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Dublin or the Wild Atlantic Way: How to Split Your Ireland Trip

Dublin or the Wild Atlantic Way: How to Split Your Ireland Trip

Homeโ€บ Irelandโ€บ Articles & Comparisonsโ€บDublin or the Wild Atlantic Way: How to Split Your Ireland Trip
Gate8 Global Team

With 7+ days, do both โ€” 2โ€“3 nights in Dublin plus a real push into the Wild Atlantic Way, ideally via Galway. With 4โ€“5 days, pick based on what you actually want: Dublin for history, museums, and pub culture in a compact, car-free package; the Wild Atlantic Way for the dramatic coastal scenery Ireland is actually known for, which requires a rental car and more logistics. Neither is objectively 'better' โ€” they're different trips wearing the same passport stamp.

This is the question almost every first-time Ireland visitor with a short trip eventually has to answer, and most articles dodge it with 'do both if you can!' Here's an honest comparison for when you genuinely can't.

DublinWild Atlantic Way
What it isCompact capital city โ€” history, museums, pubs1,600-mile signposted coastal driving route
Minimum time to do it justice2โ€“3 nights4+ days for a meaningful stretch (Galway to Kerry)
Do you need a car?No โ€” fully walkableYes, essential โ€” public transport is thin
Signature experienceThe Guinness Storehouse, Trinity College, pub cultureThe Cliffs of Moher, the Ring of Kerry, small coastal villages
Best forFirst-timers, city-break travelers, anyone without a carScenery-focused travelers, road-trippers, repeat visitors
Weather riskLower stakes โ€” indoor attractions available as backupHigher stakes โ€” outdoor scenery is the whole point
Bottom line

If you have 7+ days, don't choose โ€” do 2โ€“3 nights in Dublin plus a real west-coast push, using Galway as your bridge between the two. If you're stuck at 4โ€“5 days, pick Dublin if you'd rather not deal with a rental car and left-hand driving, or the Wild Atlantic Way if the coastal scenery is the actual reason you booked this trip in the first place.

The case for Dublin-only

If you don't want to drive abroad, or you're combining Ireland with other European cities on a tight multi-stop trip, Dublin alone is a legitimate, satisfying 2โ€“3 night city break โ€” walkable, dense with things to do, and requiring zero logistics beyond a hotel booking.

The case for skipping Dublin (mostly)

If dramatic coastal scenery is the entire reason 'Ireland' is on your list โ€” and for a lot of travelers, it genuinely is โ€” spending more than a single overnight in Dublin at the expense of the west coast is arguably the bigger regret. A quick 1-night Dublin landing pad before heading straight for Galway is a reasonable, if unconventional, call.

The middle path most people actually take

Land in Dublin, spend 2 nights, then drive (or take a direct bus/train) to Galway and spend the rest of the trip working down the coast toward Kerry, flying home from either Dublin, Shannon, or Cork depending on your route. This is the shape of most successful 7โ€“10 day first-time Ireland trips.

What if it's your second trip to Ireland?

Most repeat visitors skip Dublin almost entirely in favor of more time on the coast, in Northern Ireland, or in a specific region (Donegal, the Dingle Peninsula) they didn't have time for the first time around โ€” a reasonable sign that Dublin, while worth doing once properly, isn't usually the draw that brings people back.

Cost difference between the two

Dublin is the pricier leg per night โ€” hotels especially โ€” but requires no car rental or fuel. The Wild Atlantic Way costs less per night outside peak season (rural B&Bs undercut Dublin hotels) but adds a rental car, fuel, and generally longer stays, so a west-coast-heavy trip and a Dublin-heavy trip often land close to each other in total cost, just distributed differently.

Questions people actually ask

Can I do both Dublin and the Wild Atlantic Way in one week?
Yes, tightly โ€” 2 nights in Dublin, then 4โ€“5 days working the coast from Galway toward Kerry, flying home from Dublin, Shannon, or Cork. It's a full week, not a relaxed one, but it's a genuinely common and workable itinerary.
Is Dublin worth it if I only care about scenery?
Honestly, not as much as the west coast โ€” Dublin's appeal is history, museums, and pub culture more than landscape. If scenery is your main priority and time is tight, consider a single overnight in Dublin as a landing pad rather than a full multi-day stay.
Do I need a car for the Wild Atlantic Way but not for Dublin?
Correct โ€” Dublin is fully walkable and a car is actively a liability there (parking, traffic). The Wild Atlantic Way, by contrast, essentially requires a rental car, since public transport along the coast is thin and slow.

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