Where did they film Gilmore Girls? The answer might surprise you. Despite being set in the cozy Connecticut town of Stars Hollow, almost every scene was filmed thousands of miles away in sunny California. If you have ever watched Lorelai and Rory walk through that charming town square and wondered whether you could actually visit — this complete guide has every answer you need.
We cover every single filming location, from the famous Warner Bros. backlot in Burbank to a small town in Canada, a Beverly Hills mansion, and the real Connecticut towns that inspired the whole show. We also tell you exactly how to visit, what to expect, and what most other guides completely miss.
Is Stars Hollow a Real Place?
The short answer is no. Stars Hollow, Connecticut does not exist on any map. You cannot drive there, grab coffee at Luke’s Diner, or browse books at Stars Hollow Books. It is a completely made-up town created by writer and producer Amy Sherman-Palladino.
However, Stars Hollow was very much inspired by real places. When Sherman-Palladino took a vacation to Connecticut in the late 1990s, she stayed at the Mayflower Inn in Washington Depot. She later described the experience by saying the town was charming, that everyone seemed to know each other, and that there was a pumpkin patch right across the street. That trip planted the seed for everything you see in the show.
So while Stars Hollow is not real, the feeling it gives you — that warm, small-town, everyone-knows-your-name vibe — was directly pulled from real New England towns. Connecticut towns like Washington Depot, New Milford, and Kent all left their mark on the show’s look and feel.
The fictional town is set in Connecticut, but it was never actually filmed there. Almost everything you see on screen was built and shot in California. That is the magic of television production.

Where Was Gilmore Girls Filmed? The Main Answer
Gilmore Girls was filmed primarily at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California. The outdoor town of Stars Hollow — including Luke’s Diner, the gazebo, Doose’s Market, and Lorelai’s house exterior — was all built on a famous backlot called Midwest Street. Interior scenes were filmed on soundstages at the same studio lot.
The only exception is the very first episode. The pilot was filmed in a real town — Unionville, Ontario, Canada. Once the show got picked up by the network, all production moved to Warner Bros. in Burbank, where it stayed for all seven seasons.
Here is a quick overview of all the main filming locations before we go deep into each one:
| Location | What Was Filmed There |
|---|---|
| Warner Bros. Midwest Street, Burbank, CA | Stars Hollow town square, Luke’s Diner, gazebo, Doose’s Market, Dragonfly Inn, Lorelai’s house exterior |
| WB Soundstages (Studios 12, 14, 18) | All interior scenes — Luke’s Diner inside, Lorelai’s house interior, Independence Inn, Chilton hallways |
| Unionville, Ontario, Canada | Pilot episode only |
| Greystone Park & Mansion, Beverly Hills, CA | Chilton Academy exterior and graduation scenes |
| Pomona College, Claremont, CA | Yale University exterior scenes |
| UCLA Campus, Los Angeles, CA | Rory’s Harvard visit scenes |
| 61 Binscarth Road, Toronto, Canada | Emily and Richard’s mansion exterior (pilot only) |
| South Royalton, Vermont | Opening credits panoramic shots only |
| Washington Depot, Connecticut | Real-life inspiration — not a filming location |
Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California
Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank is one of the most famous studio lots in the entire world. It has been used to film countless movies and TV shows for over a hundred years. When Gilmore Girls moved into this lot in 2000, it joined a long list of legendary productions.
The studio address is 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California. It sits in the heart of the San Fernando Valley, about 12 miles north of central Los Angeles.
The lot has multiple backlots — outdoor areas designed to look like real streets and towns — as well as dozens of indoor soundstages. For Gilmore Girls, the production team used both. The outdoor Stars Hollow set lived on Midwest Street. The indoor scenes — every coffee shop interior, every kitchen, every Friday night dinner — were filmed on soundstages numbered 12, 14, and 18.
A fun behind-the-scenes detail: the facade of Sookie St. James’s house and Lorelai’s house were physically connected to each other on the backlot. Melissa McCarthy revealed on a Season 5 DVD extra that if you walked through Sookie’s front door and kept going, you would suddenly find yourself inside Lorelai’s foyer. That is why the show never showed the back of Lorelai’s house — there was no back to show.
You can visit Warner Bros. Studios today through the official Warner Bros. Studio Tour. The tour takes you through the backlot, including Midwest Street, and gives you access to props, costumes, and sets from Gilmore Girls and many other productions.
The Midwest Street Backlot — Stars Hollow Come to Life
Of all the backlots at Warner Bros., Midwest Street is the most recognizable. It was completely transformed into Stars Hollow for Gilmore Girls and remained that way for the entire run of the show.
This is where the entire outdoor world of Stars Hollow was built. Luke’s Diner, Doose’s Market, Stars Hollow Books, the Dragonfly Inn exterior, Miss Patty’s Dance Studio, the town gazebo, and all the connecting streets were all right here on this one backlot.
How Did They Make It Look Like New England in California?
This is the part most guides skip, and it is genuinely fascinating. The production designers had to make a California backlot look like a Connecticut town through all four seasons of the year — sometimes in the same week of filming.
Here is exactly how they did it:
- Fake leaves on the trees. The trees on Midwest Street had artificial leaves attached to them. The crew could add bright orange and red leaves for fall, green leaves for summer, or strip them bare for winter — all without waiting for the actual season to change.
- Potato flakes for snow. When the show needed a snowy Stars Hollow, the crew used mashed potato flakes to simulate falling snow. It looked completely real on camera.
- Movable interior walls. The buildings on the backlot had walls that could be repositioned. This allowed the crew to adjust the interior layout of a building for a specific scene without building a completely new set.
- Combined facades. Some buildings combined the front face of one structure with the back or side of a completely different one. The camera angles were carefully planned so viewers never noticed the joins.
- Fake Christmas lights and decorations. During holiday episodes, the entire street was dressed with thousands of lights, garlands, and decorations — all added temporarily by the set decoration team.
Creator Amy Sherman-Palladino told The Hartford Courant during Season 3 that the production team actively kept expanding the town over the years: they added brick, changed streets, extended storefronts, put in streetlights, and even added a lake with a bridge. The town of Stars Hollow grew season by season.
Midwest Street is not used exclusively for Gilmore Girls. The same backlot also appeared as Rosewood, Pennsylvania in Pretty Little Liars and as the fictional Alabama town in Hart of Dixie. It has also been used in classic films going back decades, including The Music Man and Rebel Without a Cause.
Luke’s Diner — Where Was It Filmed?
The exterior of Luke’s Diner is on Midwest Street at the Warner Bros. backlot. The iconic blue awning, the sign, and the steps where Lorelai drank her morning coffee were all part of the outdoor Stars Hollow set. The interior of the diner — the counter, the booths, the coffee machine — was filmed on a separate soundstage inside the studio lot.
The Stars Hollow Gazebo
The white, octagonal gazebo in the center of Stars Hollow is the single most recognizable structure from the show. It was the backdrop for community festivals, romantic moments, town meetings, and — in the revival — Luke and Lorelai’s wedding. The gazebo still stands on Midwest Street today and is a popular spot for fan photos during the Warner Bros. Studio Tour.
Lorelai’s House Location
Lorelai and Rory’s house exterior was also on Midwest Street. The production team dressed it to look like a cozy Connecticut home, complete with the front yard and porch where so many scenes took place. Lorelai’s tan Jeep was parked outside. The interior — the kitchen, the living room, the bedrooms — was all on a soundstage elsewhere on the lot. During the holiday pop-up event, you can actually go inside the house on the tour.
The Dragonfly Inn Set
The exterior of the Dragonfly Inn was originally filmed at the Warner Bros. Ranch, a separate property about two miles from the main Midwest Street backlot. The Warner Bros. Ranch was unfortunately demolished in 2023 as part of a renovation project, so the original Dragonfly Inn building no longer exists. The current Stars Hollow tour experience has a recreated version of it on the main lot.

Where Was the Pilot Episode Filmed? Unionville, Ontario, Canada
Before Warner Bros. fully committed to making Gilmore Girls a full series, the production filmed the pilot episode — the very first episode — in a real town: Unionville, Ontario, which is a suburb of Toronto, Canada.
Unionville was chosen because it already looked like a classic, charming small-town America. The historic Main Street, with its 19th-century red brick buildings, tree-lined sidewalks, and independent storefronts, was exactly the atmosphere Amy Sherman-Palladino wanted for Stars Hollow.
Several real Unionville locations appeared in the pilot episode:
- Main Street, Unionville — The opening shots of the town in the pilot are clearly Unionville’s Main Street. The red brick church at 150 Main Street is visible and still stands today.
- The “Welcome to Stars Hollow” sign — This sign was actually a modified sign for the Unionville Planning Mill. If you look closely at the pilot, you can see the words “Planing Mill” underneath the Stars Hollow overlay.
- The gazebo — The gazebo in the pilot was a real structure in Unionville’s town center.
- Taylor’s Old-Fashioned Shoppe location — This was at 170 Main Street in Unionville. The building is now a pastry and coffee shop called Old Firehall Confectionery.
Once the show was picked up as a full series, all further filming moved permanently to Warner Bros. in Burbank. No other episodes were filmed in Canada.
Fans can still visit Unionville today. The town embraces its connection to Gilmore Girls. Main Street retains its historic charm and architecture, and the City of Markham (which includes Unionville) even has a self-guided Gilmore Girls walking tour available on its website.
Chilton Academy Filming Location — Greystone Park, Beverly Hills
Rory’s prestigious prep school, Chilton Academy, needed to look like a grand, historic New England institution. The production team found the perfect real-world stand-in without leaving California: Greystone Park and Mansion in Beverly Hills.
Greystone Mansion was built in the 1920s and was originally owned by Edward Laurence Doheny Jr. It is now owned by the city of Beverly Hills and is open to the public. The grand Tudor Revival architecture, with its stone facade, formal gardens, and sweeping grounds, made it a convincing Chilton exterior.
The graduation scenes — where Lorelai, Sookie, and Luke all cried watching Rory graduate — were also filmed here at Greystone. The mansion’s formal grounds provided exactly the right backdrop for a prestigious school graduation ceremony.
| Chilton Scene | Real Location |
|---|---|
| School exterior | Greystone Mansion, Beverly Hills |
| Graduation ceremony | Greystone Park grounds, Beverly Hills |
| School hallways | WB Studio soundstage |
| Classroom interiors | WB Studio soundstage |
Visitors can explore Greystone Park on a self-guided tour. The estate covers about 18 acres and also has trails for walking. It is one of the most accessible Gilmore Girls filming locations because there is no studio tour ticket required — it is a public park.
Yale and Harvard Scenes — Where Were They Filmed?
This is a detail that almost every competitor glosses over, and it is one fans always ask about.
Yale University Scenes
Rory attends Yale University for a large portion of the series. However, no Yale scenes were actually filmed at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Instead, the production used Pomona College in Claremont, California, as the stand-in for Yale’s campus.
Pomona College is a small liberal arts school east of Los Angeles. Its classic brick buildings, ivy-covered walls, and traditional campus architecture made it a convincing Yale double. Exterior campus scenes, dormitory exteriors, and quad scenes were all filmed here.
Harvard Visit Scenes
When Rory and Lorelai visit Harvard together — one of the most emotionally charged episodes of the series — they were not at Harvard either. Those scenes were filmed at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles). UCLA’s large, impressive campus provided the right scale and academic atmosphere for the Harvard scenes.
Emily and Richard’s Mansion — Where Was It Filmed?
The Gilmore grandparents’ imposing, formal mansion — the setting for all those tense Friday night dinners — had two different real-world locations depending on which season you are watching.
In the pilot episode, the exterior of the mansion was a real private home at 61 Binscarth Road in Toronto, Canada. This elegant house was used for the pilot’s outdoor shots, and the facade even appeared in a flashback showing young Lorelai standing outside the house.
After the pilot, the production moved this location to a purpose-built facade at the Warner Bros. Studio lot in Burbank. The studio version was modeled to look like a California mansion with matching gates. All interior scenes — the formal dining room, the living room, Richard’s study — were filmed on a WB soundstage throughout the entire series.
What Inspired Stars Hollow? Washington Depot, Connecticut
Even though Gilmore Girls was not filmed in Connecticut, the state was still central to the show’s creation. Amy Sherman-Palladino drew direct inspiration from real Connecticut towns when designing Stars Hollow.
The story of how Stars Hollow was born is one of the most charming origin stories in television. Sherman-Palladino took a vacation to Connecticut to visit Mark Twain’s house. She ended up staying at the Mayflower Inn and Spa in Washington Depot. The inn, the surrounding small town, and the community feeling she experienced there convinced her to set the show in a fictional Connecticut village rather than a city.
Washington Depot and the broader town of Washington, Connecticut, had many elements that fed directly into Stars Hollow:
- A cozy independent bookstore (Hickory Stick Bookshop) — very similar to Stars Hollow Books. The shop even has a dedicated Gilmore Girls section with Rory’s reading picks.
- A local food market (The Washington Food Market) — the real-life Doose’s Market equivalent.
- A café (Marty’s Café) — Luke’s Diner vibes, though it does not pour its own coffee quite the same way.
- The Mayflower Inn itself is said to have inspired both the Independence Inn and the Dragonfly Inn in the show.
Other Connecticut towns also fed into the Stars Hollow picture. New Milford has a stunning town green with a gazebo that looks almost exactly like the one in the show. Kent has strong Stars Hollow energy with its indie shops, community feel, and charming architecture. New Preston is another small village with Stars Hollow vibes.

Can You Visit the Gilmore Girls Filming Locations?
Yes, and here is a practical breakdown of how to do it.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour, Burbank, California
This is the number one must-do for any Gilmore Girls fan. The Warner Bros. Studio Tour takes you directly through the Midwest Street backlot — the actual Stars Hollow set. You will see the gazebo, Lorelai’s house exterior, and the street where Luke’s Diner stood.
| Practical Info | Details |
|---|---|
| Address | 3400 Warner Blvd, Burbank, CA 91505 |
| Ticket Price | From approximately $69 per adult (prices may vary) |
| Duration | Around 3 hours for the standard tour |
| Booking | Book in advance online — tours sell out quickly |
| Best Time to Visit | Weekdays tend to be less crowded |
| Holiday Pop-Up | “Holidays Made Here” event in December — Stars Hollow is fully dressed and decorated |
The Holidays Made Here event is the most immersive Gilmore Girls experience available anywhere. The backlot is transformed back into a fully decorated Stars Hollow for the holiday season, complete with working shops, food, a costume contest, and trivia events. It runs from approximately December through early January. The next season (2026–2027) will be announced separately — sign up for notifications on the WB website.
Greystone Park and Mansion, Beverly Hills
Free to visit as a public park. Bring your camera for photos in front of the mansion that stood in as Chilton. Address: 905 Loma Vista Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210.
Unionville / Markham, Ontario, Canada
Walk the same streets as the pilot episode. Main Street Unionville is still charming and largely intact. The City of Markham has a self-guided walking tour map for Gilmore Girls filming spots. Free to do on your own.
Washington Depot, Connecticut
Not a filming location, but a pilgrimage site for fans who want to feel the real inspiration behind Stars Hollow. Stop at Hickory Stick Bookshop, the Washington Food Market, and the Mayflower Inn. The Mayflower Inn is luxurious and pricey, but worth a stop for afternoon tea or a meal if the budget allows.
Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life — Filming Locations
The 2016 Netflix revival series, Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, returned to the same core filming locations as the original show. The Warner Bros. Midwest Street backlot was once again dressed as Stars Hollow for all four episodes (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall).
A few notable additions and differences in the revival:
- The Secret Bar — A new location featured in the revival was filmed at WB’s New York Street backlot, a different section of the studio lot designed to look like city streets.
- The Life and Death Brigade sequence — The memorable, stylized Life and Death Brigade scenes were filmed partly at Midwest Street and partly on Forest Lawn Drive in Los Angeles, near Griffith Park.
- The tango club interior — Filmed at the corner of New York Street and Embassy Courtyard on the WB lot.
- Emily’s Nantucket home — After Richard’s death, Emily moves to Nantucket. The exterior was filmed at a real location, not on the WB lot.
- The gazebo wedding — Luke and Lorelai’s wedding at the end of the revival was filmed at the same Stars Hollow gazebo on Midwest Street that fans know from the original series.
The revival used all the same soundstages (12, 14, and 18) for interior scenes. Stars Hollow looked exactly as fans remembered it, which was the entire point.
Behind-the-Scenes Production Facts Most Guides Miss
This section covers the things competitors do not tell you. These are the details that make the show’s production genuinely impressive.
1. The town grew every season. Amy Sherman-Palladino kept adding new businesses and streets to Midwest Street as the show continued. A lake with a bridge was added. New storefronts appeared. The production designer treated Stars Hollow like a real town that was always growing.
2. Alexis Bledel was not drinking coffee. In every scene where Rory appears to be drinking coffee — a central running joke of the show — Alexis Bledel was actually drinking Coca-Cola. She does not like coffee in real life.
3. The pilot was cast and filmed before the network committed. The decision to film the pilot in a real location (Unionville) rather than on a studio backlot was standard practice — networks needed to see a proof of concept before building sets. Once the show was commissioned, the WB backlot became the permanent home.
4. The Sookie/Lorelai house connection. As mentioned earlier, the two houses were connected, which is why camera angles carefully avoided showing their backs. This is a production constraint that became a creative rule.
5. The Dragonfly Inn no longer exists. The original building used as the Dragonfly Inn exterior at Warner Bros. Ranch was torn down in 2023. Fans visiting today will see a recreated version, not the original structure.
6. Multiple shows share the same sets. Luke’s Diner, when not dressed for Gilmore Girls, has been repainted and redressed for dozens of other productions. The WB lot is in constant use, and the same walls that held coffee cups for Lorelai have appeared in completely different shows.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is Stars Hollow, Connecticut a real town?
No. Stars Hollow is a fictional town created by Amy Sherman-Palladino. It does not exist in Connecticut or anywhere else. It was inspired by real Connecticut towns, particularly Washington Depot, but it was never filmed there and has no real-world equivalent.
Q: Can you visit Luke’s Diner in real life?
You can visit the exterior of Luke’s Diner on the Midwest Street backlot during the Warner Bros. Studio Tour in
Burbank, California. The interior was a soundstage and is not part of the standard public tour. During the holiday Holidays Made Here event, there is more access to set interiors.
Q: Where exactly is the Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank?
The address is 3400 Warner Blvd (Studio Tour entrance) or 4000 Warner Blvd (main studio), Burbank, California, 91505. It is about 12 miles from central Los Angeles and accessible by public bus (routes 501, 222, PINK line, and B LINE Red).
Q: Was any part of Gilmore Girls actually filmed in Connecticut?
No. Not a single episode or scene was filmed in Connecticut. Connecticut inspired the show’s fictional setting, but all filming took place in California and Canada.
Q: Where was the Gilmore Girls pilot filmed?
The pilot episode was filmed in Unionville, Ontario, Canada — a suburb of Toronto. After the pilot, all production moved to Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California. Unionville’s Main Street still looks very similar to how it appeared in 2000 and can be visited today.
Conclusion
So, where did they film Gilmore Girls? Almost entirely at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California — specifically on the Midwest Street backlot, which was transformed into the fictional town of Stars Hollow. The pilot was the one exception, filmed in Unionville, Ontario, Canada. Other key locations include Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills for Chilton, Pomona College for Yale, and UCLA for the Harvard visit scenes.
Stars Hollow was never a real place, but the feeling it created was built on genuine inspiration from Washington Depot and other Connecticut towns that Amy Sherman-Palladino visited and loved. The result was a fictional world so carefully and lovingly constructed that viewers still search for it decades later.
If you want to visit, the Warner Bros. Studio Tour is your best option. The Holidays Made Here seasonal event in December is the closest you will ever get to actually walking through Stars Hollow. Book your tickets early — they sell out fast.
And if you want to feel the spirit of Stars Hollow without going to California, drive through Washington Depot, Connecticut, stop at the Hickory Stick Bookshop, pick up a coffee, and enjoy the town that started it all.



