REVIEW · SANTA RITA
Alyan Family sunset winery
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Conexion chile SPA · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Few plans beat a Santiago sunset with wine.
This Alyan Family sunset winery outing is built for people who really enjoy wine and want a guided look around the property, then a relaxed toast as the day cools off. I like the clear flow: pickup, winery tour, tasting with a food board, and time to wind down afterward. One thing to keep in mind: it’s a grown-up experience (no children under 18), so it’s not a casual family option.
Two things I especially like: the guided tour of the whole winery and the deck moment where you toast while watching the sunset. I also like that the experience includes both transport and tastings, so you’re not stuck coordinating rides or timing. The main drawback to consider is communication quality—some past groups noted the guide’s microphone/radio setup had issues—so if you’re sensitive to not hearing instructions clearly, plan to ask questions when you can.
In This Review
- Key things I’d pin to the top
- Alyan Family Sunset Winery: what the 4 hours are really about
- The ride from Santiago: pickup convenience and time in transit
- Entering Alyan Family Wines: the guided tour that sets the tone
- The sunset deck toast: where the evening clicks
- Wine tasting + food: what’s included and how it feels in practice
- Dinner time and the shop: tasting room energy, minus the pressure
- Guide and staff: what to expect from the human side
- Price and value: is $150 per person fair for this kind of evening?
- Who this sunset winery tour fits best (and who it doesn’t)
- Booking considerations: what can affect your comfort
- Should you book Alyan Family Sunset Winery?
- FAQ
- Where is the Alyan Family sunset winery tour located?
- How long is the tour?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- What time is the pickup and how long is the van ride?
- Is the tour guided?
- What language is the live guide?
- What food and drink are included?
- Is the sunset toast included?
- Is this tour suitable for children?
- What’s the cancellation and payment flexibility?
Key things I’d pin to the top

- Guided winery tour through the full property, not just a quick stop
- Sunset deck toast with wine plus a cold cuts and dried fruit board
- Food and wine included, so you can focus on the experience instead of budgeting separately
- Spanish live guide, which is ideal if you’re comfortable with Spanish
- Manager Karen gets praise for being especially welcoming and attentive
- Real-world logistics: pickup on the tourist route and a working transfer for most groups
Alyan Family Sunset Winery: what the 4 hours are really about

This is a short, well-structured evening built around one idea: wine in a scenic late-day setting, with just enough background to make it interesting. You’re not here for a long vineyard day. You’re here for a guided winery visit, a tasting and food moment, and then the sunset portion that turns the whole thing into an “okay, I get it” experience for wine lovers.
The duration is listed as 4 hours, and the schedule includes hotel pickup and return. In practical terms, that means you’ll spend part of the time in the van, then most of the fun at the winery. If you’re trying to pack Santiago sightseeing into the same day, keep your timing tight so you don’t feel rushed before pickup.
The ride from Santiago: pickup convenience and time in transit

Pickup is a big part of the value here. You’ll be collected from your hotel as long as it’s on the tourist route, with pickup options including Las Condes, Providencia, and Santiago. That’s the easiest way to do a winery evening without hunting for a taxi, then stressing about the return.
The van time is shown as about 1 hour each way. So you’re looking at roughly 2 hours of travel for the full experience, with the winery time being the main payoff. If you’re prone to feeling “tour fatigue,” bring water and something to keep your mind occupied on the ride—because the tasting is best when you arrive calm, not tired.
Entering Alyan Family Wines: the guided tour that sets the tone

Once you arrive at Alyan Family Wines in the Santa Rita area, the evening starts with a guided tour of the winery. The emphasis is on the full property—this isn’t a token walk through a tasting room. You get a tour format that helps you understand what you’re tasting and why the winery does things the way it does.
Depending on the season, you may even have the chance to eat grapes. That small detail matters because it makes the tour feel less like a lecture and more like a real winery moment. Grapes also connect tasting to something physical you can experience, not just smell and swallow.
What to watch for: one review mentioned the guide and driver could have shared more explanations before entering the winery. So if you want context fast, pay attention right away, and don’t be shy about asking a question early in the tour.
The sunset deck toast: where the evening clicks

After the winery tour, you move to the deck for the signature sunset portion. This is the part that most people remember, because it’s simple: toast with wine while the light shifts outside, plus a cold cuts and dried fruit board set up for you to enjoy during the moment.
This isn’t “sit in silence and stare at vineyards.” It’s a structured pause with food, wine, and time to enjoy the change in atmosphere. For many wine tours in Chile, tastings can blur together. Here, the deck element gives the experience a clear peak—so you don’t leave thinking you just drank wine; you leave thinking you had a proper Chilean evening.
Wine tasting + food: what’s included and how it feels in practice

The tour includes wine tasting and an included food setup—specifically a cold cuts and dried fruit board during the deck portion, plus lunch is listed as part of what you receive. That combination is a big deal. Wine often tastes better with the right bites, and the food inclusion means you’re not showing up hungry and then rushing through the tasting.
You should also expect that wine continues during the meal portion. The experience description points to dinner time after the deck toast, with more wine during that segment. In other words: you’re not just sipping a few small samples and rushing back out the door.
If you care about value, this is where it helps to look beyond the headline price. When a tour includes transport, guided access, tasting, and food, you’re essentially paying for a full evening package instead of piecing together taxis and separate tasting costs.
Dinner time and the shop: tasting room energy, minus the pressure

After the sunset deck moment, the plan continues into dinner and more wine in the internal dining area. Then you get time to enjoy the store, and if you want to buy products from the winery, you can do that before you head back.
I like this part because it gives you breathing room. Some wine tours push you through tastings like a conveyor belt. Here, dinner plus store time means you can slow down, decide what you actually liked, and then take a bottle (or more) home if it feels right.
If you’re a souvenir shopper, this also helps you avoid the “where do I buy wine now?” scramble later. If you’re not shopping, you can still use the store time to ask questions and learn what the winery sells and how it fits their lineup.
Guide and staff: what to expect from the human side

The live tour guide is Spanish. That’s not a small note. A winery tour works best when you can follow the story—terms like grapes, aging, and production steps matter, and Spanish is the language you’ll get in real time.
Past guests praised a manager named Karen for being especially kind and helpful. That’s the kind of detail you want to pay attention to, because good staff make wine feel welcoming instead of intimidating. You’re more likely to leave with actual understanding rather than just tasting and nodding.
One caution from a review: there was an issue with the guide microphone/radio setup that affected what people could hear. If audio clarity matters for you, position yourself so you can hear naturally, and ask your questions during quieter moments when you’re not relying fully on the speaker system.
Price and value: is $150 per person fair for this kind of evening?
At $150 per person for a 4-hour experience, this sits in the “premium evening” category. The question is whether you’re paying for something tangible beyond the name of the winery.
From the included elements, the value case is pretty strong:
- transport (pickup and return on the tourist route)
- ticket access
- guided tour of the winery
- wine tasting
- cold cuts and dried fruit board
- lunch included
- time for dinner and extra wine during the meal portion
- store time to buy products
So you’re not just paying for wine. You’re paying for an organized whole evening: coordination, guided access, and a set food-and-wine experience that would be harder to replicate on your own without spending time planning.
My practical take: if you care about wine and want a sunset setting with a plan that runs smoothly, this price can feel reasonable. If you’re mostly price-sensitive and only want a couple sips, you might prefer a less structured tasting option.
Who this sunset winery tour fits best (and who it doesn’t)

This is best for adults who like wine, like guided explanations, and want a “special-evening” vibe without a full-day commitment. It’s also a solid match if you’re staying in central areas like Las Condes or Providencia and want a reliable pickup.
It’s not suitable for children under 18, so plan accordingly if you’re traveling as a family. Also, it’s geared toward people who can follow a Spanish guide; if you only speak English and you rely heavily on translation, you may find it harder to get the full meaning of the tour.
Booking considerations: what can affect your comfort
A few small points can shape your experience:
- The guide is Spanish, and audio can sometimes be an issue due to microphone/radio setup.
- The experience includes wine tasting and more wine with dinner, so go easy if you’re planning any later activities that night.
- You’ll be in the van for about an hour each way, so it helps to start hydrated and ready to relax.
Also, the tour offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and there’s a reserve now & pay later option. That’s useful if you’re juggling multiple evenings in Santiago.
Should you book Alyan Family Sunset Winery?
I’d book this if you’re a wine person, you want a guided winery tour (not just a tasting room), and you like the idea of a structured sunset toast with food. The deck portion plus dinner pacing makes it feel like an actual evening out, not a rushed stop.
Skip it or think twice if you’re looking for a family-friendly outing, you strongly prefer English-only guiding, or you know you get frustrated when audio is hard to hear. One more reason to decide: you’re paying for the whole package—so if you just want the cheapest possible sip, you can probably find simpler options elsewhere.
If your goal is a memorable Santiago-area wine evening with transport handled and a clear sunset moment, this is one of the better matches on the list.
FAQ
Where is the Alyan Family sunset winery tour located?
It’s in the Santiago Metropolitan Region of Chile, visiting Alyan Family Wines in the Santa Rita area.
How long is the tour?
The duration is 4 hours.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes. Pickup is included from hotels on the tourist route, including areas such as Las Condes, Providencia, and Santiago.
What time is the pickup and how long is the van ride?
The schedule includes van time of about 1 hour to get to the winery and about 1 hour back.
Is the tour guided?
Yes. It includes a guided tour of the winery.
What language is the live guide?
The live tour guide is Spanish.
What food and drink are included?
You get a cold cuts and dried fruit board and wine tasting. Lunch is also listed as included, and the experience continues into a dinner setting with wine.
Is the sunset toast included?
Yes. You’ll toast with wine on the deck while watching the sunset, along with the food board.
Is this tour suitable for children?
No. It’s not suitable for children under 18.
What’s the cancellation and payment flexibility?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and you can reserve now and pay later.




