
The Wild Atlantic Way
The Wild Atlantic Way is a signposted 1,600-mile (2,600km) driving route down Ireland's entire west coast, from Donegal in the north to Cork in the south. Most travelers don't drive the whole thing — a realistic, satisfying chunk (Galway to Dingle or Galway to Kerry, including the Ring of Kerry) takes 4–7 days. You'll need a rental car, comfort driving on the left, and patience for genuinely narrow roads — the payoff is some of the best coastal scenery in Europe with a fraction of the crowds of the headline sights.
This is the Ireland of the postcards — green fields running straight into cliffs, stone walls, sheep with more road rights than you'd expect, and villages that feel like they haven't been asked to perform for tourists yet. It requires more planning than Dublin or a single city, mostly around the car.
How much of it should you actually drive?
Almost nobody drives all 1,600 miles, and you shouldn't try. The most rewarding, most-traveled stretch runs from Galway down through County Clare (the Cliffs of Moher, the Burren), into Kerry (the Ring of Kerry, Dingle Peninsula), roughly 4–7 days depending on how many stops you make. Add Donegal in the north if you have 10+ days and want a genuinely quieter, less-touristed version of the same landscape.
The Ring of Kerry — the signature drive
A 111-mile (179km) circular route around the Iveragh Peninsula, passing beaches, mountains, and small towns like Kenmare and Killarney. It's the single most famous stretch of the whole Wild Atlantic Way, and also the most trafficked with tour coaches.
Drive the Ring of Kerry counterclockwise. Large tour buses are required to go clockwise, so driving the opposite direction means you meet them on the wide part of the road instead of getting stuck behind — or squeezed past — one on a narrow single-lane bend. It's the single best piece of practical advice for this drive and most guides skip it.
The Dingle Peninsula — the quieter alternative
Smaller and less trafficked than the Ring of Kerry but arguably just as scenic, with the Slea Head Drive as its highlight — beehive stone huts, dramatic Atlantic views, and the westernmost point in Ireland. Many experienced Ireland travelers rate it above the Ring of Kerry specifically because of the lighter crowds.
Renting a car and driving logistics
- Ireland drives on the left — if you're used to the right, budget a nervous first hour, especially at roundabouts (there are many, and you yield to traffic already in the circle, coming from your right).
- Rental cars are almost always manual transmission by default; request automatic specifically and expect to pay more, and to book further ahead since the automatic fleet is smaller.
- Roads narrow fast once you leave the motorways — many rural stretches are one lane wide with passing bays, so slow down and expect to reverse occasionally to let oncoming traffic through.
- Fuel is sold by the liter, and diesel is common for rental cars — double-check which fuel your specific car takes before you fill up.
What it costs
| Item | Approx. cost (USD / EUR) |
|---|---|
| Rental car, per day (compact, includes basic insurance) | $45–75 / €41–68 |
| Fuel, full tank (compact car) | $70–90 / €64–82 |
| B&B along the route, per night | $75–130 / €69–120 |
| Guided Ring of Kerry day tour (no car needed) | $55–75 / €50–68 |
Common mistakes
- Underestimating driving time — winding coastal roads take noticeably longer than the same distance would on a motorway; always add 30–50% to a GPS estimate.
- Booking rigid, single-night stops everywhere — a flexible two-night stay in Dingle or Kenmare, with day trips radiating out, is usually more relaxing than moving accommodation daily.
- Skipping travel insurance that covers a rental car — narrow roads and stone walls are an unglamorous but real source of minor rental-car scrapes.
Where to stay in The Wild Atlantic Way — hotels
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