A Weekend in Shipshewana – Inside Indiana’s Amish Country

Shipshewana welcome sign marks the entrance to Indiana’s Amish Country

Arriving in Shipshewana brings a quieter rhythm. Horse-drawn buggies move along country roads, farms line open fields, and small-town streets lead to handmade goods, bakeries, family restaurants, and local shops.

Shipshewana is one of Northern Indiana’s best-known Amish Country destinations. Amish heritage, hearty meals, live theatre, markets, cottage shops, scenic backroads, and family hospitality shape the town’s character.

A weekend here can include cultural learning, handmade shopping, comfort food, buggy rides, outdoor calm, and live entertainment.

Simple living is a choice in Shipshewana. Visitors notice it in the pace, the care behind handmade items, family-style meals, and the value placed on faith, work, family, and tradition.

A weekend in Shipshewana invites travelers to experience Indiana’s Amish Country through hospitality, history, food, craftsmanship, and a slower way of life.

Friday Evening – Arrival and First Taste of Amish Country

A horse-drawn buggy travels past cornfields and red barns in Shipshewana Amish Country
Choose a central stay for easy access, or a rural stay for a calmer start

Friday night should stay easy. Settle in, eat well, and let Shipshewana’s slower pace take over.

Check in and settle in

Choose lodging based on the kind of weekend planned. Farmstead Inn is a convenient choice because it sits across the road opposite Shipshewana Auction & Flea Market and near local theatres, shops, and restaurants.

Several lodging choices fit different travel styles:

  • Farmstead Inn has Amish-inspired design, winding sidewalks, an indoor pool inside a connected red barn, and a hot tub silo with a barn-scene mural.
  • Van Buren Hotel, Amish-style stays, cabins, farm stays, and bed-and-breakfasts offer quieter or more personal options.
  • Shipshewana RV Park has full-hookup sites on the flea market grounds, making it practical for road-trippers.

A central stay keeps Friday night simple, while a rural stay gives the trip a quieter start.

Dinner at Blue Gate Restaurant


Blue Gate Restaurant is a practical first-night stop because the restaurant, bakery, and second-floor entertainment are in one building. Visitors can grab a sandwich and baked goods or sit down for an Amish and Mennonite-style meal.

Blue Gate began as Der Strudel Haus in the 1980s and grew into a major Shipshewana dining destination with 750 seats. Its business now includes retail stores, a theatre, a hotel, an event center, catering, and a carriage operation.

Evening entertainment

Blue Gate arts center sits beside an open lot in Shipshewana
Blue Gate makes dinner and live shows easy to pair in one Shipshewana night

Blue Gate Music Hall sits above the restaurant, so dinner and a show are easy to pair. Larger concerts and touring performers take place at Blue Gate Performing Arts Center.

Blue Gate Theatre and the Performing Arts Center host more than 500 music and concert events each year. Shows can include Amish-themed musicals, country, pop, gospel, major-name performers, and family-friendly productions inspired by Amish books or themes.

Saturday Morning – Learning the Story Behind Amish Country

Saturday morning is the right time to add context before shops, backroads, buggy rides, and cottage businesses.

Breakfast and bakery stop

Start with breakfast at a local spot such as Five Lakes Coffee, Kitchen Cupboard, Fawn River, Koffie Haus, Country Lane Bakery 2.0, or Shawna Rae’s Bakery & Café.

Blue Gate Bakery also works well for a morning pastry stop, especially for donuts and sweet treats.

Visit Menno-Hof Amish/Mennonite Information Center

 

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Menno-Hof Amish/Mennonite Information Center gives the weekend its cultural foundation. Visitors learn about Amish and Mennonite history, faith, and daily life through interactive historical exhibits.

Key exhibit topics include:

  • Christianity and the beginning of baptism
  • Amish culture and community values
  • Amish migration to the Americas
  • Faith, family, work, simplicity, separation, and tradition

Guides can answer deeper questions about Amish history and migration, including lesser-known topics such as Russian Amish communities. Menno-Hof also has a gift shop, but the exhibits are the main reason to visit.

Saturday Afternoon – Markets, Makers, and Backroads

Saturday afternoon brings together downtown shops, auctions, cottage businesses, food stops, and quiet country roads.

Explore downtown shops

Start on Harrison Street and Morton Street, where visitors can find boutiques, fabric shops, antiques, Amish handcrafted goods, specialty shops, and locally made products.

Davis Mercantile is a major downtown stop. It has places to eat, a giant carousel on the third floor, and a 370-year-old tree “growing” inside, creating a tree-house feeling.

Several local shopping stops add variety:

  • Teaberry Wood Products for woodcraft and home pieces
  • Riverwood Pottery for locally made pottery
  • Kid’s Kreations for children’s items
  • Lolly’s Fabrics for fabric and quilting supplies
  • Yoder’s Department Store for practical goods
  • Yoder’s Shipshewana Hardware for classic hardware-store finds
  • Yoder’s Meat and Cheese Company for local food products
  • E&S Sales for bulk foods and groceries
  • Lasting Impressions, Cornucopia, and Cariloha for gifts and specialty shopping

Morton Street antiques and the weekly summer Saturday farmers market add more reasons to browse.

Shipshewana Flea Market and Auction

Shipshewana Flea Market and Auction sign stands beside the roadside entrance
Check market dates before your weekend, since the flea market does not run every day

Shipshewana Flea Market is one of the town’s signature attractions. It is known as the Midwest’s largest flea market, with nearly 700 vendors.

Its history dates to 1922, when George Curtis held a livestock auction at his home with six pigs, seven cows, and several heads of young cattle. That small auction grew into a major regional market.

Planning around the schedule matters:

  • Regular flea market season runs Tuesdays and Wednesdays, April through September, with some special weekends and holiday events.
  • One local schedule lists weekly market days on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, May 5 through September 30.
  • Special flea market weekends may include antique markets.
  • Antique & Miscellaneous Auction runs weekly, year-round, on Wednesdays.
  • Related events can include Ship-Chic Craft Show, Shipshewana Swap Meets, and seasonal Lights of Joy.

A weekend trip can still include market-area shopping, special events, auctions, or nearby stores, but dates should be checked ahead of time.

Off the Beaten Path driving tour

Off the Beaten Path Audio Driving Tour links six communities across LaGrange County in Northern Indiana. It leads visitors along backroads past Amish-run businesses, artisans, eateries, historic barns, murals, public spaces, family homesteads, and Barn Quilt Trail stops.

One local description lists the free audio route with 120 Amish cottage shops and 80 barn quilts. Silver Star Leather and Owl Toy Craft are examples of cottage-shop stops that show local craftsmanship at work.

Lunch or afternoon snack

Leave time for a casual food stop. Pretzels, sandwiches, soups, salads, pizza, wraps, candy, popcorn, and ice cream all fit a Saturday afternoon.

Good snack and lunch options include:

  • JoJo’s Pretzels or Ben’s Pretzels for warm pretzels
  • Aunt Millie’s Candy & Nut Shop or Victorian Candy Company for sweets
  • Shipshewana Popcorn for a snack to carry
  • Vanilla Bean Creamery for ice cream
  • East of Chicago Pizza or Shipshewana Pizza & Mini Golf for pizza
  • Coody Brown’s, Destination 814, Fireside Burgers & Brew, or Linders Tavern for a fuller meal

Saturday Evening – Dinner in an Amish Home

Cinnamon rolls and hot dishes sit on a Shipshewana Amish dinner buffet
Book an Amish home dinner ahead because host spaces and seats can fill fast

Saturday evening is best saved for an in-home Amish dinner. After a day of shops and backroads, a shared meal adds a personal side to the trip.

Main experience

Yoder’s Homestyle Cooking and The Carriage House are examples of places where visitors can eat inside an Amish home, barn, or family dining space.

Meals are usually family-style, with guests gathered around long tables. A Taste of Shipshewana-style dinner can include broccoli, cauliflower salad, green beans, noodles, mashed potatoes, roast beef, baked chicken, and pie.

Generous portions are part of the experience. Plates often return for seconds, thirds, and fourths, making the meal feel communal and welcoming.

Cultural connection

Conversation can make the evening especially meaningful. Guests may ask respectful questions about the Amish lifestyle, family life, local traditions, and daily work.

In-home Amish dining may not be available through standard online reservations. Visitors may need to contact the local visitor center for host-family suggestions and call ahead to reserve.

Optional evening close

After dinner, end the night with ice cream, a quiet walk, or another Blue Gate show. Buggies on the road, hoofbeats, winding sidewalks, and a slower evening pace give Saturday night a peaceful finish.

Dessert options include:

  • Vanilla Bean, with 28 to 30 ice cream flavors
  • Dips Ice Cream Shoppe for milkshakes
  • Mom’s Ice Cream for hand-dipped Velvet ice cream
  • Old Fashioned Amish Frozen Custard & Soft Serve for custard and soft serve

Sunday Morning – Outdoor Calm or One Last Local Stop

Cyclists cross a high bridge through a dense pine forest
Keep Sunday simple with one outdoor plan or one final local stop before heading home

Sunday morning should stay flexible. Some visitors may want fresh air before heading home, while others may want one last drive, family activity, or local stop.

Option #1 – Fawn River canoeing or kayaking

Fawn River canoeing or kayaking works well on Sunday, especially because many local businesses may be closed. T&L Country Canoes offers a scenic trip on a waterway used by the Potawatomi for hundreds of years.

Much of the river has changed little over time. Paddlers can expect twists, turns, wildlife, fall color, and a gentle current. Trading Post Outfitters is another paddling option in the area.

Option #2 – Scenic drive

A Sunday drive can revisit backroads, barn quilts, murals, farms, Amish-run cottage businesses, and quiet country scenery. Off the Beaten Path and the Heritage Trail driving-tour atmosphere give visitors an easy route to follow.

Art murals also make light final stops for photos.

Option 3 – Family-friendly or casual stop

Families can use Sunday morning for nearby attractions, animal stops, museums, trails, or local shopping.

Several stops work well for children or active travelers:

  • Dutch Creek Animal Park, Cook’s Bison Ranch, and Stutzman Amish Dairy Farm offer chances to pet or feed animals.
  • Pumpkinvine Trail gives cyclists an active outdoor option.
  • No Place Like Oz Museum adds a themed museum stop.
  • Springfield Acres and Bloomfield Lavender Apothecary offer quieter local stops.

A short Sunday plan often works better than trying to do too much.

Closing Thoughts

@rileygoulettewalker This weekend my mom and I took a trip to Shipshewana, Indiana to visit the craft show. Of course we couldn’t pass up grabbing some freshly made Amish hand-rolled pretzels – they were HUUUGE and delicious! And then we spent our day browsing furniture and antiques in the downtown shops, followed by dinner at the local Mexican restaurant (which was dry so no margaritas!). Oh, can’t forget the horse and buggies we saw rolling down Main Street! Then we checked into our Airbnb on a serene property with dogs, chickens, and goats. To wrap up the trip, we grabbed brunch and mimosas in nearby Elkhart! #shipshewanaindiana #travelvlog #weekendtrip #craftfair #antiquing #motherdaughter #motherdaughtertrip #amish #amishmarket #shipshewanafleamarket #antiqueshopping #countryaesthetic ♬ original sound – Riley Walker | Fashion Inspo

A weekend in Shipshewana keeps returning to a slower pace. Meals take time, shops reward browsing, backroads invite wandering, and local stories give meaning to the buggies, barns, quilts, and family businesses visitors see along the way.

Shipshewana and LaGrange County bring together cultural learning, comfort food, handmade shopping, rural scenery, buggy rides, live entertainment, outdoor calm, and sincere hospitality.

Menno-Hof explains the culture, Blue Gate brings food and theatre together, flea market vendors and cottage shops show local craftsmanship, and backroads reveal the country life around town.

Shipshewana is not just a place to visit. It invites travelers to notice the value of simplicity, craftsmanship, faith, family, food, and community.