Walla Walla is one of the great American wine regions — and it's 4.5 hours southeast of Seattle. That makes it a genuine getaway, not an afternoon out. We chauffeur the long drive over the pass so you arrive relaxed, not road-weary, and we structure the trip three honest ways depending on whether you want the vehicle with you the whole time or just for the journey. For a Seattle-area wine afternoon, Woodinville is the right call. For a serious wine weekend, this is it.
Walla Walla is ~270 miles / 4.5–5 hours each way from Seattle. A round trip is 9–10 hours of driving alone — so this is an overnight destination, realistically 2–3 nights, not a day trip. If you want a wine day close to Seattle, our Woodinville wine tour is 30 minutes from downtown. This page is for the dedicated Walla Walla getaway.
The distance means there's no single "right" way to do a chauffeured Walla Walla trip — it depends on whether you want the vehicle with you the whole time. Here are the three honest structures, with what each actually costs and what it's best for. We'll tell you which fits your budget and group.
We chauffeur you out, the vehicle returns to Seattle, and comes back to collect you at trip end. You handle in-region tasting transport.
The chauffeur and vehicle stay with you the entire trip — dedicated for tasting loops, winery appointments, dinners, and the drive home.
Chauffeured one direction, fly the other on the short SEA–ALW route. The scenic splurge out, the one-hour flight home.
The Walla Walla Valley AVA isn't one place — it's a walkable downtown tasting scene plus several outlying districts, each with its own character, including a famous sub-AVA just over the Oregon line. Here's the lay of the land so you know where you want to spend your tasting days.
The historic, walkable town center — dozens of tasting rooms within a few blocks of Main Street, alongside excellent restaurants and hotels.
The easiest district by far — park once (or get dropped) and walk between tasting rooms. Ideal for an arrival evening or a no-driving day. Strong dining and lodging make it the natural home base.
The working winemaking districts — many producers operate tasting rooms in the airport-area incubator district and the south side of town.
Where a lot of the actual wine is made. The airport district in particular is a cluster of small, serious producers in former military buildings — a favorite for enthusiasts who want to meet winemakers. Best reached with a vehicle.
East of town toward the foothills — estate wineries with vineyard views, set among the rolling wheat-and-vine landscape Walla Walla is known for.
The scenic-vineyard experience — estate tasting rooms with views, more spread out, the postcard Walla Walla landscape. Rewards a dedicated driving day or the vehicle-stays package.
A famous sub-AVA just across the Oregon line in Milton-Freewater — defined by its distinctive basalt-cobblestone soils.
One of the most talked-about terroirs in the country — the cobblestone soils produce a distinctive, savory Syrah that's drawn national attention. A must for serious wine travelers. Technically in Oregon, ~15 minutes south of downtown Walla Walla.
A chauffeured Walla Walla trip is a premium choice, not the economical one — and we'd rather you book the right thing than feel oversold. Here's our honest take on when the chauffeur earns its cost for a trip this far, and when driving yourself makes more sense.
This is the longest road trip in our service — vehicle comfort matters more here than anywhere. The SUV is the practical choice for couples and small groups; the Sprinter is worth it for larger parties who'll spend nearly five hours together each way.
For a couple's wine-country weekend — an anniversary, a milestone trip. Comfortable for two over the long drive, lowest transfer cost. The classic romantic Walla Walla getaway vehicle.
The practical choice for a small group of friends or two couples. Room for luggage and the wine you'll bring home, comfortable seating for the long haul, captain's chairs and climate control. The sweet spot for a Walla Walla weekend.
For a larger group making a weekend of it. Standing-height cabin and room to spread out matter a lot over a 4.5-hour drive — plus a big cargo bay for everyone's luggage and the cases of wine coming home. The comfortable group option.
Every Walla Walla trip includes these. Hotel, winery fees, in-region tasting transport (except in the vehicle-stays package), and chauffeur lodging (vehicle-stays only) are separate and quoted clearly. Gratuity (20% standard) is on top.
"For our 25th anniversary we did the vehicle-stays package — three days in Walla Walla with the same chauffeur the whole time. He drove us out, ran every tasting loop including the Rocks District over in Oregon, got us to dinner reservations, and drove us home. Neither of us drove or thought about logistics for three days. It wasn't cheap, and they were upfront about that — but for the occasion it was exactly right."
Honest answers about a Walla Walla trip — the distance, cost, the three structures, the region, whether to drive yourself, in-region tasting, and timing. Anything not covered, call 206-512-8766.
Tell us your dates, group size, and which structure appeals — or just tell us what you want from the trip and we'll recommend the right fit. We quote each Walla Walla trip individually because the variables are real. Book 4–8 weeks ahead, more for harvest season.