Things to Do in Ireland
135 handpicked attractions across the Republic and Northern Ireland — filter by region, type or budget
From the Cliffs of Moher and Giant's Causeway to Killarney, Connemara and the Ancient East — every attraction includes opening hours, local tips, drive times from the nearest airport, and direct booking links.
22 results
Cliffs of Moher
Co. Clare
Ireland's most dramatic coastal walk — 214m sea cliffs, 30,000 nesting seabirds and views to the Aran Islands on a clear day. Arrive early or late to avoid the crowds.
Kylemore Abbey
Co. Galway
A Gothic Revival castle beside a Connemara lake, built in 1868 as a gift of love and now home to a Benedictine community.
The Burren
Co. Clare
A 250 km² limestone karst landscape where arctic, alpine and Mediterranean plants grow side by side — unlike anywhere else in Europe.
Aran Islands
Co. Galway
Three Irish-speaking islands at the mouth of Galway Bay, with Iron Age forts, limestone pavements and no traffic to speak of.

Killary Fjord
Co. Galway
Ireland's only true fjord — a 16 km glacial inlet walled in by the Maamturks and the Sheeffry Hills. Boat tours leave from Leenane village; the Aasleagh Falls cascade at the eastern end.
Céide Fields
Co. Mayo
The oldest known field system in the world — 5,500-year-old Neolithic field boundaries buried under the north Mayo bogland.
Bunratty Castle
Co. Clare
A 15th-century tower house with fully furnished state rooms and a 19th-century folk park of 30 authentic rural buildings. The nightly medieval banquet runs year-round — a convenient first or last night stop near Shannon Airport.
Loop Head
Co. Clare
The westernmost tip of County Clare — a working lighthouse on dramatic sea cliffs where the Shannon estuary meets the Atlantic.
Galway
Co. Galway
Ireland's west coast city — a medieval walled town with a surviving Latin Quarter, traditional music in almost every pub, and the Claddagh fishing village at its edge.
Doolin Cave
Co. Clare
A limestone cave system beneath the Burren holding Europe's largest free-hanging stalactite at 7.3 metres. Guided tours run throughout the day from the visitor centre above Doolin village — an excellent complement to the Cliffs of Moher and The Burren.
Aillwee Cave
Co. Clare
A cave system in the heart of the Burren with guided tours past stalactites, a frozen waterfall and a hibernation chamber used by brown bears 10,000 years ago — combined with Ireland's largest Birds of Prey Centre, with daily flight demonstrations of hawks, falcons and owls.
Killary Sheep Farm
Co. Galway
A working hill sheep farm on the shores of Killary Fjord offering live sheepdog demonstrations, shearing and lamb feeding. One of the most enjoyable family experiences on the Wild Atlantic Way — and a real working farm, not a heritage show.
Westport House
Co. Mayo
A grand 18th-century house above Clew Bay, built by the Browne family on the foundations of pirate queen Grace O'Malley's castle — Georgian interiors, a marble staircase, and a lakeside Pirate Adventure Park in the grounds.
Dún Aonghasa
Co. Galway
A 3,000-year-old semicircular stone fort on the edge of a 100-metre Atlantic cliff on Inis Mór — the most spectacular prehistoric monument in Ireland, ringed by a defensive field of jagged standing stones.
Dunguaire Castle
Co. Galway
The most photographed castle in Ireland — a compact 16th-century tower house on a rocky spur in Kinvara harbour on Galway Bay, open for daytime visits and famous for its evening medieval banquet.
Connemara National Park
Co. Galway
Wild bogland, mountains and Atlantic coastline across 2,957 hectares — the heart of Connemara, with Diamond Hill as the main hike.
Achill Island
Co. Mayo
Ireland's largest island — reached by bridge from Westport — with horseshoe-shaped Keem Bay tucked beneath towering cliffs, a 5 km Blue Flag beach at Keel and the ghost village of Slievemore on the mountainside.
Downpatrick Head
Co. Mayo
A wild Atlantic headland with a sea stack (Dún Briste) that separated from the cliff in 1393 — one of Mayo's most dramatic coastal stops.
Croagh Patrick
Co. Mayo
Ireland's holiest mountain — St Patrick fasted on its summit for 40 days in 441 AD; 25,000 pilgrims climb it on the last Sunday of July each year.
Sky Road
Co. Galway
A 13 km loop from Clifden along a narrow cliff-edge road above the Atlantic — arguably the finest short scenic drive in Connemara. The views take in the Twelve Bens, Clifden Bay, and the outline of Turbot Island on the horizon.
Dog's Bay
Co. Galway
Two back-to-back curved beaches south of Roundstone forming a tombolo — a sliver of land with Atlantic on both sides. Dog's Bay is composed of foraminifera shell rather than quartz sand, giving it a unique white colour. Free to visit, rarely crowded outside July/August.
Poulnabrone Dolmen
Co. Clare
A 5,500-year-old portal tomb standing in the open limestone of the Burren — one of the most iconic prehistoric images in Ireland. Free to visit, accessed by a short walk from the road through the limestone pavement. The remains of at least 33 people were found here.
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