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The best area to stay in Dublin for first-time visitors is the city centre south of the Liffey, around Grafton Street and St. Stephen's Green — walkable to the main sights. Temple Bar is liveliest (and loudest); Ballsbridge is the quiet, upmarket choice a short walk or tram from the centre.
Where to Stay in Dublin by Neighbourhood
In a city, the neighbourhood decision matters more than the individual hotel. Pick the area that suits how you want to spend your evenings — the sights are walkable from any of the central ones.
City Centre South — Grafton Street & St. Stephen's Green
Walkable to almost everything: Trinity College, the Book of Kells, Grafton Street shopping, and the museums. The safest all-round choice if it's your first visit.
- The Shelbourne — Dublin's grande dame, the five-star splurge overlooking the Green.
- The Westbury — five-star luxury just off Grafton Street, part of the Doyle Collection.
- The Merrion — five-star in four restored Georgian townhouses on Upper Merrion Street; home to the 2-star Michelin Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud and an 18m pool.
- Conrad Dublin — five-star opposite the National Concert Hall, with 192 rooms a short walk from St Stephen's Green; the big-business luxury pick.
- A central mid-range pick — solid, central, walk-everywhere value.
Temple Bar
The cobbled, pub-lined heart of the night-out scene. Brilliant for atmosphere and being in the thick of it — but genuinely noisy at night and pricier per pint. Best for younger travellers and short party-weekends; light sleepers should look one street back.
- The Hoxton, Dublin — design-forward boutique, the Dublin chapter of the well-known London-born chain; sociable lobby and restaurant, a short walk from Temple Bar.
- Wren Urban Nest — sustainable, design-conscious hotel with compact rooms; affordable, central and the eco-friendly walking-distance pick for the Temple Bar buzz.
Ballsbridge / Dublin 4
Leafy, residential, embassy-district calm, 20 minutes' walk or a quick tram (LUAS) / DART ride to the centre. The pick for couples and anyone who wants elegance over noise.
- InterContinental Dublin — five-star, quiet, polished; the grand option on Simmonscourt Road.
- The Dylan Hotel — five-star boutique in a restored Victorian building on Eastmoreland Place; smaller and more personal than the Inter, the design-led couples' pick.
- The Schoolhouse Hotel — converted 19th-century schoolhouse on Northumberland Road with a popular gastropub; the characterful mid-range pick.
Docklands / Grand Canal
Sleek, modern hotels, riverside, near the 3Arena and the tech quarter. Good value newer rooms; a little less "old Dublin" character.
- Anantara The Marker Dublin — five-star on Grand Canal Square; member of The Leading Hotels of the World, with a rooftop bar and an indoor infinity pool; the polished Docklands pick.
- The Gibson Hotel — modern 4-star next to the 3Arena and the LUAS, beside the IFSC; the well-priced Docklands pick for concertgoers and tech-quarter visitors.
Near Dublin Airport
Only if you have a dawn flight or land late. Not a base for sightseeing.
- Maldron Hotel Dublin Airport — in the airport grounds, 3-minute walk from Terminal 2; free 24-hour shuttle; the most convenient pick.
- Clayton Hotel Dublin Airport — 2.5km from the terminal at the M1/M50 junction; 24-hour free shuttle; the best-rated airport option (8.7 on Booking) for travellers who don't mind the 5-minute shuttle ride. Both run by Dalata Hotel Group.
Best Hotels in Dublin by Budget (Quick Reference)
For readers who think in price first, not place:
- ★Luxury (€€€€): The Shelbourne · The Westbury · The Merrion · Conrad Dublin · Anantara The Marker · InterContinental Dublin · The Dylan
- ◆Mid-Range (€€€): The Hoxton · The Schoolhouse Hotel (Ballsbridge) · The Gibson Hotel (Docklands)
- •Budget & Characterful (€€): Wren Urban Nest · central guesthouse and aparthotel picks
Things to Do in Dublin (Major Revenue Block)
Dublin has the highest activity-booking demand of any Irish city — top attractions sell out in peak season, and booking ahead is genuinely the move:
- 🍺Guinness Storehouse skip-the-line — the city's #1 paid attraction; pre-book to skip the queue.
- 📜Book of Kells & Trinity College — timed tickets, often sold out same-day in summer.
- 🥃Jameson Distillery tour — Bow Street, popular afternoon booking.
- 🏛️EPIC – The Irish Emigration Museum — repeatedly voted Europe's best attraction; great rainy-day pick.
- 🌊Day trip: Cliffs of Moher from Dublin — the big-ticket full-day tour for visitors not driving west.
- 🪨Day trip: Giant's Causeway & Belfast — the other top full-day coach tour.
Getting Around & Planning
The city centre south of the Liffey (Grafton Street / St. Stephen's Green) — walkable to the main sights.
Great for nightlife and atmosphere, but noisy and pricey. Stay there for the buzz; stay nearby for sleep.
No — the centre is walkable and the LUAS tram, DART, and buses cover the rest. Save the car hire for the day you leave the city.
Planning the Rest of Your Ireland Trip
Most visitors start in Dublin and head west or south. Plan your next base:
Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places we'd send our own friends.