Napa Valley may be famous for vineyard estates and scenic drives, but downtown Napa makes a strong case for staying put. The heart of the city has enough food, wine, culture and riverfront activity to stand as a destination of its own. For travelers who want the wine-country experience without spending the entire trip in a car, downtown Napa offers at least six reasons to visit this summer.
Napa Farmers Market Is Worth The Trip Alone
In 2026, Napa Farmers Market is celebrating its 40th anniversary, marking four decades of operation since it began in 1986.
The market takes place at 1100 West Street in downtown Napa. Rain or shine, it runs from 8 a.m. to noon every Saturday and Tuesday from April 7 through December 22, 2026.
Over the years, Napa Farmers Market has become a dedicated community that supports 37 family farmers and 101 small businesses, including 64 Napa-based farms and businesses. It also provides a place and an opportunity for over 40 nonprofit, community and government organizations to connect directly with locals and visitors.
Seasonal fruit, fresh bread, flowers, specialty foods and genuine connection are what Napa Farmers Market offers to each visitor. Since three-quarters of market goers are residents, the market offers a genuine snapshot of daily life in the valley.
Walkable Wine Tasting Rooms Are Everywhere
While Napa Valley is famous for requiring a car to drive from estate to estate, downtown Napa offers a different pace. With more than 50 boutique tasting rooms within a few walkable city blocks, visitors can build a full wine-country day without a car.
Vin en Noir turns the traditional wine tasting room experience on its head. This female-run space celebrates diversity in the wine industry by focusing exclusively on underrepresented winemakers.
A few blocks away, Brown Downtown is the tasting room for Brown Estate, widely recognized as Napa Valley's first Black-owned estate winery. Its downtown tasting room gives visitors a more accessible way to experience its wine selection.
The Oxbow District has several tasting rooms and visitors can effortlessly combine food with wine without leaving the neighborhood. Oxbow Public Market is its focal point, where restaurants, local vendors, produce stalls andspecialty food shops await locals and visitors.
For visitors who still want to experience the valley without renting a car, the Napa Valley Wine Train offers a memorable alternative. Its station is just a few blocks from Oxbow Public Market, where scenic wine-country excursions start before rolling north through the valley.
This June Event Turns Downtown Napa Into A Dinner Party
For travelers planning an early summer visit, The Napa Table on June 6, 2026, offers a unique wine-and-dine experience. Tickets are still available through Downtown Napa's event page.
This year's event, now in its fifth year, invites 400 guests to dine at one long table in downtown Napa, with local wines paired with a chef-curated menu. It is the kind of evening that turns the city's walkable food-and-wine scene into a communal dinner party.
Restaurants Give Downtown Napa Another Reason To Linger
Talking about dinner, the greater Napa Valley region has 17 restaurants listed in the MICHELIN guide, including five Michelin-starred restaurants.
One of them is Kenzo, on Pearl Street in downtown Napa, bringing an authentic Japanese kaiseki experience to the heart of the city. It first earned a Michelin star in 2017 and has held the distinction for eight consecutive years.
La Toque is a longtime fine-dining destination on McKinstry Street, listed as Michelin Recommended. It serves contemporary French cuisine built around seasonal ingredients and wine pairings.
However, Napa is more than fine dining. The recent opening of Stateline Road Smokehouse in the Rail Arts District certainly brings new energy to the city. Chef and co-owner Darryl Bell, a Kansas native, is the first black restaurateur in Napa since the 1800s, bringing Kansas City-style barbecue prepared in 20-foot-long, custom-built smokers to downtown.
The Napa River Is More Than A Backdrop
Downtown Napa's riverfront gives visitors another way to experience the city.
At Main Street Boat Dock, visitors can get on the water through Duffy-style boat cruises, kayak rentals and guided paddling tours, all departing from the heart of downtown.
A little Italy in Napa, Napa Valley Gondola offers private Venetian-style gondola rides on the Napa River. Standard gondola cruises last about 55 minutes and accommodate up to six guests. It allows passengers to bring wine, Champagne or other beverages aboard.
The Napa River and Bay Trail is a paved pedestrian and bicycle path that connects downtown Napa at Third Street with the wetland areas and green spaces farther south.
Victorian Architecture Is Hidden In Plain Sight
Downtown Napa is home to some of the most beautifully preserved 19th-century architecture in California. A walk around the perimeter of Fuller Park is a living architectural tour.
The neighborhood is full of perfectly preserved Victorian, Queen Anne, and Craftsman-style homes. For history lovers, the city is also home to the Goodman Library, built in 1901, the oldest building in California still operating as a library today.
Napa Valley Opera House, a restored 1879 building at 1030 Main Street, remains one of the city's most recognizable historic buildings. Its JaM Cellars Ballroom is the main venue for music and performing arts, seating up to 650 people.
