Luxury hotel holiday Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery Near Pula

Tucked into a quiet corner of Istria near Bale, Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery is a five-star Relais & Châteaux estate offering a relaxed and wine-focused Croatian holiday. Set among 12 hectares of vineyards, olive groves and gardens, it provides straightforward access to the Adriatic coast, Rovinj, Pula's Roman amphitheatre, and Brijuni National Park, with estate-produced wines, Michelin-recommended Istrian dining, a full spa and private residences with pools among the highlights.
Included in your Expressions holiday
  • Accommodation in a Classic Room on bed and breakfast
  • Flights to and from Pula and hire car
  • Concierge service and Expressions Holidays regional helpful hints
  • Choice of upgrades available — rooms and transport.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, Croatia

A five-star Relais & Châteaux estate in rural Istria, with 59 rooms, residences and villas set among its own vineyards and olive groves, Michelin-recommended dining, and a well-equipped spa.

Facts in brief

Official star rating 5

Location In the countryside, approximately 7km from the town of Bale

Annual opening All year

Closest airport Pula

Distance from airport 40 minutes by car

Closest railway station Pula

Distance from railway station 40 minutes by car

Hotel facilities and services

12 hectares of vineyards, olive groves and gardens, Meneghetti Restaurant & Bar (Michelin-recommended, Gault&Millau 3 toques, Falstaff 3 forks), Oliveto Restaurant & Lounge Bar, Beach Club Restaurant, Meneghetti Spa with 3 treatment rooms, indoor family pool, Tranquillity Zone with heated adults-only indoor pool, Finnish bio sauna, steam room and cold plunge pool, outdoor Garden Spa area, 2 outdoor pools, fitness studio, outdoor activity zone with gym and boxing ring, tennis court, golf driving range, cycling and e-bike routes, yoga, bio garden, wine cellar, estate wine and olive oil tastings, truffle hunting experiences, Beach Club on the Adriatic, children's playground, free parking.

Complimentary

Wi-Fi

Land sports

Tennis, cycling, golf driving range, yoga, boxing, and hiking.

Out and about nearby

The stone-built town of Bale is just a few minutes' drive from the estate, with narrow lanes, local restaurants and pleasant views over the surrounding countryside. Rovinj, around 25 minutes away, rewards a longer visit with its Venetian-influenced harbourfront, the hilltop Church of St Euphemia and a network of cobbled streets lined with galleries and wine bars. Pula is within comfortable reach and is home to one of the world's best-preserved Roman amphitheatres, as well as the Temple of Augustus and a characterful old town shaped by both Roman and Austro-Hungarian history. Brijuni National Park, reached by ferry from the small port of Fažana, offers pine-shaded walking paths, Roman remains and wildlife across a cluster of car-free Adriatic islands. Inland, the hilltop town of Motovun sits above truffle-rich woodland and is a natural stopping point for truffle tastings, local wine and views across the Mirna valley, while the walled coastal town of Poreč is home to the 6th-century Euphrasian Basilica, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Sports nearby

Cycling, tennis, golf, hiking, sailing, and kayaking.

I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH49762

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, Croatia

Room descriptions

Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, near Bale in Istria offers 59 rooms, with air-conditioning, desk, flat-screen TV, Wi-Fi, minibar, safe, and hairdryer, with interiors featuring locally sourced stone and timber, Meneghetti-branded bathroom amenities, and turndown service.

Classic Room 23sqm, one king size bed
Superior Room 28sqm, one king size bed or twin beds
Vintage Room 42sqm, either two-storey with king size bed or single storey with twin beds
Executive Suite 65sqm, one king size bed, lounge area, and balcony with vineyard and pool view
Vintage Suite 65sqm, one king size bed, lounge area with fireplace, and terrace with olive grove view
Estate Residences 75 to 150sqm, 30 private residences with one or two bedrooms, terraces, gardens, and the option of a pool
Casa del Bosco 325sqm and 75sqm terrace, two en-suite bedrooms with king size beds and walk-in wardrobes, swimming pool, jacuzzi, barbecue, open-plan living with full kitchen, and private parking.
I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH49762

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, Croatia

The journey and how you get there

For a holiday to Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, fly to Pula, approximately 40 minutes from the hotel by car. A hire car is strongly recommended, as the hotel's rural location makes a car essential for day trips to Rovinj, Pula, Brijuni and the hilltop towns of central Istria. Alternatively, we can arrange transfers directly from Pula airport to the hotel. Meneghetti can also be incorporated into a wider self-drive touring holiday through Croatia, or combined with a visit to Slovenia or northern Italy - Trieste is approximately two hours away by car.

Additional information

Children: Meneghetti welcomes families with dedicated children's amenities including a playground, children's menus, high chairs in the restaurant, and welcome gifts for younger guests on arrival. Many rooms and suites can accommodate additional beds.

I wanted to thank you for organising such a great trip - we have absolutely loved it. Really it couldn’t have all gone better - thank you for organising it so perfectly for us.
Mrs C, June 2024

From about

Holiday Code EXH49762

The prices displayed here are a guide only. Each holiday price will be tailor-made at the time of booking to reflect all actual costs including up-to-date special offers.

Luxury bespoke hotel holidays to Meneghetti Wine Hotel & Winery, Croatia

Top luxury experiences in Croatia

Our bespoke Croatia holidays can provide you with private guided tours of Diocletian's Palace (a living Roman monument), exclusive wine tastings at family-owned Istrian vineyards, and evening walks through Rovinj's Venetian-era cobbled streets.

Highlights of Croatia

The capital city of Zagreb encapsulates Croatia. The Upper Town, or Gornji Grad, rises above the terracotta rooftops, accessed by the charming 19th-century funicular—one of the world's shortest. The medieval Stone Gate, with its miraculous icon of the Virgin Mary, stands sentinel over cobbled streets where café culture thrives beneath chestnut trees. To transition from the historic heart to the elegant Austro-Hungarian Lower Town, stroll down through the vibrant Dolac Market, where farmers still sell produce from wicker baskets. Zagreb is home to the Museum of Broken Relationships, an utterly unique collection that captures the Croatian spirit—poignant, humorous, and deeply human. Though this city is the country's capital, it retains an intimate, walkable character. Plane trees shade the broad boulevards of the Lower Town, parks punctuate the elegant 19th-century architecture, and pavement cafés spill onto every square and street corner. The walled city of Dubrovnik on the Dalmatian coast is rightly celebrated as the 'Pearl of the Adriatic'. The old town itself, with its gleaming limestone streets polished smooth by centuries of footfall, is a UNESCO World Heritage monument and looks out across the shimmering Adriatic Sea. The dramatic Dinaric Alps form a stunning backdrop. The city's main thoroughfare, the Stradun, leads directly from the Pile Gate to the elegant Luža Square, where Renaissance palaces now house museums and galleries. Visitors here benefit from all the beauty of Mediterranean Europe combined with a rich maritime heritage. Walk the complete circuit of the medieval walls—nearly two kilometres of ramparts offering breathtaking views across terracotta roofs to the azure sea beyond. One of the natural wonders of Europe, Plitvice Lakes National Park is Croatia's most visited natural attraction, featuring sixteen terraced lakes connected by spectacular waterfalls and cascades. The wooden walkways that take you through this aquatic wonderland have allowed visitors to traverse the emerald and turquoise waters for decades. The park's travertine barriers create an ever-changing landscape—the waterfalls literally grow and shift over time. Guided tours draw your attention to features such as the 78-metre Veliki Slap waterfall, the rich biodiversity including brown bears and rare orchids, and the remarkable clarity of water that reveals submerged tree trunks and limestone formations. In the heart of Istria lies the hilltop town of Motovun, perched dramatically above vineyards and the misty Mirna River valley. Its medieval ramparts have encircled the town for centuries, offering panoramic views across Istria's undulating landscape of forests and fertile valleys. The narrow streets wind upward past stone houses adorned with geraniums to the main square, where locals still gather for their morning coffee. In summer, the town hosts the renowned Motovun Film Festival, when the ancient walls are transformed into outdoor cinemas. The surrounding forests are famous for their white truffles, and autumn brings truffle hunters and their trained dogs to search beneath the oak trees. The Dalmatian islands scattered along Croatia's coast number over a thousand, each with its distinct character. Hvar town, on the island of Hvar, combines Venetian elegance with lavender-scented hillsides and some of the Adriatic's clearest waters. The 13th-century city walls enclose a Renaissance cathedral and the oldest public theatre in Europe, dating from 1612. The harbour promenade, lined with palms and agaves, comes alive each evening as locals and visitors gather for the traditional evening stroll, or korzo. Meanwhile, Korčula—believed to be Marco Polo's birthplace—enchants with its herringbone street layout designed to protect against winds, whilst Vis remains beautifully uncommercialised, its dramatic coastline hiding the luminous Blue Cave on nearby Biševo island. For a true insight into traditional Croatian culture, visit the Dalmatian hinterland, where the klapa singing tradition still thrives. In villages around Split and Omiš, men gather to perform this a cappella harmony singing, recognised by UNESCO as intangible cultural heritage. The coastal town of Omiš itself hosts an annual klapa festival each summer, where local groups compete beneath the fortress walls, their voices echoing across the Cetina River canyon.

Cultural highlights of Croatia

Split's historic centre is built within and around Diocletian's Palace, a UNESCO World Heritage site constructed by the Roman Emperor in the 4th century AD as his retirement residence. Unlike museum ruins, this palace is vibrantly alive—its ancient walls now contain apartments, restaurants, shops, and even a cathedral built into the emperor's mausoleum. The peristyle courtyard, where Diocletian once received dignitaries, now hosts summer concerts and late-night gatherings. Walking these limestone streets, you're literally living within Roman history, as locals have done for 1,700 years. The baroque city of Varaždin in northern Croatia served briefly as the Croatian capital in the 18th century and retains an elegant, Central European atmosphere. Its pastel-coloured palaces and ornate churches surround spacious squares, whilst the imposing Varaždin Castle houses a city museum spanning five centuries. The town is particularly renowned for its elaborate baroque music festival each September, when period costume processions fill the streets and concerts echo from historic churches. Rovinj, on the western Istrian coast, rises from the Adriatic like a jewel, its tightly packed houses in ochre, terracotta, and cream climbing the hill to the Venetian campanile of St Euphemia's Church. The Venetian influence pervades the old town—Gothic palaces, narrow calli (streets), and Italian-speaking locals reflect centuries under La Serenissima's rule. The Grisia Gallery Street becomes an open-air exhibition each August, when artists display their work along the cobbled lane. The harbour, with its traditional batana boats, remains a working fishing port where you can still watch the catch being landed at dawn. Croatia's islands preserve traditional crafts and customs. On Pag, women still create intricate lace using techniques unchanged since the Renaissance—Pag lace is so fine it was once presented to European royalty. The island is also famous for Paški sir, a hard sheep's cheese aged in olive oil, its distinctive flavour imparted by the aromatic herbs the sheep graze. Meanwhile, on Hvar, the centuries-old tradition of lavender cultivation continues, the purple fields harvested each June in scenes that could be from Provence.

Facts in brief

Capital Zagreb
Airport Zagreb, Pula, Split, and Dubrovnik are the main air gateways
Size 21,612 sq. miles
Population 3.87 million
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