10 Days in Dublin
🍀 Complete Itinerary & Cost Guide
10 days in Dublin lets you go beyond the highlights — take day trips, revisit favourites, and enjoy slow mornings. Here's a realistic day-by-day plan plus what it costs.
Day-by-Day Itinerary
This plan covers the essentials without burnout. Adjust based on opening hours, weather, and your stamina. Most days are 4–6 hours of activity with long meals and downtime built in.
Settle into your hotel, grab a light lunch, then ease into Dublin with Trinity College — Book of Kells + the Long Room library. Don't overbook day one — jet lag is real.
Guinness Storehouse with a pint in the Gravity Bar. Pair it with a sit-down lunch nearby and an evening walk through a different neighbourhood.
Kilmainham Gaol (book online days ahead — always sells out). Take the morning slow and use the afternoon to explore a quieter district away from the tourist core.
A real session pub — The Cobblestone in Smithfield for live trad music. Pair with a long lunch — Skip dinner in Temple Bar — eat a toastie with your Guinness at Grogan's, seafood chowder in Howth, and a proper full Irish at The Fumbally.
Howth cliff walk + fish and chips (25 min on the DART). This day usually involves a longer journey so start early.
Revisit Trinity College — Book or spend the morning at a café in a quieter neighbourhood. The best travel days are often the unscheduled ones.
Revisit Guinness Storehouse with a or spend the morning at a café in a quieter neighbourhood. The best travel days are often the unscheduled ones.
Revisit Kilmainham Gaol (book online or spend the morning at a café in a quieter neighbourhood. The best travel days are often the unscheduled ones.
Use this day for whatever you didn't get to: a museum, a hammam, a long lazy lunch. The best memories come from unplanned hours.
Hit one final must-see (Howth cliff walk + fish and chips (25 min on the DART)), pick up souvenirs, and leave time for a relaxed lunch before your flight or onward train.
What does 10 days in Dublin cost?
Estimates below are per person, including accommodation, food, local transport, and ~1 paid activity per day. Flights to Dublin are not included — they vary wildly by origin.
Dublin survival tips
Get a Leap Visitor Card for buses, trams and DART trains. The city core is walkable in 30 minutes — the 16 bus from the airport beats the €35 taxi.
Skip dinner in Temple Bar — eat a toastie with your Guinness at Grogan's, seafood chowder in Howth, and a proper full Irish at The Fumbally.
No real scams — just Temple Bar itself, where a pint hits €10 (it's €5.80 two streets away). Fake charity clipboard collectors work Grafton Street; real ones carry Garda permits.
When to go
May, June, July, August, September are the best months for Dublin — the climate is at its best and crowds haven't peaked. Avoid November–February (dark by 4:30pm + rain).