Spring in Vermont gets a complicated reputation. Mud season is real, the roads get soft, and the shoulder season between ski season and summer can feel a little in-between. But once you get past mid-April, something genuinely lovely happens. The hills go green almost overnight, the crowds thin out compared to fall, and the small towns that get overrun in October become yours again.
If you have been waiting for a good excuse to explore Vermont without fighting for a parking spot in Stowe or standing in line for brunch in Woodstock, spring is actually your window. Here are five Vermont small towns worth building a weekend around this season.
Why Spring Deserves More Credit
Most people plan Vermont trips around foliage season or ski season, which means spring gets overlooked. That is honestly fine, because it keeps things quiet. Late April through May brings wildflowers along the roadsides, rivers running high and fast from snowmelt, and farm stands starting to wake back up. Maple season is winding down but sugar shacks are still worth visiting, and the landscape has that new-green quality that feels almost electric after a long winter.
You also get the full Vermont experience without the full Vermont crowd. Restaurants that are booked out weeks in advance in October often have open tables on a Friday night in May. That alone is worth the trip.
Stowe: Classic Vermont With Room to Breathe
Stowe is one of those towns that gets overshadowed by its own reputation. Yes, it is famous, yes it gets busy, but in spring it settles back into something more manageable. The ski lifts are quiet, the main street has space, and you can actually have a conversation at a restaurant without shouting.
The rec path that follows the West Branch River through town is one of the nicest easy walks in Vermont. It is flat, well-maintained, and runs through some genuinely pretty scenery for a few miles out and back. In spring, the trees are just leafing out and the river is moving with energy from snowmelt.
Von Trapp Brewery is open year-round and the lager garden is one of the better spots in the state for a slow afternoon. The Trapp Family Lodge grounds are also open to visitors and the views of the valley from up there do not require a room reservation.
Stowe also makes a good base if you want to explore the broader Lamoille Valley or push into the Northeast Kingdom for a day.
Woodstock: The Living Postcard That Still Feels Real
Woodstock is probably the most photographed village green in Vermont, and for good reason. The covered bridge, the Federal-style buildings, the hills closing in on all sides. It looks like someone designed it specifically to be beautiful, but it has been this way for 200 years, so you can forgive the postcard quality.
Billings Farm and Museum reopens in spring with programming around maple, farming history, and seasonal agriculture. It is genuinely worth a few hours, especially if you are traveling with kids or just want to understand what Vermont farming actually looks like. The working dairy is the real thing, not a recreation.
The stretch of Elm Street downtown has a strong independent food and shopping scene. The Woodstock Farmers Market (the store, not the outdoor market) is excellent for picking up local provisions, and there are a couple of good spots for lunch that do not feel like tourist traps.
A short drive away, the Quechee Gorge is accessible year-round and the overlook is dramatic in any season. Spring runoff makes the river down below run especially hard, and the short trail along the rim is worth the stop.
Middlebury: The College Town That Earned Its Reputation
Middlebury does not always make the top of Vermont travel lists and that is a mistake. It is a working college town with a genuine downtown, which means the food scene and the arts programming exist for locals, not just visitors. That makes a real difference in how a place feels.
Otter Creek Falls runs right through the center of downtown and in spring it runs hard. There is a small park area where you can watch the water go over the falls from practically street level, and it is one of those small Vermont moments that sticks with you. The sound alone is worth a few minutes standing there.
The Frog Hollow Vermont Craft Gallery on the main drag is one of the better spots in the state to find work by Vermont makers, from ceramics to woodworking to textiles. If you want to bring something home that actually came from Vermont, this is a more satisfying option than most gift shops.
Middlebury is also sitting at the edge of the Champlain Valley, so the drive in or out along the lake shore on Route 7 or the more rural Route 22A puts you through some of the most open, agricultural landscape in the state. In late April and May, that drive is genuinely beautiful.
Montpelier: Small Capital, Big Personality
Montpelier is the smallest state capital in the United States, and it wears that fact with a certain pride. The whole downtown is maybe six or eight blocks, walkable in an afternoon, but it punches well above its size in terms of food, coffee, and culture.
The most notable thing about Montpelier’s downtown is that there are no chain restaurants. None. The whole strip is locally owned, from the coffee shops to the Thai place to the pizza spot. That is not an accident, it reflects something about the character of the city, and you feel it when you walk around.
Bear Pond Books on State Street is a genuine independent bookstore with a strong local section and staff who actually know what they are talking about. The State House grounds are open and worth a walk, especially in spring when the lawn is green and the building is quiet compared to the legislative session months.
Spring is a particularly good time to visit because the summer festival season has not kicked in yet, but the city has fully shaken off winter. The farmers market comes back in May and the local arts calendar starts filling up again.
Grafton: The One Most People Miss
If you want Vermont with absolutely none of the crowds, Grafton is your answer. It sits in the hills of southern Vermont in Windham County, far enough from the main tourist corridors that most people drive past it without stopping. That is their loss.
The Grafton Village Cheese Company alone makes the drive worthwhile. They have been making raw milk cheddar here since 1892, and the tasting room lets you work through their lineup at your own pace. The cheddar aged three or four years is the one to start with. Pick up a wedge for the drive home and you will thank yourself later.
Grafton itself is one of those Vermont villages that looks essentially unchanged from 150 years ago, not because it is frozen in amber but because people here have actively kept it that way. The Old Tavern at Grafton has been operating in some form since 1801. The architecture along the main road is classic New England without any of the commercial creep that edges into more visited towns.
Grafton Ponds Outdoor Center runs mountain biking and trail programming when the snow is gone, and the trail system there is a good spring option once the ground firms up. It is quiet, well-maintained, and gives you a real taste of Vermont woodland without a three-hour drive to the Northeast Kingdom.
A Few Notes on Planning a Spring Vermont Weekend
Mud season runs roughly from mid-March through mid-April, sometimes into early May in higher elevations and on unpaved roads. The timing varies year to year. If you are planning to hike trails or explore backroads, check local trail and road conditions before you go. Town websites and local Instagram accounts are more reliable for real-time conditions than national travel sites.
Even in spring, smaller Vermont inns and bed-and-breakfasts fill up on weekends faster than people expect. If you are planning a trip for May, booking accommodations a few weeks out is not overkill.
Layering is not optional. Spring days can swing twenty degrees between morning and afternoon, and an overcast day in the hills feels genuinely cold even in late April. Bring a fleece and a rain layer regardless of what the forecast says.
The best version of a Vermont spring weekend is an unhurried one. Pick one or two towns, give yourself time to walk around and eat well and take a wrong turn or two on the back roads. That is when Vermont actually reveals itself.
Spring here is worth more than it gets credit for. You just have to show up for it.
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