The Merano Grape Festival

Evolving tradition


See you from October 17 to 18, 2026


140 years of the Grape Festival – a milestone worth celebrating! South Tyrolean traditions are interpreted in style and enriched by many new features at the Merano Grape Festival. Dating back to 1886, it is the most profoundly rooted event in Merano's social life. Various initiatives on Saturday and Sunday show the authentic and young face of the historic festival.

Anyone wishing to immerse themselves carefree in a weekend full of tradition will be in exactly the right place at the Merano Grape Festival. Folk music sets the tone – sometimes in a contemporary guise, and now and again with more than just a hint of the avant-garde. Classics of South Tyrolean cuisine, shaped by influences from both north and south, define the culinary offering and reflect the character of Merano itself: the city’s soul also has a cosmopolitan side.

Local produce from the Merano Market and selected wines from the Burgraviato region, many of them award-winning, play an essential role at the Grape Festival, which reaches its climax on Sunday with a procession of brass bands and groups through the town centre.

We wish you lots of enjoyment!

The traditional grand parade
The crowning moment of the Grape Festival


The festival parade will start on October 18, 2026, at 2:15 PM at the Vinschgauer Gate.

The area around the Vinschgauer Gate marks the start of the parade and is reserved for the floats and groups. We kindly ask spectators to keep this area clear.


The traditional grand parade is the undisputed highlight of the Merano Grape Festival. The institutions and clubs involved already begin days before to decorate their floats with much dedication, passion and attention to detail. Most of the floats stand for traditions that are celebrated with particular pride at the Merano Grape Festival. These "classics" are joined each year new interesting companions.

Some floats have long since become famous beyond South Tyrol: for example, the so-called "Kundschafter" of the farmer's youth Lagundo with its 300 kilogram giant grape or the Marling float "Apfelkrone", which participated for the first time in 1949. Particularly symbolic wagons are also the floats of the "Schützen" with the title "South Tyrol - The cradle of Tyrol" and that with the coat of arms of Merano.


Route of the Grand Parade: Porta Venosta, via delle Corse, corso Libertà superiore, piazza della Rena, Passeggiata Lungo Passirio, ponte Teatro, piazza Terme.

Download the parade route map here.
Please note: the bus stops highlighted in orange are reserved exclusively for the participating brass bands after the festival procession.
Floats

The most famous floats are placed in various places in town, such as the Marling apple crown on Sandplatz, the float Kundschafter with giant grape on the Kurpromenade and the float Schloss Trauttmansdorff on Thermenplatz.


The Marlinger apple crown float, made in 1949, is the oldest of all the floats of the Meran Grape Festival. Its dimensions are remarkable: It is over five metres long, 2.20 metres wide and weighs 2.3 tonnes (of which over 500 kilos are apples).

Where: Kurpromenade near stairway


With its 300-kilogram grape, the "Kundschafter" float from Algund is one of the essential floats in the procession. The float weighs about half a tonne; it is 4.50 metres high and 1.60 metres wide. The giant float itself is one and a half meters tall. The float was first decorated in this form in 1951.

Where: Kurpromenade near "merano" logo
The Saltner – Guardian of the Vineyard

Anyone who plunges into the hustle and bustle of the Merano Grape Festival may well come across a figure they are unlikely to forget in a hurry: the Saltner – staring, admiring and photographing are all very much encouraged.

What is a Saltner?
He is dressed in leather breeches, leather gaiters, and a richly embroidered belt buckled around his waist. He wears chains made from wild boar and rodent teeth, and a hat adorned with peacock and pheasant feathers, with fox tails dangling from either side. In his hands he carries a halberd.

Right up until the 1960s, villages would round up their young men – unmarried they had to be, and honest they were expected to be – to keep a watchful eye over the vineyards. Their duty began either on the 25th of July, the feast of Saint James, or on the 10th of August, the feast of Saint Lawrence, and lasted through to the end of the harvest. The vineyard was guarded by day and by night, and the Saltner's imposing presence was also meant to deter any would-be thieves.
Dress Code
Dirndl & Lederhose 

Every festival has its rituals, and what could be a better outfit than Dirndl & Lederhosen to enjoy the weekend of the Meran Grape Festival perfectly dressed? Runggaldier 1896 - Tracht & Tradition: under the Laubengasse (arcade alley), a traditional house for stylish and traditional costumes. Here you are sure to find the right dress for the festival.

The Merano Tourist Office team was dressed by Boutique Runggaldier Tracht & Tradition.