Why James B. Beam Distilling Co. Works as Your Road-Trip Anchor
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James B. Beam Distilling Co. in Clermont, Kentucky, sits between Louisville and Bardstown, which makes it a natural hub for 7- to 14-day Southern road trips. The Beam Made Bourbon Tour & Tasting is a 75-minute, hands-on experience that walks guests from grain to glass with five bourbon pours and barrel work along the way.
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Four distinct road-trip routes use the distillery as a first stop, midpoint, or closing anchor, so it fits easily into many Southern itineraries.
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Reserve the Beam Made Bourbon Tour & Tasting now to secure your preferred date and time.
Four Southern Road-Trip Routes at a Glance
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Route |
Total Miles (approx.) |
Suggested Nights |
Best 2026 Windows |
Beam Placement |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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1: Louisville–Bardstown–Lexington Loop |
~250 |
7 |
Derby season (late April–May); National Bourbon Week June 14–21 |
Day 1, first stop off I-65 |
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2: Memphis–Nashville–Clermont–Asheville Arc |
~900 |
10 |
Natural midpoint, Day 5–6 |
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3: Charleston–Savannah–Atlanta–Clermont Return |
~1,200 |
14 |
Fall foliage (Oct.); Bourbon on the Banks Oct. 3 |
Closing anchor, Day 12–13 |
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4: Gulf Coast–Birmingham–Clermont–Cincinnati Extension |
~1,100 |
12 |
Spring (April–May); early fall (Sept.) |
Penultimate anchor, Day 10–11 |
Route 1: Louisville–Bardstown–Lexington Loop (7 Days)
Jacob Beam sold his first barrel in 1795, and the same family still runs the still in Clermont today. That continuity shapes Route 1, which delivers one of the tightest and most bourbon-dense loops in the South. Here is how to experience that legacy over seven days.

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Day 1: Arrive in Louisville, then drive 30 minutes south on I-65 to Clermont. Take the Beam Made Bourbon Tour & Tasting, fill and dump a barrel, taste five bourbons as you move through the process, and seal your own Knob Creek bottle with a thumbprint in wax. Have lunch at The Kitchen Table, then return to Louisville for the night.
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Days 2–3: Stay in Louisville and visit Churchill Downs, NuLu dining, and the Louisville Slugger Museum.
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Days 4–5: Overnight in Bardstown, which sits about 20 minutes from Clermont. Maker’s Mark and Heaven Hill work well as same-day companions. National Bourbon Week runs June 14–21, 2026, with distillery dinners and rare bottle releases across the Bardstown area.
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Days 6–7: Finish in Lexington with horse farms, Keeneland, and the broader Kentucky Bourbon Trail.
Drive times: Louisville to Clermont, 30 minutes. Clermont to Bardstown, 20 minutes. Bardstown to Lexington, 1 hour.
Reserve your spot on the Beam Made Bourbon Tour to experience the grain-to-glass story firsthand.
Route 2: Memphis–Nashville–Clermont–Asheville Arc (10 Days)
Route 2 builds a 10-day arc around hands-on stories like Jim Beam carrying his wild yeast strain in his Cadillac to protect it. That same strain still shapes nearly every Beam bourbon, and you can stand beside the actual car on the tour floor.

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Days 1–2: Start in Memphis with the National Civil Rights Museum, Sun Studio, and Beale Street.
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Days 3–4: Continue to Nashville for honky-tonks, The Gulch, and the Masters & Makers Trail in nearby Franklin (about 25 minutes from Nashville), where craft beverage stops line a historic main street.
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Days 5–6: Drive north to Clermont, about three hours from Nashville. Beam sits between Louisville and Bardstown, which makes it a logical place to pause the drive and go deeper. Take the Beam Made Bourbon Tour in the morning, enjoy lunch at The Kitchen Table, then browse the American Outpost gift shop in the afternoon. Overnight in Louisville or Bardstown.
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Days 7–10: Head southeast to Asheville, about four hours from Louisville. Asheville offers mountain scenery, the Blue Ridge Parkway, and a strong food-and-drink scene that pairs well with the bourbon country leg.
The Kentucky Bourbon Festival (Sept. 10–13, 2026, Bardstown) fits neatly into a fall version of this route.
Route 3: Charleston–Savannah–Atlanta–Clermont Return (14 Days)
Route 3 covers the coastal and mountain South before turning north through bourbon country with Clermont as the closing anchor. Fred Noe, 7th-generation master distiller, summed it up in one line: “Bourbon and Kentucky have always been one and the same.”

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Days 1–3: Begin in Charleston with the Old Slave Mart Museum, the historic district, and nearby coastal marshes.
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Days 4–5: Continue to Savannah, about two hours from Charleston, for River Street, Forsyth Park, and ghost tours.
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Days 6–8: Drive to Atlanta, about four hours from Savannah, and visit the Georgia Aquarium, Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site, and Ponce City Market.
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Days 9–11: Head to Asheville via the Blue Ridge Parkway. November travel on the Blue Ridge Parkway offers peak fall foliage, and the drive from Atlanta to Asheville takes just over two hours.
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Days 12–13: Drive north to Clermont, about five hours from Asheville. Close the trip with the Beam Made Bourbon Tour, a walk through active warehouses, and a final night in Louisville.
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Day 14: Depart north.
The Bourbon on the Banks Festival (Oct. 3, 2026, Frankfort) adds a natural one-day extension for fall travelers, with 75+ distilleries along the Kentucky River a short drive from Clermont.
Route 4: Gulf Coast–Birmingham–Clermont–Cincinnati Extension (12 Days)
Route 4 traces the inland South from the Gulf Coast to Clermont, then finishes in Cincinnati for travelers heading home to Ohio, Indiana, or Illinois. The Beam family history in Clermont becomes the pivot point between beach towns and Midwestern cities.
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Days 1–3: Start on the Gulf Coast with Gulf Shores, Mobile, and Ocean Springs.
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Days 4–5: Drive about three hours to Birmingham for the Civil Rights Institute, Vulcan Park, and Pepper Place Market.
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Days 6–7: Continue about three hours to Nashville for Music Row, Ryman Auditorium, and the East Nashville food scene.
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Days 8–9: Head about three hours to Memphis for Sun Studio, Graceland, and Beale Street.
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Days 10–11: Drive northeast to Clermont, about four and a half hours from Memphis. Treat Beam as the penultimate anchor with the Beam Made Bourbon Tour and dinner at The Kitchen Table before the final push north. Spend day 11 in Louisville.
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Day 12: Travel from Louisville to Cincinnati in about an hour and a half, then depart.
Family-Friendly Southern Road Trips with a Clermont Stop
Families increasingly seek unique experiences, and James B. Beam Distilling Co. fits that trend. The grounds, The Kitchen Table restaurant, and the American Outpost gift shop all welcome families. Children may accompany adults, but all bourbon tastings are strictly 21+ with a valid ID.

Add these family-friendly stops to any Beam-anchored route:
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Bernheim Arboretum & Research Forest, which borders the distillery property, offers 16,000 acres of trails, wildlife, and seasonal programming for all ages.
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Louisville Zoo and Louisville Slugger Museum, both within a short drive of Clermont, add easy half-day outings.
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Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the most visited national park in the United States, works as a natural add-on for Routes 2 and 3.
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AAA’s Smoky Mountains loop, designated as appropriate for families, couples, and campers, runs Knoxville–Gatlinburg–Asheville at 497.8 miles.
Manageable driving distances of 1–4.5 hours between stops help maintain energy levels when traveling with children, and the short drive from Louisville to Clermont keeps the distillery visit from overwhelming a family itinerary.
Couples’ Southern Road Trips with a Beam Campus Focus
Couples often choose memorable experiences over material gifts, and the Beam campus supports that kind of trip. The Beam Made Bourbon Tour uses a taste-as-you-go format, with five pours at the moments that explain them, so the visit feels like a shared story instead of a lecture. The monthly Supper Club at The Kitchen Table pairs a four-course menu with family whiskeys in an intimate evening setting.
Consider these couple-focused additions by route:
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Route 1: Stay overnight in Bardstown’s historic district, enjoy dinner at The Kitchen Table after the tour, and add Maker’s Mark as a same-day companion.
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Route 2: Use Asheville’s boutique hotels and farm-to-table dining to complement the bourbon-country leg. The four-hour drive from Louisville to Asheville passes through rolling Kentucky and Tennessee countryside.
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Route 3: Book Charleston inns and Savannah’s garden-square stays for romantic overnights before the Clermont finale.
Book your couples’ tour and Supper Club experience at The Kitchen Table.
Spring and Fall 2026: Event Windows for Bourbon Travel
Kentucky’s 2026 event calendar creates clear booking windows for every route.
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Derby Season (late April–May): My Old Kentucky Home State Park in Bardstown runs its Kentucky Derby exhibit “The Race Is On!” April 17–May 17, 2026. Louisville hotels fill quickly, so book Clermont tours well in advance.
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National Bourbon Week™ (June 14–21, 2026): Bardstown hosts distillery dinners, rare bottle releases, and the Bourbon City Street Concert, which makes this week ideal for Route 1.
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Kentucky Bourbon Festival® (Sept. 10–13, 2026): Now in its 35th year, with tastings from 60+ distilleries in Bardstown. Tickets go on sale April 14, and VIP tiers sell out in minutes.
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Bourbon on the Banks (Oct. 3, 2026): More than 75 distilleries pour along the Kentucky River in Frankfort, a convenient extension for Routes 3 and 4.
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Fall Foliage (October–November): The Blue Ridge Parkway ranks among the top leaf-peeping destinations in the USA and pairs well with a Clermont anchor on Routes 2 and 3.
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SEC Football Weekends (September–October): Louisville, Lexington, and Nashville draw large weekend crowds, and Clermont sits close enough to Louisville to work as a Friday or Sunday addition to any football-weekend itinerary.
Budget and Booking Tips for Your Beam Visit
The Beam Made Bourbon Tour & Tasting costs $30 plus tax and fees, which makes it one of the more accessible entry points on the Kentucky Bourbon Trail. Active military can visit for free with a valid ID, and veterans receive a discount. Bottling your own Knob Creek on the T-Line costs $59.99, which matches the shelf price, and engraving adds $10.

Advance reservations help you secure preferred times, especially on weekends and during major events. Tours depart promptly, so arrive at least 30 minutes early. Walk-ins are welcome at The Kitchen Table and the American Outpost gift shop without a reservation.
A global American Express survey found that 60% of respondents planned to book a trip around an entertainment or sporting event, so if your Southern road trip aligns with Derby season, the Kentucky Bourbon Festival, or an SEC weekend, reserve Beam tours when you book lodging.
All tastings are 21+ with a valid ID. Please enjoy responsibly, designate a driver, or arrange transportation between distillery stops. For responsible drinking resources, visit responsibility.org.
Lock in your tour reservation now, because weekend and event-season dates sell out quickly.
Conclusion
Southern USA road trips often suffer from too many options and not enough time, and anchoring at James B. Beam Distilling Co. solves that planning problem. The Clermont campus delivers the world’s #1 bourbon, a 75-minute hands-on tour, and a central location between Louisville and Bardstown. The result is a road trip that feels focused instead of scattered.
Whether you are driving down from Ohio for a long weekend or looping back north after two weeks on the Gulf Coast, Clermont sits just off I-65 south of Louisville. It belongs on your map.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does the Beam Made Bourbon Tour take, and what does it include?
The Beam Made Bourbon Tour & Tasting runs about 75 minutes and covers the full grain-to-glass story of how Jim Beam bourbon is made. Guests move through the working distillery in stages, including limestone water and grains, fermentation, distillation, and barrel aging, and taste five bourbons at the moments that explain them: Jim Beam White, Jim Beam Black, Basil Hayden, Knob Creek, and a rotating surprise pour. The tour stays hands-on by design, so guests fill a real barrel, dump a real barrel, and can bottle their own Knob Creek on the T-Line, sealing it with a thumbprint pressed into wax. Plan on spending two to three hours on the grounds overall to include the American Outpost gift shop and a meal at The Kitchen Table restaurant. All tastings are 21+ with valid ID.
Do I need to book in advance, or can I walk in?
Guided tours and tasting experiences work best when booked in advance at beamdistilling.com, because popular weekend dates and event-season windows such as Derby, the Kentucky Bourbon Festival, and SEC football weekends sell out regularly. Tours depart on time, so arrive at least 30 minutes before your scheduled start, since guests cannot join a tour already in progress. Walk-ins remain welcome at The Kitchen Table restaurant and the American Outpost gift shop without a reservation, so guests without a tour booking can still browse distillery-exclusive bottles and enjoy a meal on the grounds.
Can families with children visit James B. Beam Distilling Co.?
Families can visit the distillery grounds, The Kitchen Table restaurant, and the American Outpost gift shop. Children may accompany adults on select tours, although all bourbon tastings are strictly for guests 21 and older with a valid ID, with no exceptions. The adjacent Bernheim Arboretum & Research Forest, which borders the distillery property, offers 16,000 acres of trails and wildlife programming for all ages and pairs well with a distillery visit for families traveling with younger children.
What makes Clermont, Kentucky a logical stop on a Southern road trip rather than a detour?
Clermont sits at 568 Happy Hollow Rd., just off Interstate 65, about 30 minutes south of Louisville and between Louisville and Bardstown. Travelers driving south from Ohio, Indiana, or Illinois toward Nashville, Memphis, or the broader Deep South pass within minutes of the distillery. It serves as the first stop on the Kentucky Bourbon Trail and sits directly on the route between Louisville and Bardstown, so it adds a half-day experience to an existing drive instead of requiring a separate side trip. For travelers building a 7- to 14-day Southern loop, Clermont works as either a natural first stop heading south or a closing anchor heading north.
What are the best 2026 events to time a Kentucky bourbon road trip around?
Several 2026 events create strong timing windows for bourbon-country road trips. National Bourbon Week runs June 14–21 in Bardstown, with distillery dinners and rare bottle releases that fit a summer Route 1 loop. The Kentucky Bourbon Festival, now in its 35th year, takes place September 10–13 in Bardstown during National Bourbon Heritage Month, with tastings from more than 60 distilleries, and VIP tiers sell out quickly, so early booking is essential. Bourbon on the Banks on October 3 brings more than 75 distilleries to Frankfort’s Kentucky River waterfront, a short drive from Clermont. Derby season in late April and early May draws large crowds to Louisville and Bardstown, which makes it a peak window for Route 1 and Route 4. For any of these windows, book Beam tour reservations at the same time as lodging.
This article is promotional content of James B. Beam Distilling Co. Please practice responsible drinking.