Dublin Self-Guided Walking Tour

New Tour
Samuel Beckett Bridge, North Wall, Dublin, Ireland
From: $9,99
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Duration

4 Hours

Tour Type

Daily Tour

Group Size

Unlimited

Languages

English, French, German, Spanish

About this tour

Explore Dublin’s 1000-year story from Viking black pools to revolutionary proclamations with GPS-triggered audio that plays automatically as you walk. This 3-4 hour self-guided tour covers 45 iconic stops across central Dublin, perfect for history buffs and first-time visitors. Walk at your own pace through cobbl... Read more

Sample Tour Audio

Samuel Beckett Bridge
The Jeanie Johnston
Epic Irish Emigration Museum

Highlights

  • Uncover Dublin's Viking origins at the mysterious 'black pool' that named the city
  • Meet the miracle ship that saved 2,500 lives during Ireland's Great Famine
  • Visit Trinity College and marvel at the world-famous Book of Kells manuscript
  • Explore Temple Bar's cobbled streets and legendary Irish pub culture
  • Stand where Irish independence was declared at the historic GPO in 1916
  • See Dublin's controversial Spire piercing the sky on O'Connell Street
  • Enter Ireland's largest cathedral where Jonathan Swift rests eternally
  • Cross the iconic Ha'penny Bridge, Dublin's most photographed landmark
  • Discover 800 years of power struggles at magnificent Dublin Castle
  • Experience the Abbey Theatre where riots erupted over a single word in 1907

Included/Excluded

  • Access to the Explore Dublin Self-Guided Walking Tour on our App
  • 40+ narration points of popular locations in Dublin
  • Detailed directions to both well-known attractions and hidden spots
  • Fully offline map – no need for Wi-Fi or data.
  • Audio Guide
  • In Person Guide
  • Entry fee of the Irish Whiskey Museum ($23)
  • Entry fee of the Christ Church Cathedral & Synod Hall – Heart of Medieval ($12)

Tour Stops

 Samuel Beckett Bridge

Modern harp-shaped bridge by Santiago Calatrava. Rotates 90° for ships. Named after Nobel playwright. Connects Docklands with sleek white cables spanning the Liffey like Irish harp strings.

The Jeanie Johnston

Replica famine ship that never lost a passenger across 16 Atlantic crossings. Miracle vessel of the 1840s when "coffin ships" claimed thousands. Tour the cramped quarters of Irish emigration.

 Epic Irish Emigration Museum

World's first fully digital museum in converted warehouse. Interactive journey through Irish diaspora - 70 million people worldwide claim Irish heritage. Dance through history via motion sensors.

 The Famine Memorial

Six haunting bronze figures by Rowan Gillespie commemorate the Great Famine. Positioned where desperate emigrants began their journey. Each sculpture tells a different story of survival and loss.

Custom House

 Gandon's neoclassical masterpiece built on a bog for £500k. Burned by IRA in 1921, rebuilt with Irish stone dome. From British power symbol to rebel target - architectural irony at its finest.

The Abbey Theatre

 Ireland's national theatre where underwear mention caused 1907 riots. Founded by Yeats & Gregory. Original burned down, rebuilt in 1966. Still stages plays that make people think, argue, and storm out.

Ancient Origins

 Dublin's Viking origins revealed. "Dubh linn" means black pool - where Nordic warriors found a dark lake and built a city. Every time you say Dublin, you're speaking ancient Gaelic.

 Dublin Portal & James Joyce

 Giant digital donut live-streaming to global cities meets "The Prick with the Stick" - Joyce's bronze statue. Modern connection meets literary precision in O'Connell Street.

O'connell Street & Spire

 Dublin's main stage with 120m steel "Spike." Locals call it "Stiletto in the Ghetto." 1916 Easter Rising battlefield where rebels declared independence. Bullet holes still visible.

Clerys Clock & Jim Larkin

 "Meet me under Clerys Clock" - Dublin's most romantic phrase. Big Jim Larkin's bronze figure with arms wide, leading 1913 labor movement. Romance meets revolution on O'Connell Street.

 O'connell Monument & Bridge

 The Liberator's monument with 30 bronze figures and bullet-scarred angels. Europe's only bridge wider than it's long. Victorian crowdfunding met Irish engineering creativity.

Parliament House

 World's first purpose-built parliament house, now Bank of Ireland. British forced destruction of Commons chamber but kept Lords. Hibernia statue watches over centuries of identity crisis.

Trinity College

 Ireland's oldest university with superstitious Campanile bell tower. Home to Book of Kells - "made by angels, not men." Protestant plot became nationalist breeding ground ironically.

 Irish Whiskey Museum

 "Water of life" education in Edwardian building. Independent museum tells real whiskey story without brand bias. Triumphs, disasters, and spectacular comeback of Irish liquid poetry.

Merrion Square & Oscar Wilde

 Oscar's childhood blue door and reclining statue in jade jacket. Wit sharpened at dinner parties with revolutionary poets. "Either the wallpaper goes, or I do" - even death couldn't stop him.

Wolfe Tone Memorial

 Father of Irish republicanism in amphitheater-like memorial. Protestant lawyer who united Catholic, Protestant, Dissenter. 1798 Rebellion failed but vision lived on through centuries.

St. Stephen's Green

 22-acre democratic playground gifted by Guinness family. Former private park with bullet-scarred Fusiliers' Arch. 1916 rebels learned tall buildings overlook parks the hard way.

Grafton Street

 Car-free catwalk from muddy lane to busker's paradise. Glen Hansard and Damien Rice played here before fame. Pure Dublin theatre with shopping, coffee, and spontaneous performances.

Molly Malone & St. Andrew's

 "The Tart with the Cart" - Dublin's beloved fictional fishmonger in bronze. "Alive, alive oh!" Still selling cockles and mussels outside converted church-turned-tourist office.

Dame Street

 Financial heart of Georgian Dublin. Named after medieval dam on River Poddle. From merchant powerhouse to modern banking, lined with Olympia Theatre and elegant Georgian facades.

 Eustace Street

 Birthplace of Irish republicanism in 1791. United Irishmen founded at Eagle Tavern over drinks. Simple idea: unite all Irish regardless of religion. Revolutionary thinking in modest lane.

 Dublin City Hall

 Former Royal Exchange turned rebel garrison in 1916. Merchant palace to democratic seat with stunning rotunda. Gandon's architecture survived merchants, rebels, and city council meetings.

Dublin Castle

 700 years of British rule ended here in 1922. Medieval tower meets Georgian palace. State apartments host presidents where viceroys once plotted. From fortress to ceremony center.

 Dubh Linn Gardens

 Where Dublin began - the original black pool. Vikings moored dragon ships here in 841 AD. Celtic knotwork in grass honors Norse artistry. River Poddle still flows underneath secretly.

Chester Beatty Library

 Mining magnate's 20,000 treasures spanning 6,000 years. 9th-century Qur'ans meet Chinese jade books. "Best museum in Europe" housed in Georgian clock tower building. Free entry.

Ship Street Little

Walk Ship Street Little, where cobbles echo soldiers and servants, castle walls face modern flats, and Dublin’s layers medieval, Georgian, Victorian—collide in one quiet street.

St. Patrick's Park

 Saint's baptism site turned slum turned literary paradise. Guinness money created 1904 park with writer tributes. Swift to Beckett lined up like intellectual bus queue. Sacred to sublime.

St. Patrick's Cathedral

 Ireland's largest church where Swift wrote sharp epitaphs. "Chancing his arm" door hole story of feuding families. Cromwell's horse stable turned Gothic masterpiece via Guinness restoration.

Water Of Life

Whiskey, the ‘water of life,’ and Guinness, born of a 9,000-year lease, define Dublin’s spirit. From distillery rivalries to the Guinness Storehouse, liquid history flows through the city.

Christ Church Cathedral

 Viking church rebuilt by Normans. Mummified Tom & Jerry cat and rat in crypt. Stolen saint's heart mysteriously returned after 6 years. Medieval mystery meets tourist attraction.

Smock Alley Theatre

 Ireland's first purpose-built playhouse since 1662. Galleries collapsed twice on reclaimed river ground. Whiskey warehouse to Catholic church to theatre - ultimate Dublin survivor story.

Temple Bar District

 Cultural quarter named after Temple family, not drinking. Medieval street grid survived 1970s bus station threat. Touristy but essential - over 700 venues in cobblestone chaos.

 Temple Bar Pub

 Fire-engine red pub that defines the district. Founded 1840, nearly demolished for development. Most photographed pub in Ireland with most expensive pint. Tourist rite of passage.

Irish Music Wall Of Fame

 Red wall celebrating Ireland's rock legends. U2 to Thin Lizzy portraits in windows. Inside: Rock 'n' Roll Museum with rehearsal studio. From school gym beginnings to stadium gods.

Ha'penny Bridge

 Dublin's oldest pedestrian crossing since 1816. Elegant white cast iron replaced unreliable ferries. Half-penny toll until 1919. Links north and south Dublin across "stampeding" River Liffey.

Durations

4 - 5 hours

Languages

English
French
German
Spanish

Tour Type

Walking Tour

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Member Since 2025


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