia — Anita and Varinder Sahi — has built a winery that takes pride in welcoming all visitors, not just wine experts. The wines focus on Rhône and Bordeaux varietals crafted from both their Adelaida District and Willow Creek estate vineyards.

The tasting experience happens at a comfortable, unhurried pace where kids can move comfortably. Copia’s new walking tour begins with a greeting wine and a walk through our estate grounds. You’ll also sip a selection of their award-winning wines along the way. The estate’s calm, welcoming atmosphere makes it feel less like a commercial operation and more like visiting a vineyard you actually know.

Must-Try for Families:
Their estate Rhône blends are a great introduction to what the Adelaida District does best. For non-drinkers, ask about a stroll through the estate — the views across the sustainably farmed vineyards are worth the stop alone.

Address: 5076 Mustard Creek Rd, Paso Robles, CA 93446
Hours: Mon & Thu 11:00 AM – 3:45 PM; Fri–Sun 10:00 AM – 3:30 PM (check online for current hours)
Tasting Fee: $25 per person, waived with bottle purchase
Kid-Friendly Notes: Panoramic outdoor patio, family-welcoming atmosphere. Closed Tuesday–Wednesday. Call ahead in summer to confirm afternoon hours during heat.

Graveyard Vineyards

Graveyard Vineyards

Don’t let the name fool you: Graveyard Vineyards is one of the warmest, most welcoming stops on the Pleasant Valley Wine Trail. Founded by Rob and Paula Campbell-Taylor in 2003, this family-owned winery in San Miguel takes its name from the historic Pleasant Valley Cemetery that’s been on the property since the 1860s — a piece of genuine local history that actually gives kids something to ask questions about.

The setting is pure Paso charm: perched on an oak-studded hilltop overlooking the Estrella District, the tasting room features an impressive two-story stone fireplace and lakeside views that make every season feel right. The atmosphere is casual and storytelling-friendly — exactly the kind of place where a relaxed family afternoon unfolds naturally.

Walk-ins are welcome, the tasting fee is a reasonable $20, and the portfolio covers a lot of ground: robust reds, elegant whites, dessert wines, and sparkling options including their standout “The Ascender” — a French Colombard and Chenin Blanc blend with bright white peach and apple character that makes an excellent non-intimidating pour for newcomers.

Must-Try for Families: “The Ascender” sparkling wine is the perfect conversation starter and a crowd-pleaser for visitors who aren’t yet deep into red wine territory. Winter visits are especially cozy — that stone fireplace earns its keep on cool Paso afternoons. On warmer days bring picnics and take advantage of the unique catch-and-release fish pond.

Address: 6990 Estrella Road, San Miguel, CA 93451
Hours: Check their website for current hours; walk-ins are welcome
Tasting Fee: $20 per person, no reservations required
Kid-Friendly Notes: Casual family-owned atmosphere, historic on-site cemetery provides natural curiosity for older kids, lakeside views, dog-friendly, walk-ins welcome. Pairs naturally with a stop at nearby Four Sisters Ranch for a full Pleasant Valley afternoon.


Planning a Family Wine Tasting Day

If you’re planning a full day with kids in Paso Robles wine country, here’s how to make it work:

Start early. Kids have the most energy and patience in the morning. Aim for your first winery between 10am and 11am.

Pick two to three wineries maximum. Don’t try to cover six stops with kids. The quality of the experience matters far more than the number of tasting rooms you check off.

Cluster geographically. Group your stops so you’re not driving across the region every 30 minutes. Eastside estates like Cass, Pear Valley, and Four Sisters Ranch cluster naturally. Sculpterra sits between downtown and the Eastside. Lone Madrone anchors a Westside loop.

Schedule around meal times. If your kids get hangry, plan lunch at a winery with food — the CASS Café and Lone Madrone’s Kitchen 46 are your best bets — or pack a picnic for Pear Valley’s hilltop grounds. Don’t try to squeeze visits around irregular hunger schedules.

Bring water and sunscreen. Even family-friendly wineries in Paso involve heat and sun exposure. Kids dehydrate faster than adults, and the afternoon sun here is no joke in summer.

Check hours before you go. Some of the smaller, more family-friendly wineries operate on limited schedules. A 30-minute detour to find a closed tasting room ends the day badly for everyone.

Let kids choose one activity or wine to taste. They’ll remember the day better if they had actual agency in the experience, not just tagged along on your itinerary.

Beyond the Tasting Room: Other Kid-Friendly Options

If wine tasting feels like the wrong fit for your specific group, Paso has other family-friendly activities that pair well with the wine country setting:

These options make it possible to spend a full weekend in Paso Robles with kids where wine is part of the experience, not the entire point.

Logistics: What to Know Before You Go

Ages and restrictions: Most of these wineries welcome kids of any age, but some activities (like archery and axe throwing at Cass) have age minimums. Always confirm when you book.

Tasting fees: When kids aren’t participating in wine tastings, fees are typically waived. A few places charge a nominal fee for non-tasting family members. Ask upfront.

Reservation policies: Weekends and summer fill quickly. Cass Camp activities especially require advance booking. Smaller operations sometimes operate by appointment only. Call ahead to avoid disappointment.

Heat management: Summer temperatures in Paso regularly exceed 95°F. Many wineries have shade, but not all. If you’re visiting June through September, ask about shaded tasting areas or indoor options.

Dietary needs: If your family has dietary restrictions or allergies, mention them when you book or call ahead. Many wineries can accommodate, but some smaller operations need advance notice.

Restrooms: All the wineries listed have facilities, but if you have very young children, ask about changing tables when you call ahead. Not all have them.

The Real Reason Paso Robles Works for Families

Paso Robles wine country doesn’t have the polished, intimidating energy of Napa. It was built by people actually trying to make wine here, not people trying to build an aspirational experience. That philosophy extends to how the region treats families.

When you visit one of these wineries with your kids, you’re not imposing yourself on an exclusive experience. You’re joining a community that actually wants you here — kids, noise, questions about why grapes turn into wine, and all. That’s the real Paso Robles difference.

Plan your visit with the winery map, check a few hours ahead to confirm current information, and give yourself permission to leave early if the kids hit the wall. The best family wine country days are the ones where everyone actually enjoys themselves, not the ones where you power through until everyone’s exhausted.

Ready to Plan Your Family Trip?

Start with the Paso Robles winery directory to see complete listings. Then download the wine tasting map to plan your route. Looking for more family activities beyond wine? Check out our guide to things to do in Paso Robles, which includes non-wine options that work well for groups with kids.

And if you need a place to stay that welcomes families, browse the lodging directory — many properties offer family-friendly rooms and amenities.

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