A small capital with a huge reputation, Dublin is a multicultural, artistic city brimming with incredible architecture, beautiful green spaces, and great opportunities for entertainment.
While traces of Ireland's Viking past have been largely washed away, the city is a living museum of its history since then, with medieval castles and cathedrals on display alongside beautiful examples of 18th-century architecture. As an added bonus, Dubliners are warm and welcoming hosts – a charismatic bunch with compelling souls and sociability.
Make the most of your visit to Dublin with our favorite top things to do in and around the city.
To indulge your cultural side, explore the fantastic street murals of the Icon Walk, or see a performance at the Project Arts Centre. A bar tab in Temple Bar is more expensive than other areas, but unusual venues like the Vintage Cocktail Club or a great pub like the Palace Bar are worth your time and money.
Planning tip: This area is also a haven for great food, both local and international. Temple Bar Food Market runs every Saturday and it’s easy to while away an hour or two there, sampling the delights.
Explore Temple Bar effortlessly with GetYourGuide. Book your tour today.
Planning tip: Other attractions include the neo-Gothic Museum Building, home to the Zoological Museum (a top place to visit if you're traveling with kids), and the beautiful wildflower meadows that make for a delightful place to wander.
Highlights include the music section, where you can put your feet to work following the steps of the world-famous Riverdance, and the Rogues’ Gallery, where you can practice your quick-draw with a motion detector Irish outlaws quiz. For those interested in tracing their ancestry, there are professional genealogy service partners at the Irish Family History Centre.
The top-floor Gravity Bar offers panoramic views of Dublin city. You can test your pouring power and drink a pint here, and maybe stick around for lunch at the excellent restaurant on the floor below.
Planning tip: The Storehouse offers a range of experiences, including the Guinness Brewery Tour, which brings visitors to parts of St James's Gate that were previously off-limits to the public.
Transform your visit to Guinness Storehouse by booking with GetYourGuide.
You can get a call back from James Joyce whose monologue is voiced by Gabriel Byrne, Wolfe Tone (Brendan Gleeson), Oscar Wilde (Andrew Scott), Fidelity on the O'Connell Monument (Ruth Negga), and James Larkin (Stephen Rea). Some approaches are dramatic, others are humorous, and some include flights of pure fantasy.
The park also contains the opulent Farmleigh House, the Irish government's official guesthouse, a fine Georgian-Victorian pile that was originally part of the Guinness estate. It offers a guided tour that takes in the fantastic library and glass conservatory. The vast surrounding grounds, with their lake and walled gardens, are a delight to stroll.
Planning tip: There's a farmers market on the grounds of Farmleigh House at the weekends.
Explore Phoenix Park effortlessly with GetYourGuide. Book your tour today.
Browsing the museum will give you excellent context and access to some of the former prisoners' personal belongings and letters. The enthusiastic guides provide a thought-provoking tour of the eerie prison, the largest unoccupied building of its kind in Europe. The highly memorable visit finishes in the yard where the leaders of the failed 1916 Easter Rising were executed.
Planning tip: General admission is free and free tours can be booked in advance. There is an audio tour and several self-guided tours aimed specifically at families with children.
Planning tip: Other lovely things to see include sculptures, two sundials, a bandstand built in 1894, and a Viking house, but for an in-depth background to all of the garden's features, book in advance for a daily guided tour. Refreshments are available at the Garden Tearoom.
Literary types will love Marrowbone Books, a cute, independent bookstore selling pre-loved paperbacks and hosting intimate music gigs. You’ll find Dublin’s antique quarter on Francis Street, broken up by tiny art galleries, while newer additions to the area include a couple of whiskey distilleries, Teelings and the Pearse Lyons Distillery, which offer excellent tours.
The Brazen Head, the oldest pub in Dublin, is located here, and Arthur’s is the best place to continue sipping Guinness after a Storehouse visit – the crackling fire makes it ideal on a winter's evening.
The gardens can be visited separately and are a hugely popular tranquil retreat, containing rare trees from all over the world. The Walled Garden encompasses Isobel Talbot’s pond, the blooming Rose Garden, and the famous Victorian Conservatory. It is also home to the Butterfly House, where over 20 species of butterflies live.
Planning tip: If you're traveling with children, make time for the interactive Fairy Trail, which is full of magic and fun.
One of the city’s best green spaces, St Stephen’s Green, is a popular meeting spot for Dubliners and a great place to have a picnic. Although surrounded by iconic Georgian architecture, the layout of the park is Victorian, with tree-lined avenues, a duck pond, ornamental gazebos, and a bandstand that is still used in summer.
Statues and public artworks are found at every turn, and there is a playground and garden designed especially for people who are visually impaired.
Planning tip: The Grafton Street shopping area and The Little Museum of Dublin are both located right beside the park and are well worth a visit.
You'll find stunning Celtic metalwork, Ireland's most famous crafted artifacts such as the Ardagh Chalice and the Tara Brooch, and a collection of mummified bodies from the Iron Age, preserved to a disturbingly perfect degree by Ireland's peat bogs.
The National Museum of Ireland – Decorative Arts & History's exhibits include a treasure trove made up of everything from silver, ceramics and glassware to weaponry, furniture and folk-life displays. Then there's the Museum of Natural History, which is also a fascinating place to visit, particularly if you have family members who will appreciate stuffed beasts and skeletons.
The social and political story of Ireland is told in wonderful detail in Glasnevin Cemetery Museum. The City of the Dead covers the burial practices and religious beliefs of the 1.5 million people who found their final resting place at the cemetery, while the Milestone Gallery features a digitally interactive timeline outlining the lives of its most famous residents.
Planning tip: Combine a visit here with a trip to the Botanic Gardens next door.
There's a whole room on the 2nd floor devoted to the history of the band U2, and the museum hosts a treasure hunt that allows visitors to discover 1000 years of history in less than 60 minutes. There are always new exhibitions and fascinating tours on offer including the award-winning Green Mile tour, which is a very popular walking tour of St Stephen’s Green that begins outside the museum.
When you've worked up an appetite, enjoy a picnic in the People’s Park, which has been open to the public since 1890 and hosts a popular farmers market every Sunday. It features fine examples of Victorian architecture with the Gate Lodge and the Tea Rooms, a bandstand with the original gaslight standards, and a playground.
Ireland’s National Maritime Museum is housed in the 180-year-old Mariners Church, and no visit to Dún Laoghaire would be complete without a trip to Teddy's Ice Cream for a 99 cone.
Planning tip: While you're out that direction, the James Joyce Tower & Museum in Sandycove features Joyce memorabilia and gives a fantastic view of the coast and the surrounding countryside.
Every Dubliner has their favorite haunt, from the never-changing traditional pub to whatever new opening is bringing in the beautiful people. With more than 1000 spread throughout the city, you're spoilt for choice.
Planning tip: Temple Bar may be famous for its pubs, but it’s just the start: leave its well-trodden streets to discover some of Dublin’s best-loved drinking holes like John Mulligan's, where John F Kennedy paid his respects in 1945.
Planning tip: There's a good cafe on the grounds. When you’re finished touring the cutting-edge collection, stroll around the building and the beautiful surrounding gardens.
Pop to The International Bar for very authentic, often local, music. One of the city's best comedy venues is also upstairs if you fancy a laugh. Locals' favorite, The Workman's Club, features everything from acoustic warblers to electronic harmonizers. It costs nothing to enjoy the nightly traditional sessions in O’Donoghue’s, where folk and trad legends, The Dubliners, cut their musical teeth in the 1960s.
Sandycove Beach is very popular with young families, thanks to its shallow waters for paddling. Swimmers and divers can tackle the Forty Foot Pool, which was made famous by Joyce's Ulysses. Irish weather isn't exactly tropical, but hardy Dubliners come here all year round to swim in the Irish Sea.
Also drawing year-round swimmers is Seapoint Beach, between Blackrock and Monkstown on the south side of the city. Located in Clontarf, Dollymount Strand is a popular spot with dog walkers and joggers, as well as swimmers, paddleboarders, and kite surfers. The 5km-long (3 miles) stretch is set to the backdrop of Dublin's Poolbeg Chimneys and Howth Head.
Planning tip: Dollymount Strand is surrounded by the North Bull Island Nature Reserve, which is great for urban wildlife watching.
The General Post Office (GPO) building is where the Proclamation of the Republic was read and it is at the heart of Ireland's struggle for independence. The GPO served as command HQ for the rebels during the 1916 Easter Rising and has become the focal point for all kinds of protests, parades and remembrances, as well as home to the interactive GPO Witness History visitor center.
The excellent 1916 Rebellion Walking Tour is led by Trinity graduates, who give you the lowdown on where, why, and how the 1916 Rising took place. Then there's the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl, where actors escort you through a selection of the city's most renowned literary boozers – with plenty of hilarious bits acted out for good measure. Music fans will enjoy the Dublin Musical Pub Crawl, which explores the history of Irish traditional music and its influence on contemporary styles in a number of Temple Bar pubs.
Planning tip: Just want to put your feet up and see the sights? Dublin Bus Tours has routes with hop-on-hop-off options, and there's the semi-amphibious Viking Splash Tours, which explores the city center before taking a plunge into the Grand Canal Dock.
Originally built in the 1720s for wealthy Dublin families, by 1911 over 850 people lived on Henrietta Street, and over 100 of those were in number 14.
Part museum, part community archive, the museum covers the magnificent elegance of upper-class life in the 1700s to the destitution of the early 20th century when the house was a tenement with its occupants living in near squalor.
It gives visitors an insight into the stories of the people who passed through the house, examining their changing circumstances, their experience of family life, and the impact of politics and world affairs on their circumstances.