Destinations in Ireland — where to go
Dublin, Galway, Cork, and the Wild Atlantic Way — where to base yourself and for how long.
Ireland rewards a loop, not a single base: Dublin (2–3 days, the capital and main gateway), Galway (2 days, the arts-and-trad-music town on the west coast), Cork (1–2 days, the food-obsessed 'real capital' by local reputation), and the Wild Atlantic Way — the 1,600-mile signposted coastal drive connecting the west, including the Cliffs of Moher and the Ring of Kerry (4–7 days if you drive a meaningful stretch of it). A 10–12 day trip comfortably covers Dublin plus a west-coast loop.
Ireland is a small country that takes longer to cross than its size on a map suggests — mostly because the roads wind, the views keep making you pull over, and every second pub has a conversation in it you didn't plan on having. The efficient move is Dublin plus one real push west, not trying to ring the whole island in a week. Here's every major stop, with an honest read on how long it deserves.

Dublin
2–3 nights — walkable, pub-dense, and the country's main gateway.

Galway
2 days, colorful streets, real trad music, and the launch point for the west coast.

Cork
1–2 days, Ireland's food capital, with Cobh and Blarney Castle nearby.

The Wild Atlantic Way
A 1,600-mile signposted coastal drive — 4–7 days for a real chunk of it.











































