January Reset: The World’s Top Wine Spas to Begin the Year in Balance (Part II)

If Part l explored the icons, Part ll turns toward places where wine spas feel almost monastic, deeply rooted in land, tradition, and quiet luxury. These destinations reward slow travel and reflective itineraries, making them especially compelling the first few months of the new year!

From the Douro Valley to Burgundy and Sonoma, these wine spas prove that wellness doesn’t need reinvention, only intention.

6. Quinta da Pacheca – Douro Valley, Portugal

Why it’s unforgettable

Red wine baths, barrel-shaped suites, and sweeping river valley views define this historic estate.

Why January, February and even March works

The Douro is hushed and atmospheric, ideal for contemplation and unhurried indulgence.

Recommended January–March
3 night itinerary

A cozy three‑night winter retreat featuring wine‑infused spa rituals (including a red wine bath), private wine and port cellar tastings, and quiet walks along the terraced Douro. Firelit evenings and a gentle river cruise create a warm, restorative start to the year.

Website: https://www.quintadapacheca.com

7. Herdade da Malhadinha Nova – Alentejo, Portugal

Why Herdade da Malhadinha Nova is distinctive

This is a design-forward estate that emphasizes sustainability, privacy, and holistic wellness within its vineyards and olive groves.

Why are January, February and March ideal

Cool temperatures and golden winter light make outdoor walks and spa time especially restorative.

Recommended January–April
3 night itinerary

A serene early‑year escape blending botanical spa treatments, horseback rides through open countryside, and farm‑to‑table dining. Hands‑on culinary sessions and sunset vineyard moments bring softness and creativity to the three‑night stay.

Website: https://malhadinhanova.com

8. Castillo Monasterio Valbuena – Ribera del Duero, Spain

Why is Castillo Monasterio Valbuena remarkable

A 12th-century monastery transformed into a wine spa where thermal waters echo centuries of contemplation.

Why the winter months enhance this wine estate

Winter amplifies the sense of history and solitude.

Recommended January–April
3 night itinerary

A tranquil winter wellness retreat with thermal‑circuit relaxation, Tempranillo‑based vinotherapy, and guided visits to top Ribera del Duero bodegas. Monastery quietude and riverfront strolls set a deeply calming rhythm.

Website: https://www.castillomonasteriovalbuena.com

9. Hotel Le Cep Spa — Beaune, Burgundy, France

Why does Hotel Le Cep Spa belong on this list

There are three good reasons: Pinot Noir-based treatments in the intellectual heart of Burgundy, and steps from legendary cellars.

Why are the winter months perfect

Burgundy becomes introspective, offering meaningful tastings without distraction.

Recommended January–April
3 night itinerary

A refined three‑night immersion in Burgundy’s winter charm, centered on personalized spa rituals (including a grape-extract facial), intimate tastings at historic domains, and wandering Beaune’s medieval streets. A sophisticated, slow‑paced seasonal escape.

Website: https://www.hotel-lecep.com

10. Kenwood Inn & Spa — Sonoma, California, USA

Why it endures

A Mediterranean-inspired retreat offering quiet luxury in Sonoma’s rolling hills.

Why the early months of the year deliver

Cool air, empty tasting rooms, and a slower pace define wine country at its most authentic.

Recommended January–April
3 night itinerary

A gentle winter‑into‑spring retreat offering vineyard‑sourced treatments, heated outdoor pools, and private tastings at boutique Sonoma wineries. Sunlit terraces and scenic valley drives add relaxed California warmth to the stay.

Website: https://www.kenwoodinn.com

Wine spas represent a shift in wine tourism, from consumption to connection, from indulgence to balance. The first months of the year and particularly January, with its emphasis on renewal, is when these destinations feel most honest and most powerful.

Taken together, these ten wine spas show how wellness and wine culture can coexist beautifully – rooted in place, shaped by tradition, and designed for travelers who value depth over display.

Your January 2026 reset begins here!

January 2026 Reset: Top Wine Spas to Start the Year in Balance (Part I)

January is the quiet inhale after the excess of the holiday season. Vineyards lie dormant [depending on the hemisphere] travel slows, and intention replaces indulgence. It’s the moment when wine travellers stop chasing novelty and start seeking meaning, and this is where wine spas come into their own.

Wine spas sit at the intersection of wellness and terroir. Drawing on vinotherapy, treatments that use grape skins, seeds, vine extracts, and mineral‑rich waters, they offer an experience that is restorative rather than performative. These destinations don’t simply pamper; they recalibrate.

Part One of this two‑part series explores five of the world’s most iconic wine spas, each offering a January escape that blends vineyard culture, spa science, and place‑driven calm.

  1. Les Sources de Caudalie – Bordeaux, France

Why Les Sources de Caudalie leads the category

Often cited as the birthplace of modern vinotherapy, Les Sources de Caudalie is woven into the vineyards of Château Smith Haut Lafitte. Treatments are grounded in rigorous research into grape polyphenols and antioxidants, delivering results without theatrics.

Why winter matters here

Winter in Bordeaux is reflective and restrained. With fewer visitors, tastings become conversations, and spa rituals feel deeply personal.

Recommended January–April
3‑night itinerary

A three‑day stay at Les Sources de Caudalie is designed around gentle immersion. Day one begins with arrival among the vines, followed by a vinotherapy bath and grape‑seed body wrap to unwind after travel. Day two balances wellness and wine culture: a morning facial using grape extracts, a private château tasting in the afternoon, and an elegant dinner paired with Bordeaux crus. Day three is deliberately unhurried, with a final spa ritual, a walk through the winter vineyards, and a relaxed lunch before departure – restored rather than rushed.

Website: https://www.sources-caudalie.com

  1. ADLER Thermae Spa & Relax Resort – Tuscany, Italy

Why it’s exceptional

Set in the Val d’Orcia, ADLER Thermae merges ancient thermal bathing traditions with vineyard‑inspired wellness. The landscape includes rolling hills, stone villages, and winter light – quite magical.

Why go early in the year

Steam rises from outdoor thermal pools as frost settles over the vineyards, creating one of Tuscany’s most cinematic winter moments.

Recommended February–April
3‑night itinerary

At ADLER Thermae, three days unfold at a Tuscan pace. Day one centres on the thermal pools and a grape‑infused massage, best enjoyed outdoors as steam rises against the Val d’Orcia hills. Day two ventures beyond the spa with a guided Brunello di Montalcino tasting, returning for vinotherapy facials and yoga. The final day is reserved for slow rituals – thermal soaking, countryside walks, and a long, unhurried Tuscan lunch that allows body and mind to recalibrate before departure.

Website: https://www.adler-thermae.com

  1. Royal Champagne Hotel & Spa – Champagne, France

Why it belongs on this list

Royal Champagne redefines Champagne tourism through wellness. The spa is contemporary and expansive, with vineyard panoramas that reframe the region beyond celebration.

Why visit early in the year

The region slows dramatically after the holidays, offering intimate cellar visits and uninterrupted spa time.

Recommended January–April
3‑night itinerary

A three‑day escape at Royal Champagne blends restraint with indulgence. Day one begins with the thermal spa circuit and a sunset aperitif, followed by dinner overlooking grand cru vineyards. Day two pairs a private Champagne house visit with a bespoke spa treatment, ending with an elegant dégustation dinner that reframes Champagne as contemplative rather than celebratory. Day three offers a final swim, a leisurely breakfast with vineyard views, and a late checkout—proof that winter in Champagne is as much about calm as sparkle.

Website: https://www.royal-champagne.com

  1. Entre Cielos Wine Hotel & Spa – Mendoza, Argentina

Why Entre Cielos Wine Hotel & Spa stands out

Entre Cielos blends modern design with traditional vinotherapy against the dramatic backdrop of the Andes. Treatments highlight Malbec grape extracts and regional ingredients.

Why this season is ideal

It’s midsummer in the Southern Hemisphere. Vineyards are vibrant, and wellness is paired with energy rather than hibernation.

Recommended January–April
3‑night itinerary

Three days at Entre Cielos capture Mendoza’s energy and elegance. Arrival day includes a grape‑seed scrub and a Malbec‑inspired wine bath to ease into the rhythm of the Andes. Day two explores high‑altitude wineries, followed by a traditional hammam ritual that blends heat, water, and aromatherapy. The final day slows the pace with a vineyard‑view breakfast, light spa treatments, and time to absorb the mountain landscape before departure.

Website: https://www.entrecielos.com

  1. Awasi Mendoza — Argentina

Why Awasi Mendoza is a classic

A Relais & Châteaux property where spa treatments are discreet, personalized, and inseparable from the surrounding vineyards.

Why the early‑year months shine

Warm evenings, private plunge pools, and alfresco dining elevate the sensory experience.

Recommended January–April
3‑night itinerary

A three‑day stay at Cavas Wine Lodge is intimate and deeply personal. Day one begins with an arrival massage and private wine tasting as the Andes glow at dusk. Day two is devoted to vineyard exploration and spa immersion, alternating between Malbec‑focused treatments and long, leisurely meals. The final morning is intentionally quiet – breakfast overlooking the vines, a final soak, and a departure that feels unhurried and complete.

Website: https://www.cavas-wine-lodge.com

These first five wine spas share a seductive commonality: they treat wine not as ornament, but as a tactile, transformative material. The winter months, with their instinct for pared‑back beauty, only heighten their allure. Each destination leans into a kind of quiet luxury – treatments infused with craft, spaces washed in intentional light, and an atmosphere where refinement feels less performed than lived‑in and luminous.

Part Two continues the journey, shifting to Portugal, Spain, Burgundy, and California, where wine spas offer a different expression of wellness shaped by history, architecture, and landscape. Stay tuned!

Dimora Cottanera: A Sicilian Escape in the Heart of Etna’s Vineyards

Perched on the northern slopes of Mount Etna, Dimora Cottanera is more than a wine resort; it’s an unforgettable escape that breathes in the rhythms of the volcano, vineyard-lined horizons, and refined Sicilian hospitality. My one-night stay revealed an intimate side of this property, where elegance meets serenity.

A Sense of Place
Dimora Cottanera is a restored country estate that exudes quiet sophistication. Its design blends rustic charm: stone walls, exposed wooden beams, and historic character, with curated modern touches that feel effortless. Each room is unique, yet all share a common gift: views that frame the living landscape of Etna, with vines stretching to the horizon and the volcano’s majestic silhouette ever-present.

Outside, the gardens set the tone for slow exploration. Lavender drifts through the air, citrus groves nod to Sicily’s agricultural heart, and hidden corners invite quiet reflection. At the center of it all lies the infinity pool, a tranquil, infinity-style basin that seems to melt into the surrounding vineyards. It’s the kind of place where time surrenders, and lingering with a glass of wine feels like the only sensible agenda.

Poolside Indulgence
Lunch by the pool was an elegant yet relaxed affair. Seasonal produce, local cheeses, and delicately prepared dishes echoed the freshness of the estate, paired effortlessly with a crisp glass of Cottanera Etna Bianco. Lunch here isn’t about ceremony; it’s about savouring the simplicity of Sicilian flavours against a backdrop of rippling water, views of Mount Etna, soft mountain breezes, and vineyards glowing under the midday sun.

It was a moment of understated luxury: no rush, no excess, just pure enjoyment in one of the most beautiful settings imaginable.

Sunset Dining in the Winter Garden Restaurant
As the day shifted, so did the mood. When the sun began to set, the Winter Garden Restaurant revealed its magic. Inside, the atmosphere glowed with warmth, stone walls bathed in soft lamplight, rustic beams overhead, and candles casting an intimate glow.

Dinner was a journey through Sicily’s culinary heritage, elevated with refinement: handmade pasta flecked with truffles, tender lamb infused with local herbs, and citrus-forward desserts that spoke to the island’s zest for life. Each course was paired perfectly with Cottanera wines, their elegance deepening as the night lingered.

The true luxury lay in the moment itself, glasses catching candlelight, flavours in harmony with the land, and just beyond the windows, Etna silhouetted against the evening sky.

A Sicilian Escape to Remember
Dimora Cottanera is more than a place to stay; it’s a destination that embodies the essence of luxury travel. Here, indulgence is subtle, rooted in authenticity, and framed by the raw beauty of nature. Whether it’s a leisurely poolside lunch, a candlelit dinner in the Winter Garden Restaurant, or simply watching the play of light across the vineyards, every experience feels curated yet natural.

Why Go:
For an intimate Sicilian escape where luxury is defined by authenticity, vineyards, volcanic views, and timeless hospitality.

Best For:
Wine lovers, design-conscious travelers, and couples seeking a romantic retreat framed by nature.

Highlights:
• Infinity pool overlooking Etna’s vineyards
• Gardens scented with lavender, exotic flowers, and citrus groves
• Seasonal, locally inspired dining experiences
• Cozy Winter Garden Restaurant with fireplaces and candlelight—perfect for sunset views
• Exceptional pairings with Cottanera’s acclaimed Etna wines

Insider Tips:
Book a room facing the volcano for sunrise views that rival the sunsets. A glass of Etna Rosso in hand makes the moment unforgettable.

Reflections
My brief stay at Dimora Cottanera was a reminder of why Sicily has become such a beacon for wine tourism. It’s not only about the wines, though they are expressive and elegant; it’s about how a place can embody the soul of its land. From poolside lunches to sunset dinners, every detail was designed to immerse guests in the spirit of Etna.

Dimora Cottanera offers more than hospitality; it offers a dialogue with the land. And in that dialogue, over a glass of wine and a view of the volcano, one finds both comfort and wonder.