The pub is the best thing about traveling Ireland, and the traditional Irish pubs are where the whole trip actually happens. The music, the pints, the late nights talking to strangers, it all goes down in these rooms. So this is our running list of the ones we’d go back to.

We spent about two weeks driving the country on our last trip, in shoulder season, and we hit pubs in just about every town we stopped in. Most of the ones on this list we drank in ourselves.

A few are famous for good reason, and a couple you’d never find unless someone pointed you at the door, like Foxy John’s in Dingle, a working hardware shop with a bar at the back.

Checklist card showing what makes an Irish pub genuinely traditional, from a properly poured pint and live trad to original fittings and no table service

We did the whole route by campervan, but a rental car works exactly the same on this drive and is the easier choice for a first trip. It’s worth a few minutes to compare car hire deals on Discover Cars before you set off.

Below is the list, from the household names down to the ones we’d actually steer you toward instead. I’ve split it into the best all-rounders, the spots for live trad, and the places to go when you just want a quiet, perfect pint, plus a map, a few tips for getting the most out of an Irish pub, and our final verdict at the end.

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Quick Answer:

The best traditional Irish pubs are spread across the country, not packed into one city. For live trad, Galway’s Latin Quarter wins, with Tig Coili and Taaffe’s. For a perfect pint, Mulligan’s in Dublin. Sean’s Bar in Athlone is the oldest, open since around 900 AD. Dick Mack’s in Dingle is the most characterful. Below, we rank the lot.

The Best Traditional Irish Pubs

Pint of Guinness settling on a wooden pub bar
A proper pint of Guinness, poured and settled, is the baseline every pub on this list gets right.

These are the all-rounders, the ones that get the pint, the food, the welcome and the music right. Some are household names and some you’d only find if you knew to look. Here’s where we’d send you first.

Gus O’Connor’s, Doolin (County Clare)

Rows of spirit bottles lined up behind an Irish pub bar under warm lights
The back bar tells you what kind of night you are in for.

We hiked the Cliffs of Moher path from Doolin and walked straight into Gus O’Connor’s after, soaked and starving. We had fish, chips and mussels and a pint, and it was exactly the pub you want at the end of a long walk.

It’s been open since 1832 and the trad sessions run most nights in season. If you only do one pub in Doolin, do this one. Pair it with a day on the water first and book the Doolin Cliffs of Moher boat tour on GetYourGuide, which runs from the pier just down the road.

Where to Stay in Doolin

Tig Coili, Galway

Close-up of a fiddle being played mid-session with a hammered dulcimer alongside it
Get a pint, grab a stool, and the fiddle will start up before you finish it.

Tig Coili on Mainguard Street is small and packed and the trad is on twice a day. We ended up back here twice in Galway because it’s the real thing, locals and travelers crammed in together around the players.

No frills, no stage, just a tight room and great music. It’s our pick of the Latin Quarter pubs.

Dick Mack’s, Dingle (County Kerry)

A hand resting on a glass of amber Irish whiskey on a dim pub bar.
Dick Mack’s built its name on whiskey, not pints. Order a measure of Irish single malt and let it sit a minute before the first sip.

We only had one rainy evening in Dingle and didn’t make it into Dick Mack’s, but it’s the name everyone gives you. It’s an old leather shop turned bar, still fitted with the original counters and drawers, with a big whiskey range and a brewery out the back.

There are brass stars set into the pavement outside for the famous faces who’ve drunk here. If we’d had a dry night in town, this is where we’d have spent it.

Where to Stay in Dingle

The Coachman’s, Kenmare (County Kerry)

Two beers and a candle on a worn wooden pub table in a warm, low-lit room
Two by the candlelight, and the chat gets going from there.

We stopped in Kenmare to see the Bronze Age stone circle just off the main street and ducked into The Coachman’s for a drink. It’s a proper local bar on a colorful little town that makes an easy break on the Ring of Kerry.

Kenmare gets touristy in parts, but the pubs here still feel like locals’ pubs. Good for an hour off the road.

Where to Stay in Kenmare

The Long Hall, Dublin

Close-up of polished brass beer taps on a traditional pub bar
The brass taps do a lot of heavy lifting at a proper old Dublin pub.

Our first night in Dublin was a Temple Bar crawl, all noise and crowds, which is fun once. The Long Hall on South Great George’s Street is the opposite, and it’s the one we’d point you to for a serious pint.

It’s a Victorian bar with the original mirrors, chandeliers and dark wood all intact. No music, no fuss, just one of the best-looking rooms in the city and a properly poured Guinness.

Sean’s Bar, Athlone (County Westmeath)

Close-up of glowing embers and burning logs in an open pub fire
Sean’s keeps a real fire going, and that glow is most of the reason you stay for a third pint.

Sean’s Bar in Athlone claims to be the oldest pub in Ireland, with roots traced back over a thousand years. The floor still slopes, the walls are lined with history, and it sits right on the banks of the Shannon in the middle of the country.

It’s an easy stop if you’re driving between Dublin and Galway, and the trad sessions are regular. Worth the detour for the history alone.

Peadar O’Donnell’s, Derry

Two hands clinking a pale ale and a dark stout in a toast inside a pub
Order a stout, find a corner, and let the night take its time.

Peadar O’Donnell’s in Derry runs live trad every single night, and it’s set up like an old grocery and bar with shelves of bric-a-brac everywhere. It connects through to the Gweedore Bar next door, so you get two rooms of music under one roof.

It gets busy and loud, in the best way. If you’re up in the northwest, this is the session you’re looking for.

Hopkins Bar, Sligo

Stools lined up along a warm wooden pub counter with a man reading at the bar
Grab a stool at the bar in Hopkins and you settle in for the night. This is the kind of counter where one pint turns into three and a chat with whoever is next to you.

Sligo doesn’t get the pub headlines that Galway and Dublin do, which is part of why it’s worth stopping. Hopkins Bar is a traditional town-center pub with regular trad and the kind of local crowd you don’t get in the tourist spots.

It’s a good reminder that some of the best sessions are in towns most visitors drive past. Sligo is one of them.

Best Pubs for Live Trad Music

Guitar microphone and a pint set up for a trad music session in an Irish pub
The setup before a trad session starts: a guitar, a mic, and a pint within reach.

Trad music is the reason a lot of people plan their nights around the pub in the first place. These are the rooms where the players just turn up, pull a few chairs into a circle, and go. No stage, no setlist, no cover charge.

Monroe’s Tavern, Galway

Close-up of a musician playing a piano accordion during a live traditional Irish music session indoors.
The box gets going and nobody touches their pint for the next twenty minutes.

We stepped off the taxi in Galway and could already hear the music coming out of Monroe’s Tavern on Dominick Street. We walked in to find about 20 people mid-session, fiddles and a bodhran going, and that was our first ten minutes in the city.

It’s a big, busy room and the trad runs most nights, sometimes with set dancing on top. If you want the Galway music scene in one stop, start here.

Foxy John’s, Dingle (County Kerry)

Close-up of a musician playing a silver flute during a live trad session in a dim pub
Foxy John’s is one of those Dingle spots where the trad session just starts up and the whole room leans in.

Foxy John’s is a working hardware shop by day, with a small bar at the back, and at night a couple of players set up among the shelves of tools. We caught a guitar and tin whistle duo going when we ducked in out of the rain.

You can buy a hammer and a pint in the same room, which sounds like a gimmick until you’re sitting in it. It’s one of the most unusual pubs in the country and the session is the real thing.

Taaffe’s Bar, Galway

Close-up of hands strumming an acoustic guitar with a banjo player alongside during a live Irish trad session
Two players locked in, one on guitar, one on banjo, and that is when a Galway session actually gets going.

Taaffe’s on Shop Street runs trad twice a day, afternoon and evening, so you can catch a session without waiting until midnight. We pulled in here after Monroe’s and it held up, a tighter room with the players right by the door.

Between this and Tig Coili a few doors down, you can hop straight from one session to the next. That stretch of Galway is the easiest place in Ireland to find live trad on any given night.

The Cobblestone, Dublin

A musician playing the fiddle during a live traditional Irish music session
The Cobblestone runs trad sessions every night, and a good fiddle player will have the whole room quiet in seconds.

The Cobblestone in Smithfield is the trad pub serious music fans send you to in Dublin. It bills itself as a drinking shop with a music problem, and the front bar runs sessions every night where the musicians, not the tourists, set the tone.

There’s a back room for ticketed gigs too, but the free front-bar session is the one to aim for. It’s a world away from the Temple Bar crowds across the river.

Matt Molloy’s, Westport (County Mayo)

guinness beer in ireland

Matt Molloy’s in Westport is owned by the flute player from The Chieftains, so the music here has a pedigree few pubs can match. The back room fills up nightly and the sessions can run long once they get going.

Westport itself is a tidy little town worth a night, and this pub is the main reason to stop. If you want to stay and let the session run long, book a night in Westport on Booking.com within a short walk of the door. Get there early if you want a seat near the players.

Where to Stay in Ireland’s Best Pub Towns

Best Pubs for a Quiet, Perfect Pint

Warm wood-panelled Irish pub bar with stools and Guinness taps
An empty bar in the late afternoon is the best time for a quiet, slow pint.

Some nights you don’t want the session. You want a snug, a slow Guinness, and a conversation you can actually hear. These are the pubs for that, no band, no stage, just a great room and a properly poured pint.

Mulligan’s, Dublin

Close-up of a settled pint of Guinness stout on a wooden pub table
The pour is half the ritual, give it the full two minutes.

Mulligan’s on Poolbeg Street has been pouring since 1782 and has a long-standing reputation for one of the best pints of Guinness in Dublin. It was the journalists’ pub for generations, all dark wood and worn seats and no interest in modernizing.

There’s no music and no fuss, which is the whole point. You go to Mulligan’s for the pint and the talk, and both hold up.

Kehoe’s, Dublin

Inside a traditional Irish pub: brass-railed bar stools, a tiled floor, and a wall of whiskey behind the bar.
Grab a stool at the bar and let the first pint settle while you read the room.

Kehoe’s on South Anne Street is a Victorian bar with the original snugs still in place, those little partitioned booths built for a private drink. The upstairs used to be the owner’s living quarters and still has the feel of it.

It gets busy after work, so come early if you want a snug to yourself. Grab one and it’s the best seat in the city for a quiet pint.

The Crown Liquor Saloon, Belfast

Ornate Victorian pub bar back with stained glass panels, a marble counter and old brass lamps
The stained glass behind the bar is the whole point, order something slow and just look up.

The Crown in Belfast is owned by the National Trust, which tells you how special the room is. It’s a Victorian gin palace with carved wooden snugs, gas lamps, and tiled walls, each booth with its own door you can pull shut.

Tuck into one of the snugs with a pint and you’ve got the quietest corner in the city. It’s right across from the Europa Hotel, so it’s an easy first stop in Belfast.

The Gravediggers, Dublin

A settled pint of dark Irish stout with a thick creamy head on a wooden pub table.
A proper Irish pint of stout, poured in two parts and left to settle until the head sits creamy and tight.

John Kavanagh’s, known to everyone as The Gravediggers, sits right beside Glasnevin Cemetery and has been run by the same family for generations. There’s no TV, no music, and the front bar has barely changed in over a century.

It’s out of the center, so it never fills with tourists, and the Guinness has a serious local following. This is as old-school as a Dublin pint gets.

Morrissey’s, Abbeyleix (County Laois)

Rows of old bottles on wooden shelves beside a wall of small labeled grocer drawers in a dim traditional pub interior.
Morrissey’s still works as a grocer as much as a pub, so you order your pint next to shelves of old bottles and a wall of little wooden drawers.

Morrissey’s in Abbeyleix is an old grocery and bar in one, with the shop shelves and drawers still lining the walls behind the counter. There’s a pot-bellied stove in the middle of the floor and the kind of stillness you only get in a country pub.

It sits on the main road south from Dublin toward Cork, so it makes a perfect break on a long drive. Pull in for a slow pint and you won’t want to leave.

Map of the Best Traditional Pubs in Ireland

Colourful village street with a thatched cottage in Doolin County Clare
Doolin in County Clare, a tiny village with more good trad music than places ten times its size.

Here’s every pub on this list plotted on one map, so you can see what’s near your route before you book anything.

Map of the best traditional Irish pubs across Ireland with eight numbered pins from Dingle to Kenmare

The clusters tell you a lot. Dublin and Galway are stacked, which is no surprise, but you’ll also spot the traditional Irish pubs out on their own, like Sean’s in Athlone and Morrissey’s in Abbeyleix, that make a perfect break on a long drive between the big towns.

If you’re driving the west coast, you can see how Doolin, Dingle and Westport line up along the way. Plan a night in each and you’ve got most of the best sessions in the country covered.

Tips for Visiting Traditional Irish Pubs

Temple Bar pub lit up at night in Dublin with crowds on the street
Temple Bar after dark, the busiest pub corner in Dublin and the one to know your way around.

A few things make a pub night go smoother once you know them. None of this is complicated, but it’s the stuff that separates a tourist standing at the bar looking lost from someone who looks like they’ve done this before.

Order a Guinness and then wait for it. A proper pint is poured in two parts and left to settle, so it takes a couple of minutes. Don’t hover or look impatient, the bartender knows what they’re doing.

If there’s a trad session on, keep the talking down while the players are going. The music isn’t a paid gig with a stage, it’s a few musicians who turned up, so the room respects it. Clap at the end of a set, not in the middle of a tune.

You don’t tip on pints in Ireland. Tipping at the bar isn’t a thing, and nobody expects it. If a band has a tip jar out, a couple of euro is a nice touch, but it’s never required.

  • Sessions usually kick off around 9:30pm, not early evening, so plan a late night.
  • Buy in rounds if you’re with a group, it’s how the locals drink and it’s bad form to skip your turn.
  • Cash still helps in the older country pubs, though most take cards now.
  • Order at the bar, not from a table. There’s no table service in a traditional pub.

The big one is just talking to people. The whole point of an Irish pub is that strangers end up in conversation, and the locals are usually happy to chat once you start. Some of our best nights in Ireland came from a pint and a chat that went on way longer than we planned.

Plan the Whole Irish Road Trip

Frequently Asked Questions

These are the questions we get asked most about traditional Irish pubs, from which city does it best to which one is the oldest. Short, straight answers below.

What city has the best pubs in Ireland?

Galway, no contest. The Latin Quarter packs more good trad into a few streets than anywhere else, and you can walk from Tig Coili to Taaffe’s to Monroe’s in ten minutes and catch a session in each. Dublin runs it close on history and the pint, but for music every night Galway wins.

What is the most famous pub in Ireland?

The Temple Bar in Dublin is the most photographed, the red-fronted spot every tour group ends up at, though locals find it pricey and touristy. For real pedigree, Dick Mack’s in Dingle and The Cobblestone in Dublin are better known, and Sean’s Bar in Athlone is famous as the oldest.

What is the oldest pub in Ireland?

Sean’s Bar in Athlone, County Westmeath, claims the title, with roots traced back over a thousand years to around 900 AD, and Guinness World Records has recognized it as the oldest pub in Ireland. It sits right on the Shannon, an easy stop driving between Dublin and Galway.

In short

  • Gus O’Connor’s in Doolin has run since 1832, with trad sessions most nights in season.
  • Tig Coili on Galway’s Mainguard Street runs live trad twice a day.
  • Dick Mack’s in Dingle is a former leather shop with a big whiskey range and back brewery.
  • Foxy John’s in Dingle is a working hardware shop with a bar at the back.
  • Shoulder season is the time to drive Ireland’s pubs, fewer crowds across two weeks of towns.

Final Word on Ireland’s Traditional Pubs

Green fields and stone walls along the Burren coast in County Clare Ireland
The Burren coast in County Clare, the kind of drive that connects half the pubs on this list.

If you take one thing from this list, make it this: the pub is the trip. We drove the whole country and the nights we remember weren’t the big sights, they were the rooms, the pints and the people we ended up talking to.

You don’t need to hit all of these. Pick the ones near your route, give each a proper evening, and don’t rush. One good session beats three quick stops every time.

And don’t write off the small towns. Some of our best nights came in places most visitors blow straight past, like the late one we had in Galway that started the second we got off the taxi and went on far longer than we’d planned.

So order the Guinness, wait for it to settle, and start a conversation. That’s the whole thing. Do that in a couple of the pubs above and you’ll go home with the best stories of your trip.

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Dark wood interior of a traditional Irish pub with a pint of stout on the bar
Musicians playing a live trad session in a traditional Irish pub with patrons listening
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