Pubs, literary history, a city center you can walk in a day, and the best gateway to the Wild Atlantic Way.
Dublin is the most walkable European capital you'll visit. The whole historic core fits inside a 1.5km radius — Trinity College, Temple Bar, St Stephen's Green, the Guinness Storehouse, all reachable on foot in 20 minutes from each other. You don't need a metro card or rental car. You barely need a bus.
It's also the rare city where pubs are still the cultural center — not nightlife venues, but living rooms where conversations between strangers are normal and trad music sessions run nightly in the right back rooms (The Cobblestone, O'Donoghue's). The 'craic' (good times, conversation) is real and you'll get pulled into it within 48 hours.
Use Dublin as both a destination and a launchpad. The city itself is a 3-day trip. From there, Galway (2.5hr by train), the Cliffs of Moher (4hr), Connemara, and the Wild Atlantic Way are all within reach. A 7-10 day Ireland trip almost always starts or ends in Dublin.
Beyond the obvious highlights, here are six spots locals actually use and most guidebooks miss:
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Dublin has a oceanic climate. Here's the month-by-month breakdown:
Our pick: May through September. June-August has the longest daylight (sunset at 10pm in June) and warmest weather, but expect rain showers any day of the year. May and September are quieter and almost as good. Pack a waterproof jacket regardless of month — Dublin gets rain 150+ days a year.
Dublin Airport (DUB) is 30 minutes from downtown by Aircoach or 747 bus (€8). Taxi is €25-35. From the US East Coast: 6-7 hour direct flight, $350-700 RT (Aer Lingus has excellent NYC-DUB pricing). From London: 1-hour direct flight, £60-200 RT. From other European capitals: 2 hours direct, €80-250 RT.
South of the Liffey (Temple Bar, Dame Street, St Stephen's Green) for first-trip walkability. Stoneybatter for indie/quiet residential stays. Portobello for canal-side cafés and gentrifying scene. Avoid Temple Bar itself for a hotel — atmospheric in daylight, very loud after midnight.
Headline acts: Trinity College + the Book of Kells (book online, go early), the Guinness Storehouse (commercial but the rooftop pint is iconic), Kilmainham Gaol (Ireland's prison history, deeply moving), a trad music session at The Cobblestone, a literary pub crawl. For day trips: Howth (30min), Wicklow Mountains + Glendalough (1hr), Galway (2.5hr by train).
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May through September. June-August has the longest daylight (sunset at 10pm) and warmest weather. May and September are quieter and pricing is gentler. Avoid November-March unless you specifically want grey, wet, atmospheric Dublin — it rains 150+ days a year.
Three days for the city — Trinity, Guinness, Kilmainham, pubs, one neighborhood explore. Add days for Wicklow, Howth, or the Cliffs of Moher (4hr each way as a long day, or stay overnight in Galway). Dublin works best as the start or end of a 7-10 day Ireland trip.
Yes — Dublin pricing is closer to London than to Lisbon. Hotels €150-350/night downtown. A pint of Guinness in a central pub €7-8. Restaurant mains €18-32. Save by eating at modern pub kitchens (better food than expected) and staying in Stoneybatter or Portobello.
Briefly. Walk through it during the day to see it, but don't drink there at night — €9 pints, packed with stag parties, and no Dubliners. The good pubs are around the corner: O'Donoghue's, The Long Hall, The Stag's Head, Grogan's.
Yes — Irish tap water is excellent throughout the country.
Not for Dublin (walkable + great public transit). For the Wild Atlantic Way, Connemara, or the Ring of Kerry: yes, you'll want one. Pick it up from Dublin Airport on your way out. Drive on the left, narrow roads, and the rule of thumb is double your estimated travel time.