19 of the best free things to do in Dublin

Destinations

One of Europe’s most expensive capitals, Dublin offers up a surprising selection of free attractions that reveal the Irish capital’s innate personality.

From acclaimed museums and art galleries to city beaches and street musicians, you can still tap into the city’s culture and charm without spending a cent. 

Forge new connections on your next adventure with the latest advice from our weekly newsletter.

1. Enjoy the epic Phoenix Park

The ultimate urban escape, Phoenix Park is the largest enclosed city park in Europe, and gives serious bang for zero bucks. Join the walkers and joggers, cyclists and cricketers, footballers and families, who all come to breathe fresh air, enjoy the cultural and historic sites, spot the herds of fallow deer and catch a glimpse of the park’s most famous resident, the President of Ireland.

Planning tip: Áras an Uachtaráin, the president’s official residence, offers free guided tours on Saturdays, which need to be booked in advance.  

2. Take a day trip to Howth Head

The perfect day trip from the city center, Howth offers quintessential fishing village vibes without leaving the capital. The Cliff Walk passes beautiful private houses before rewarding walkers with spectacular views across Dublin Bay. There are four waymarked routes to follow with the full loop achievable in 3 hours. Look out for seals and seabirds, the small islands of Ireland’s Eye and Lambay, and the Secret Beach (safest to admire from above). If the budget allows, don’t leave Howth without sampling fresh fish and chips on the seafront.

Soak up the peace and quiet of the beautiful National Botanic Gardens for nothing © Davi Costa / Shutterstock

3. Tour the National Botanic Gardens of Ireland

Tropical plants, spectacular structures and frisky squirrels are some of the delights on offer at the National Botanic Gardens of Ireland. Home to Ireland’s only tropical rainforest, the Turner Curvilinear Range and Great Palm House are the country’s most famous greenhouses, with exotic orchids, cacti, bamboo and bananas thriving under glass. Covering 50 acres in Glasnevin, the gardens are a haven of endangered species, rare trees and fragrant flowers.

Planning tip: There are free guided talks on Sundays and downloadable official audio guides.

4. Go people-watching on Grafton St and St Stephen’s Green

You’re never far from music in Dublin, and the city’s buskers provide year-round entertainment along pedestrianised Grafton St. Catch a tune, move along to the next entertainer and soak up the vibes with the crowds. Then head to nearby St Stephen’s Green, the grandest Georgian park in Dublin and fashionable since opening to the public in 1880. With 9 hectares of manicured lawns, colorful flower beds, a Victorian bandstand, pond and playground, it’s a calm space to grab a bench or hang out on the grass. There will be swans and sculptures, ducks and dogs, but this is the ultimate place for people-watching.

5. Hunt for ancient treasures at the National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology

Prehistoric gold, Viking weapons, ancient ceramics and medieval shrines are some of the startling objects on display in the National Museum of Ireland, Archaeology. This Kildare St museum combines interactive displays with themed exhibitions.

Planning tip: Daily guided tours will transport you back in time, via original objects, from the Stone Age to Medieval Ireland. 

6. Stroll Dún Laoghaire’s East Pier and take a swim

A confection of Victorian and Georgian terraces overlooking a large harbor, the coastal suburb of Dún Laoghaire has drawn Dubliners for generations to enjoy a leisurely stroll along its East Pier. In summer, continue to walk south along the shore to join the bathers on tiny Sandycove Beach, or head around the corner to the Forty Foot Pool, Ireland’s most famous swimming spot.

Planning tip: Swimming here is a popular year-round activity, so pack your swimsuit and join the group of hardy regulars who brave the waters all through winter.

A Georgian-style green door and a yellow door in the front of a red-brick building
Look out for the gorgeous Georgian doors found around the city © Chiara Salvadori / Getty Images

7. Take photos of Dublin’s colorful Georgian doors

Once the second most important city in the British Empire, the Georgians left a legacy of iconic architecture that defines Dublin’s city center today. You don’t need to be an architecture buff to enjoy the 18th- and early 19th-century streetscapes and private garden squares, where politicians and the professional classes lived in serious style. Today the colorful Georgian doors with ornate fanlights and gleaming brass are synonymous with the city and make a fun photography trail.

8. Marvel at modern masterpieces at IMMA

Housed in the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, a magnificent 17th-century building modeled on Les Invalides in Paris, the Irish Museum of Modern Art – IMMA – has a setting worthy of the contemporary treasures held inside. Ramble the corridors and galleries discovering works by Le Brocquy, Freud and Mary Swanzy amongst installations, sculptures and moving images.

Planning tip: Don’t leave without exploring the grounds and formal gardens where you’ll find more of the art collection and a mapped-out nature trail.

9. Go on a seaside nature walk along Dollymount Strand

Connected to the coast at both ends, long and skinny North Bull Island is a glorious nature reserve tucked into Dublin Bay. Come to jog or walk along the three-mile Dollymount Strand, spotting seals at the northern end and kite surfers at the southern one. Migratory birds nest in the dunes, making it a popular spot for birders, with the chilly waters populated year-round by swimmers. There are designated bathing areas, should you feel like joining them.

10. Find all kinds of creatures at the Dead Zoo

After undergoing an extensive refurbishment, Dublin’s “Dead Zoo” (aka the Museum of Natural History) has partly reopened. Ireland’s oldest museum, the eclectic space on Merrion Street Upper houses a fantastical exhibition of over 10,000 species (out of a collection of 2 million) and includes meteorites, mammals, insects, birds and skeletons of some of the largest creatures known to humankind. Quirky and exotic, it’s always a big hit with the kids.

A woman sits on a rocky viewpoint above the coastline and throws her arms up in the air
Dublin might have hills rather than mountains, but the views are still pretty spectacular © Osadcha Olga / Shutterstock

11. Soak up the views in the Dublin Mountains

Encircling the city, the Dublin Mountains might only pass for hills in other parts of the world, but what they lack in height they more than make up for with scenery. There are trails for every fitness level with Carrickgollogan Forest Walk a good entry level one. Popular with mountain bikers and families, the disused stone chimney of the leadmine, with its twisty staircase, is mesmerizing, while the viewing rock enables spectacular panoramas from south Dublin to north Wicklow.

12. Explore the National Gallery

A great place to hideout on a rainy day, the National Gallery on Merrion Sq houses 2500 paintings, significant sculptures and thousands of artworks in watercolor, pencil and print. The permanent collection includes works by Vermeer and Van Gogh, Osborn and Orpen, and can be navigated with a free audio guide.

Planning tip: There’s a fun work space for children to get creative in, and free public tours at weekends. 

13. Celebrate Dublin’s remarkable residents through the ages

From statesmen and singers to patriots and poets, Dublin’s streets and squares are watched over by many of the city’s most remarkable citizens. Carved in stone and cast in bronze, they commemorate and celebrate the capital’s proud history and culture. Look up as you walk and meet the famous and fearless, from Molly Malone to Michael Collins, The Children of Lir to James Joyce. One of the city’s most evocative statues, Famine, sits on Custom House Quay, a collection of forlorn bronze figures commemorating the millions of Irish forced to emigrate during the 19th century Irish Famine. 

14. Find peace along Dublin’s waterways

Two tranquil waterways running through the city, the Grand Canal on the southside and Royal Canal on the northside, wend their way west towards the River Shannon. Built in the 18th century, and made redundant by the railways, they’re largely traffic-free routes today enticing walkers, joggers and cyclists to enjoy the peaceful pleasure paths along their banks. Take a picnic, grab a bench, admire the wildlife en route, and leave the buzz of the city behind you.

Closeup up the inside pages of ancient Koran found at the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin.
Chester Beatty Library is filled with ancient books from around the globe © Jonathan Smith / Lonely Planet

15. Wander the grounds of Dublin Castle for free

Built on the site first settled by Vikings in 841, Dublin Castle dates back to the 13th century, having served as a fortress, prison, treasury and seat of English rule for 700 years. Guided tours will cost you but visitors can explore the atmospheric grounds for free. Wander the cobbled squares, enjoy the Castle’s striking exterior and sit in the intricate Dubh Linn Garden.

Planning tip: Don’t leave without visiting the Chester Beatty Library, a fascinating museum with an eclectic collection of rare and ancient manuscripts, artworks and artefacts, gathered by an erudite, and very well-traveled, American magnate and philanthropist.

16. Wade out to Shenick Island

The pretty seaside town of Skerries in north Dublin is the starting point for a fun land- and sea-adventure, and one that’s especially great for kids. At low spring tide, don your wellies and walk across the mud flats to Shenick Island, where a lonesome Martello Tower, a defensive fort, stands sentinel over this wildlife reserve. The island might look deserted, but it’s a magnet for nesting gulls, cormorants and basking seals, with great views back to land.

Planning tip: You must check tidal times in advance, and return to the mainland within two hours of low tide. 

17. Admire modern art with a free concert

Built in the 1700s as a private townhouse, the imposing Georgian mansion on Parnell Sq North is home to the Hugh Lane Gallery and Ireland’s finest collection of contemporary art. Named for the celebrated art dealer and gallery director who founded it, this beautiful space houses works from Monet and Manet to Sean Scully and Harry Clarke’s kaleidoscopic stained glass.

Planning tip: Once a week on Sundays (excluding July and August) you can combine the great art with great music with free concerts in the Sculpture Gallery by Irish and International performers.

18. Visit the restored diving bell that helped shape Dublin Port

In use from 1871 until the 1950s, the restored Diving Bell on Sir John Rogerson’s Quay is a Victorian feat of engineering that facilitated the below-water construction of Dublin’s deep water quays. The unique chamber holds Dublin’s smallest museum today, revealing the grueling work and personal stories of brave divers who dredged the riverbed, deepening the capital’s port from within this metal box. 

19. Time your visit for the first Wednesday of the month

On the first Wednesday of every month, many Office of Public Works (OPW) Heritage Sites offer free admission to some of the country’s most popular attractions, like the neo-classical pleasure house of Casino Marino and Elizabethan Rathfarnham Castle. Farmleigh House, an Edwardian mansion in the Phoenix Park was once home to the Guinness family and is always worth a trip. With opulent interiors, it’s used today as a guesthouse by the Irish state, and features artworks, books and furnishings that once belonged to the original owners.

Planning tip: Free First Wednesday tickets are allocated on a first come, first served basis and cannot be booked in advance.

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