Solo Travel in Dublin
🍀 The honest guide for going alone
Dublin is one of the best cities in the region for solo travellers — walkable city centre and strong solo-dining culture. Here's everything you actually need to know: safety realities, where to base yourself, solo-dining culture, and how to meet people without trying too hard.
Why Dublin works for solo travellers
- ✦Walkable city centre
- ✦Strong solo-dining culture
- ✦Lively nightlife for meeting people
- ✦Plenty to do solo without feeling lonely
Is Dublin safe for solo travellers?
Dublin is generally safe for solo travellers — including solo female travellers — provided you follow the usual urban precautions. The main thing to watch out for is this:
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.
General solo safety tips that apply here: keep your phone in a zipped pocket, don't flash valuables, take Uber/Bolt/Grab over street taxis at night, and let someone know your rough plans for each day.
Where to stay solo in Dublin
For solo travellers, base yourself somewhere central enough to walk to dinner safely after dark. Avoid pure-residential areas — you want a neighbourhood with restaurants, cafés, and street life. If meeting people matters, pick a neighbourhood near the nightlife but not on its main strip — you want the energy nearby, not under your window.
Eating alone (and not feeling weird about it)
Dublin has strong solo-dining culture. Counter seating at smaller restaurants is normal — chefs often chat with single diners. 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.
How to meet people in Dublin
- ✦Walking tours on day 1 — free or cheap, and the best way to meet other solo travellers in your first 24 hours.
- ✦Group food tours or cooking classes — guaranteed conversation over food.
- ✦Hostel pub crawls or local meetups via Couchsurfing Hangouts.
- ✦Travel apps: BumbleBFF, Travello, and Backpackr work in most cities for finding meetup buddies.
Getting around solo
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.
Best time to visit Dublin solo
May and June are the best months — good weather and lots of other travellers around (which means easier to meet people). If you want fewer crowds, try shoulder months: April, October, March (St. Patrick's — book far ahead).