TripPick Ireland Ireland

Dublin Deep Dive 7-Day — City, Wicklow, the West & the North

Full Dublin + Glendalough + the Cliffs of Moher + Newgrange + a Belfast & Giant's Causeway day

Seven days covers Dublin thoroughly and reaches the country's headline sights. Days 1-2 are the city core. Day 3 is Glendalough and the Wicklow Mountains. Day 4 is the full-day Cliffs of Moher coach tour. Day 5 is the Boyne Valley — Newgrange (a 5,000-year-old passage tomb older than the pyramids) and the Hill of Tara. Day 6 crosses into Northern Ireland for Belfast and the Giant's Causeway (note: the North is part of the UK, uses the pound, but the border is open and unmarked). Day 7 winds down with the Howth coast and departure. Ireland is not in Schengen — check its separate (mostly visa-free) entry rules.

A full week is enough to actually understand Dublin. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$815

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,730

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$3,537

Per person, flights excl.

Book Hotels & Flights for This Itinerary

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Arrive in Dublin + Trinity College + Temple Bar

Dublin Airport - Trinity College & Book of Kells - Grafton Street - Dublin Castle - Temple Bar trad music

Activities

  1. 10:00 Arrive at Dublin Airport (DUB) + transfer to the city 1h30

    After immigration and bags, there's no airport rail link — take the Airlink Express or Aircoach bus to the city center (30-45 min, €7-9) or a taxi (€25-35, 25-40 min). The airport is about 10km north of the center.

    Cost: Bus €7-9 or taxi €25-35 TIP: Buy bus tickets online or tap contactless to skip queues. Allow extra time in rush hour. Avoid the yellow Euronet ATMs and airport exchange desks — use a bank ATM or a Wise/Revolut card. Ireland uses the euro and Type G (UK-style) plugs.
  2. 12:00 Hotel check-in + lunch near Grafton Street 1h30

    Check in (or drop bags) at a hotel south of the Liffey near Grafton Street or St Stephen's Green, then lunch — a pub toastie and soup, or fresh plates at Cornucopia or Queen of Tarts (€12-18).

    Cost: Lunch €12-18 TIP: Staying south of the Liffey keeps you walkable to nearly everything. Cards and Apple Pay work everywhere. Bring genuinely waterproof shoes — cobblestones plus showers are the reality year-round.
  3. 14:00 Trinity College + the Book of Kells & Long Room 1h30

    Ireland's oldest university (founded 1592). The Book of Kells Experience (timed entry, ~€18-25) shows the 9th-century illuminated manuscript and the magnificent barrel-vaulted Long Room library. Wandering the campus itself is free.

    Cost: Book of Kells ~€18-25 TIP: Book online in advance — it's timed-entry and very popular; early or late slots are quietest. The Long Room periodically undergoes conservation work, so check current display details when booking. The campus is a lovely free stroll in the heart of the city.
  4. 16:00 Grafton Street + Dublin Castle 1h30

    Stroll Grafton Street (Dublin's main pedestrian shopping street, full of buskers), then visit Dublin Castle (state apartments, courtyards) and the free Chester Beatty library beside it — a world-class manuscript and art collection.

    Cost: Castle ~€8; Chester Beatty free TIP: The Chester Beatty is one of Dublin's best free attractions — don't miss it. Grafton Street's buskers are part of the city's character. Dublin Castle's grounds are free to walk even if you skip the paid state apartments.
  5. 18:00 Temple Bar walk + early dinner 1h30

    Wander Temple Bar's cobbled lanes, then an early dinner of traditional Irish food — boxty and stew at Gallagher's Boxty House, or fish and chips and oysters at Klaw (€16-30).

    Cost: Dinner €16-30 TIP: Temple Bar is fun but touristy and pricey — eat smart (Klaw's oyster happy hour is good value) and save serious drinking for better pubs nearby. It gets rowdy with stag/hen parties on weekend nights. Mind your bag and phone in the crowds.
  6. 20:00 Trad music + a pint in a historic pub 2h

    End the night with live traditional Irish music and a pint of Guinness — The Brazen Head (Ireland's oldest pub, est. 1198) has nightly sessions, or head to Mulligan's or Kehoe's for one of the city's best pours.

    Cost: Pints €6.50-8.50 each TIP: A perfect pint of Guinness genuinely tastes better in Dublin. Mulligan's (since 1854) and Kehoe's (since 1803) are atmospheric, conversation-first pubs. Remember the 'rounds' custom in a group. Pace yourself — Irish hospitality adds up.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

In-flight or hotel breakfast

En route / Hotel · Included / €12-18

A light start; save room for a proper lunch in the city.

Lunch

Cornucopia or Queen of Tarts

Near Grafton Street · €12-18

Fresh plates or a full Irish — central and good value.

Dinner

Gallagher's Boxty House or Klaw

Temple Bar · €16-30

Traditional boxty and stew, or fresh oysters and seafood.

Transit:

Dublin Airport → city by Airlink/Aircoach bus (€7-9) or taxi (€25-35) — no airport rail. In the center, walk; use the Luas tram, DART, or buses with a Leap Card or contactless for longer hops.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $105 Mid $230 Luxury $497
DAY 2

Guinness Storehouse + Kilmainham Gaol + the cathedrals

Guinness Storehouse & Gravity Bar - Kilmainham Gaol - St Patrick's & Christ Church Cathedrals - historic pub

Activities

  1. 09:30 Guinness Storehouse + Gravity Bar 2h

    Dublin's #1 attraction at St James's Gate — a self-guided seven-floor experience of the Guinness story, ending at the rooftop Gravity Bar with a 360° city view and your included pint (€26-36, dynamic pricing). A short Luas Red Line ride or 25-min walk from the center.

    Cost: Entry €26-36 TIP: Buy online in advance — dynamic pricing means early-morning slots are cheapest and least crowded. The Gravity Bar pint with the panoramic view is the payoff. Commercial but a Dublin rite of passage. Allow 1.5-2 hours; there are cafés inside for a snack.
  2. 12:00 Lunch in the Liberties + walk to Kilmainham 1h30

    A casual lunch in the Liberties neighborhood near the brewery — a pub or café — then head west toward Kilmainham (a short walk, bus, or Luas).

    Cost: Lunch €12-18 TIP: The Liberties is an old working-class quarter being revived with new distilleries and cafés — worth a quick wander. Keep your timed Kilmainham slot in mind; don't linger too long over lunch.
  3. 14:00 Kilmainham Gaol — 1916 Rising history 1h30

    A guided tour of the former prison where leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising were held and executed — one of Dublin's most powerful and important historic sites, central to modern Irish independence. Admission €8.

    Cost: €8 TIP: Crucial: the cheap OPW tickets are released online a few weeks ahead and sell out fast — book the moment you can. It's guided-tour only and timed. A sobering, essential stop for understanding Ireland. West of the center via Luas Red Line or bus.
  4. 16:30 St Patrick's & Christ Church Cathedrals 1h30

    Dublin's two great medieval cathedrals — St Patrick's (Ireland's largest, linked to Jonathan Swift) and Christ Church (with its atmospheric crypt) — a short walk apart back toward the center (entry ~€8-11 each).

    Cost: ~€8-11 each TIP: If choosing one, St Patrick's is the grander; Christ Church has the more interesting crypt and the famous mummified 'cat and rat.' You can admire both from outside for free. Leo Burdock's classic chipper is right by Christ Church for a snack.
  5. 19:00 Dinner + a pint in a real Dublin pub 2h30

    Dinner of modern Irish at The Winding Stair (over the Liffey by the Ha'penny Bridge) or hearty Irish stew and coddle at The Hairy Lemon, then a pint at a historic pub like Mulligan's or Kehoe's.

    Cost: Dinner €25-55 + pints TIP: The Winding Stair has some of the best Liffey views in the city — book ahead for a window seat. After dinner, a slow pint in an old pub beats the Temple Bar prices. Tip ~10-12.5% in restaurants if no service charge is on the bill.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or café

City center · €12-18

A full Irish to fuel a big walking day.

Lunch

Liberties pub or café

The Liberties · €12-18

Casual pub grub near the Guinness Storehouse.

Dinner

The Winding Stair or The Hairy Lemon

Liffey quays / city center · €25-55

Modern Irish over the Liffey, or hearty stew and coddle.

Transit:

The Luas Red Line and buses reach the Guinness Storehouse and Kilmainham from the center; otherwise walk. Use a Leap Card or tap contactless.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $110 Mid $235 Luxury $505
DAY 3

Glendalough + the Wicklow Mountains

Guided tour - Glendalough monastic site - Wicklow Mountains - Sally Gap - lakes and round tower

Activities

  1. 08:30 Depart on a Glendalough & Wicklow tour 1h30

    Pick up a half- or full-day guided tour from the city center (around €30-40), or take the seasonal St Kevin's Bus. The road climbs south into the Wicklow Mountains, 'the Garden of Ireland,' past lakes and bogland.

    Cost: Tour €30-40 TIP: Public transport to Wicklow is limited, so a guided tour or St Kevin's Bus is the practical choice. Sit on the left going out for the best mountain views. Bring a waterproof and good shoes — the weather turns fast in the mountains.
  2. 10:30 Glendalough monastic site + round tower 1h30

    An early-medieval monastery founded by St Kevin in the 6th century, set in a glacial valley of two lakes — a remarkably preserved round tower, ruined churches, and Celtic crosses. A small visitor centre explains the history (~€5).

    Cost: Visitor centre ~€5 TIP: One of Ireland's most atmospheric historic sites — the round tower and the Upper Lake are the iconic views. Easy walking trails of varying length loop the valley and lakes. Genuinely magical in morning mist. Dress for changeable weather.
  3. 12:30 Lakeside walk + lunch 1h30

    Walk to Glendalough's Upper Lake and along the valley trails, then lunch at the visitor area café or a village pub (tour-dependent), surrounded by mountains and woodland.

    Cost: Lunch €12-18 TIP: The walk to the Upper Lake is gentle and scenic — the highlight for many. Stick to the marked trails. If your tour allows time, the longer Spinc loop has spectacular ridge views but needs a few hours and fitness.
  4. 14:30 Wicklow Mountains scenic drive 2h30

    The tour winds through the Wicklow Mountains — the Sally Gap, Lough Tay (the 'Guinness Lake'), and sweeping bog and heather landscapes used as film locations (Braveheart, Vikings, P.S. I Love You).

    Cost: Included in tour TIP: Lough Tay, with its dark water and pale sandy beach, really does look like a pint of Guinness — a top photo stop. The scenery is the point here, so enjoy the ride. Layers help; mountain weather is cooler and windier than the city.
  5. 18:00 Return to Dublin + dinner 2h

    Back in the city by early evening. Dinner of hearty Irish food and a pint — The Hairy Lemon for stew and coddle, or a pub with trad music.

    Cost: Dinner €18-30 + pints TIP: A full day in the mountains earns a hearty dinner. The Hairy Lemon's coddle and stew hit the spot. Keep the evening relaxed before the early start for the Cliffs of Moher tomorrow.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast or café

City center · €10-18

A quick full Irish or scone before the tour pickup.

Lunch

Glendalough café or Wicklow pub

Glendalough / Wicklow · €12-18

Soup, a toastie, or pub grub among the mountains.

Dinner

The Hairy Lemon

City center · €18-30

Hearty Irish stew and coddle, with a pint.

Transit:

Guided half/full-day tour from the city center (~€30-40) or the seasonal St Kevin's Bus — public transport to Wicklow is limited, so a tour is easiest.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $120 Mid $250 Luxury $510
DAY 4

Cliffs of Moher full-day coach tour

Early coach - Cliffs of Moher - the Burren - Galway or Doolin - long but spectacular day

Activities

  1. 07:00 Early departure on a Cliffs of Moher coach tour 3h30

    A full-day coach tour leaves Dublin early (around 7:00) for the Atlantic west coast. It's a long day — typically 12-13 hours round trip (€50-99) — crossing the country to County Clare.

    Cost: Tour €50-99 TIP: There's no quick way to do the Cliffs in a day without driving, and Ireland drives on the left, so a coach tour is by far the least stressful option. Eat breakfast first and bring snacks and water. Sleep on the long drive out; the scenery starts in the west.
  2. 11:00 Cliffs of Moher 2h

    Ireland's most famous natural sight — sheer Atlantic cliffs rising over 200m for 8km, with O'Brien's Tower and dizzying ocean views (admission usually included; ~€10-12 if not). Allow 1.5-2 hours on the cliff paths.

    Cost: ~€10-12 (often included) TIP: Stunning but exposed and windy — hold onto hats and phones, and stay behind the safety barriers (the cliff edges are genuinely dangerous). A clear day is breathtaking; mist can roll in fast. The visitor centre is built into the hillside. A bucket-list view.
  3. 13:30 The Burren + Doolin (lunch) 2h

    The tour usually crosses the Burren — a vast, otherworldly limestone karst landscape — and stops in Doolin (a hub of traditional music) or another village for lunch.

    Cost: Lunch €12-20 TIP: The Burren's bare, cracked limestone is unlike anywhere else in Ireland — surprisingly full of rare wildflowers in spring. Doolin is famous for trad music sessions. Tour itineraries vary, so confirm exactly what stops are included when you book.
  4. 15:30 Galway City (tour-dependent) + return 5h30

    Many tours include a stop in lively Galway City — a colorful, music-filled harbor town — before the long drive back east to Dublin in the evening.

    Cost: Included in tour TIP: Galway's Latin Quarter, with buskers and pubs, is a fun short stroll. Then settle in for the long return drive (3+ hours). Confirm whether your tour includes Galway, the Burren, a Cliffs boat trip, or just the Cliffs — they differ a lot.
  5. 20:30 Arrive back in Dublin + late dinner 1h30

    Back in the city late evening. A relaxed late dinner or a final pint — a pub toastie, fish and chips, or a quiet Guinness after a big day.

    Cost: Dinner €15-30 TIP: You'll be tired after 12-13 hours, so keep dinner simple and close to your hotel. A late-night chipper or a quiet pub pint is the easiest end to the day. Worth every hour for the cliffs.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early breakfast before pickup

Hotel · €10-18

Eat before the 7:00 departure; bring snacks for the long drive.

Lunch

Doolin or Burren village

County Clare · €12-20

Pub lunch or soup and sandwiches on the tour stop.

Dinner

Late pub dinner

Dublin city center · €15-30

Something simple and close to the hotel after a long day.

Transit:

Full-day coach tour from Dublin (€50-99, ~12-13 hours round trip) — the standard way to reach the far-west Cliffs of Moher in a day. No practical quick independent option without a car.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $130 Mid $270 Luxury $540
DAY 5

Boyne Valley — Newgrange + the Hill of Tara

Guided tour - Brú na Bóinne / Newgrange passage tomb - Hill of Tara - ancient Ireland

Activities

  1. 08:30 Depart on a Boyne Valley tour 1h30

    A guided day tour north into the Boyne Valley (around €40-55), or self-drive (~45 min). The region is the cradle of ancient and early-Christian Ireland, dense with prehistoric monuments and battle sites.

    Cost: Tour €40-55 TIP: Newgrange can only be visited via the Brú na Bóinne Visitor Centre with a timed shuttle to the tomb — a guided tour handles all the logistics. Booking ahead is essential in summer as access is capped. Sit back for the short drive north.
  2. 10:30 Newgrange passage tomb (Brú na Bóinne) 2h

    A UNESCO World Heritage Neolithic passage tomb built around 3200 BC — older than Stonehenge and the Egyptian pyramids — famous for the midwinter-solstice sunrise that lights its inner chamber. A guided shuttle and tour (~€18) from the visitor centre.

    Cost: ~€18 (visitor centre + tomb) TIP: Astonishing 5,000-year-old engineering with carved kerbstones and a precise solstice alignment. The guided chamber tour simulates the solstice light. Access is timed and capped, so book through the visitor centre or a tour well ahead. A genuine highlight of ancient Ireland.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + the Hill of Tara 2h30

    Lunch en route, then the Hill of Tara — the ancient ceremonial and political seat of the High Kings of Ireland, a green ridge of earthworks with wide views across the central plain. Free to walk.

    Cost: Lunch €12-18; Tara free TIP: Tara is more about atmosphere and views than ruins — bring a windproof and walk the grassy mounds where Irish kings were crowned. Free and uncrowded. Tour itineraries vary (some add Trim Castle or Mellifont Abbey), so check what's included.
  4. 17:00 Return to Dublin + dinner 3h

    Back in the city by late afternoon/early evening. Dinner of modern Irish at Etto or The Winding Stair, then a pint at a historic pub.

    Cost: Dinner €27-55 + pints TIP: After a day of ancient sites, treat yourself to a good modern-Irish dinner — Etto is excellent and books out, so reserve ahead. Then a slow pint at Mulligan's or Kehoe's. Tip ~10-12.5% if no service charge.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or café

City center · €10-18

A full Irish before the tour pickup.

Lunch

Boyne Valley village or café

County Meath · €12-18

Pub grub or sandwiches near the sites.

Dinner

Etto or The Winding Stair

City center · €27-55

Modern Irish small plates or Liffey-view dining.

Transit:

Guided Boyne Valley day tour from Dublin (~€40-55) — handles the timed Newgrange shuttle and access. Self-drive is ~45 min north but still needs a pre-booked visitor-centre slot.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $120 Mid $255 Luxury $520
DAY 6

Belfast + the Giant's Causeway (Northern Ireland)

Coach tour - Belfast - the Giant's Causeway - Antrim coast - Titanic / Game of Thrones country

Activities

  1. 07:00 Early coach north to Northern Ireland 2h30

    A full-day coach tour leaves Dublin early for Northern Ireland (around €55-90, ~12 hours). The border between the Republic and the UK's Northern Ireland is open and unmarked — you cross without checks — but the North uses the British pound.

    Cost: Tour €55-90 TIP: Bring some British pounds or a card for purchases in the North (the euro isn't generally accepted). The open border means no passport check on the road, but keep your ID with you. A long day — eat breakfast and bring water.
  2. 11:00 The Giant's Causeway 2h

    A UNESCO World Heritage site on the Antrim coast — some 40,000 interlocking basalt columns formed by ancient volcanic activity, tied to the legend of the giant Finn McCool. Spectacular coastal scenery (visitor centre fee varies).

    Cost: Visitor centre/parking fee varies TIP: The hexagonal columns stepping into the sea are unforgettable — wear grippy shoes (the rocks are slippery when wet) and a windproof. You can walk down to the stones for free; the visitor centre/exhibition is paid. A top natural wonder of the British Isles.
  3. 14:00 Antrim coast + Game of Thrones country 2h30

    The tour follows the dramatic Causeway Coastal Route — possibly the Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge, the Dark Hedges (a Game of Thrones filming location), or Dunluce Castle, depending on the itinerary.

    Cost: Included; some add-ons extra TIP: The Antrim coast is one of the most scenic drives in Europe. Game of Thrones fans will recognize several stops. Itineraries vary widely between operators, so confirm exactly which sites (Dark Hedges, Carrick-a-Rede, Belfast) are included before booking.
  4. 16:30 Belfast (Titanic Quarter) + return 4h

    Many tours include time in Belfast — the Titanic Belfast museum (where the ship was built) and the city center — before the drive back to Dublin in the evening.

    Cost: Titanic Belfast ~£25 if visiting TIP: Titanic Belfast is excellent but needs 1.5-2 hours, so it depends on the tour's timing. If your tour just passes through Belfast, consider a separate dedicated Belfast trip another day. Then the ~2.5 hour drive back to Dublin.
  5. 20:30 Arrive back in Dublin + late dinner 1h30

    Back in the city late. A simple late dinner or a final pint near the hotel after a long day in the North.

    Cost: Dinner €15-30 TIP: You'll be tired — keep it close and easy. A chipper or a quiet pub pint is the simplest end. The Antrim coast and Causeway make the long day worth it.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early breakfast before pickup

Hotel · €10-18

Eat before the 7:00 departure; bring snacks.

Lunch

Antrim coast village or Belfast

Northern Ireland · £10-18

Pub lunch on the coast — bring pounds or a card.

Dinner

Late pub dinner

Dublin city center · €15-30

Something simple near the hotel after the long day.

Transit:

Full-day coach tour from Dublin to Northern Ireland (€55-90, ~12 hours). The open, unmarked border needs no passport check on the road, but the North uses British pounds.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $140 Mid $290 Luxury $560
DAY 7

Howth coast + last museums + departure

DART to Howth - cliff walk - harbor seafood - final city stroll - departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 DART to Howth + cliff walk 2h30

    An easy, relaxed final day: take the DART coastal train to Howth (~30 min, ~€8 return) and walk part of the cliff path for views over Dublin Bay, Ireland's Eye, and the lighthouse.

    Cost: DART ~€8 + walk free TIP: A gentle, scenic way to end the week without another long tour. Wear proper shoes and a windproof. The shorter Cliff Path Loop is about an hour. Watch for seals in the harbor.
  2. 12:30 Harbor seafood lunch in Howth 1h30

    Lunch on very fresh fish and chips or seafood by the Howth harbor at Beshoff Bros or a harbor restaurant, watching the fishing boats.

    Cost: Lunch €12-20 TIP: The freshest fish and chips of the trip, in a working harbor setting. A lovely, low-key final Irish meal. Check DART times back so you don't rush.
  3. 14:30 Return + final city stroll or free museum 2h

    DART back to the city for a last wander — Grafton Street, the Liffey quays, a free museum you missed (National Gallery, Chester Beatty), or some souvenir shopping.

    Cost: Free (shopping extra) TIP: A relaxed afternoon to soak up the city. The free National Gallery or Chester Beatty are great if it's raining. Good souvenirs: Irish whiskey, Guinness merchandise, Aran knitwear, and Irish-made crafts.
  4. 17:00 Departure 2h30

    Collect bags and head to Dublin Airport by Airlink/Aircoach bus (€7-9) or taxi (€25-35) — no airport rail link. Allow plenty of time for queues.

    Cost: Bus €7-9 or taxi €25-35 TIP: Dublin Airport gets busy — leave generous time, factoring the bus/taxi from the center. A final Guinness airside is the classic Dublin farewell.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or hotel breakfast

City center · €10-18

A leisurely full Irish or brunch.

Lunch

Beshoff Bros or harbor restaurant

Howth · €12-20

Fresh fish and chips by the harbor.

Dinner

Final pint or airport bite

City center / Airport · €10-25

A last Guinness, or a quick meal before the flight.

Transit:

DART to Howth (~30 min, ~€8 return). Airport via Airlink/Aircoach bus (€7-9) or taxi (€25-35) — no airport rail.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $95 Mid $200 Luxury $420

Book Dublin Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Dublin 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Can I visit Northern Ireland from Dublin in a day?
Yes — full-day coach tours (€55-90, ~12 hours) reach the Giant's Causeway and the Antrim coast, often with time in Belfast. The border between the Republic of Ireland and the UK's Northern Ireland is open and unmarked, so you cross without checks, but the North uses the British pound, not the euro — bring some sterling or a card. Carry photo ID even though there's no road checkpoint.
Is Newgrange worth it, and how do I visit?
Yes — it's a 5,000-year-old Neolithic passage tomb, older than Stonehenge and the pyramids, with a remarkable midwinter-solstice alignment. You can only visit via the Brú na Bóinne Visitor Centre with a timed shuttle to the tomb (~€18), and access is capped, so book ahead (especially in summer) or take a guided Boyne Valley tour that arranges it.
Is 7 days too long for Dublin?
Not if you use day trips. The city itself fills 2-3 days, but Dublin is the ideal base for Ireland's headline sights — Glendalough, the Cliffs of Moher, Newgrange, and even Belfast and the Giant's Causeway are all doable as day tours. Seven days lets you see the city properly plus four major excursions without changing hotels.
Is Dublin a good base, or should I move around?
For a one-week trip focused on the east and the famous sights, Dublin as a single base works well and saves the hassle of changing hotels — coach tours fan out to everything. If you specifically want the west coast (Galway, the Cliffs, Connemara, Kerry), it's worth basing there for a couple of nights instead, since day-tripping it from Dublin means very long drives.

Looking for Different Trip Lengths?

Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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