The Local's Guide to

Visiting Litchfield County, Connecticut

Everything worth doing, eating, hiking, and exploring — written by someone who actually lives here, updated every single week.

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Why People Come to Litchfield County

Litchfield County is what the Berkshires and the Hudson Valley have been for decades — except it hasn't been discovered yet. That's the whole point.

Tucked into the northwest corner of Connecticut, Litchfield County is 920 square miles of rolling hills, historic village greens, farm-to-table restaurants, vineyard weekends, covered bridges, and some of the best hiking in New England. It borders New York's Hudson Valley to the west and Massachusetts' Berkshires to the north — and draws comparisons to both constantly. The difference is the price of a dinner reservation and the length of the wait for a parking spot.

The anchor is the town of Litchfield itself — a National Historic Landmark District with one of the most beautifully preserved 18th-century village greens in America. But the county is full of towns worth exploring: Kent, with its art galleries and waterfalls. Washington, with its Mayflower Inn. Salisbury, with its prep school charm and White Hart Inn. New Milford, New Preston, Cornwall, Woodbury. Each one has its own character. None of them feel like tourist traps.

"A small town that more than carries its weight on the history, charm, and scenic beauty fronts."

— Travel + Leisure Magazine on Litchfield

The Litchfield Ledger has been covering this region every week since 2024 — events, hidden gems, restaurant openings, local history, and everything worth doing on a Saturday morning. This guide is the distillation of that. Consider it your cheat sheet from a local.

When to Visit

Every season in Litchfield County has a different character. None of them are wrong.

Spring 🌿

The hills go electric green. Trout fishing opens on the Housatonic. Farmers markets return. Crowds are minimal.

Summer ☀️

Bantam Lake, vineyard weekends, outdoor concerts, farm stands everywhere. The peak season — book ahead.

Fall 🍂

The most spectacular. Peak foliage on Route 7 and Route 63 rivals anything in Vermont. Apple picking, cider donuts.

Winter ❄️

Skiing at Mohawk Mountain. Cozy inn weekends. Antiquing in Woodbury. The prices drop significantly.

The honest local take: Fall draws the biggest crowds and for good reason — the foliage here is genuinely extraordinary. But a late-spring Friday through Sunday, when the farms are coming alive and the trails are empty, is arguably the best-kept secret in New England travel.

Things to Do in Litchfield County

This is the non-exhaustive version. The Ledger covers new events and discoveries every week — subscribe to stay current.

🏛️
Litchfield Village Green

One of the most intact 18th-century village centers in America. Walk it, sit on it, admire the churches. The whole thing is a National Historic Landmark.

⚖️
Tapping Reeve House & Law School

America's first law school. Aaron Burr studied here. Now a living history museum. Five-minute walk from the Green.

🌊
Kent Falls State Park

The most-visited waterfall in Connecticut — 107,000 people a year. A series of cascades over ancient Connecticut marble. Worth every person in the parking lot.

🍷
Hopkins Vineyard

235 years old, overlooking Lake Waramaug in Warren. One of the most picturesque winery settings in New England.

🌲
White Memorial Conservation Center

4,000 acres, 40+ miles of trails around Bantam Lake. The largest nature center in Connecticut. Free to enter and explore.

🌉
West Cornwall Covered Bridge

The longest historic covered bridge in Connecticut, tucked into the village of Cornwall. A genuine 19th-century structure still in use.

🥃
Litchfield Distillery

Open seven days a week. Guided tours, tastings, award-winning craft spirits. Great on a Monday when everything else is closed.

🎭
Local Events (Weekly)

The Ledger publishes a full county events calendar every Tuesday — concerts, farm dinners, art openings, festivals. This is the best way to know what's on.

Where to Eat in Litchfield County

The food scene here is punching well above its weight. Farm-to-table isn't a marketing phrase — the farms are literally next door.

Hiking in Litchfield County

None of these hikes will kill you — which is part of the appeal. The views are big, the trails are manageable, and you can be back at a vineyard by 3pm.

The Housatonic River runs through the center of the county and is one of the most celebrated trout fishing rivers in the Northeast. If that's your thing, the stretch through Cornwall and Kent is the one everyone points to.

Where to Stay in Litchfield County

The county leans toward historic inns, beautiful Airbnbs, and a handful of genuine luxury properties. There are no big box hotels. That's the point.

Events in Litchfield County

This is where the Ledger is different from every other guide you'll find. We publish a full county events calendar every single Tuesday.

Most travel guides for Litchfield County are static — written once, updated occasionally, missing the thing happening this weekend. The Litchfield Ledger publishes a comprehensive weekly events calendar every Tuesday covering the entire county: concerts, farm dinners, art openings, outdoor markets, community events, fundraisers, wine tastings, and everything in between.

If you're planning a trip and want to know what's actually happening during your visit — not just the landmarks, but the events — the Ledger is the one source that will tell you. It covers venues from Torrington to Salisbury, New Milford to Canaan, Washington to Kent.

Subscribe to the Ledger below and you'll get this week's full events calendar delivered to your inbox every Tuesday morning.

The Towns of Litchfield County

The county is a collection of distinct villages, each worth knowing. Here's the quick map.

Getting here: Litchfield County is approximately 2 hours from New York City, 2.5 hours from Boston, and 45 minutes from Hartford. There's no train service into the county — you'll need a car. Download your Google Maps offline before arriving; cell service in some valleys is unreliable depending on your carrier.

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