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Galway, Ireland
Galway

Connacht (West Coast / Wild Atlantic Way)

Galway

There's no airport, so arrive by train from Dublin, stay two or three nights by the Latin Quarter, and book one Cliffs of Moher or Connemara tour rather than driving the west coast yourself.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights

Nearest airport

No Galway airport; Shannon (SNN) ~1h, Knock (NOC) ~1h, Dublin (DUB) ~2.5h

From Dublin

Irish Rail train or Citylink coach, both about 2h 30m city-to-city

Best base

Latin Quarter / city centre on foot; Salthill for value

In short

Galway at a glance

Galway works best as a 2- or 3-night base on the west coast: arrive by train from Dublin rather than flying into Galway (there is no commercial airport), stay walking distance from the Latin Quarter, and use the city as a launchpad for one Cliffs of Moher or Connemara day tour rather than trying to drive everything yourself.

The short version

  • There is no Galway airport: fly into Dublin and take the train or Citylink coach (about 2.5 hours), or use Shannon (about 1 hour by car) for west-coast-only trips.
  • Stay in or beside the Latin Quarter so the trad-music pubs, restaurants and Spanish Arch are all on foot; Salthill is cheaper but a 30-minute seafront walk out.
  • You do not need a car to stay in Galway itself, but a hire car or a day tour is the only sensible way to reach Connemara, Kylemore Abbey and the Cliffs of Moher.
  • Book a Cliffs of Moher and Aran Islands combined tour (around €80) ahead in summer; the ferry leg is weather-dependent, so keep a flexible day.
  • Two full days covers the city, a trad session and one big day trip; three nights lets you do both Connemara and the Cliffs without rushing.

Galway is small, and that is the point. The medieval Latin Quarter, the trad-music pubs, the Spanish Arch and the river all sit inside a 20-minute walk, so a first trip here is less about ticking off sights and more about settling into one good base, catching a session most nights, and picking your day trips well. Where it catches people out is arrival and the surrounding region: there is no Galway airport, so you fly into Dublin and add a train or coach, and the headline scenery — the Cliffs of Moher, Connemara, Kylemore Abbey — is an hour or more out of town on roads with thin bus coverage.

That makes the two planning calls simple. First, get in from Dublin by the Irish Rail train (about 2 hours 30 minutes, city centre to city centre) or the Citylink coach if you are landing at Dublin Airport, where it runs direct from the terminal. Second, decide how you reach the west coast: book a day tour from Eyre Square for the Cliffs or Connemara, or hire a car for the days you head out and skip it for the walkable city itself.

Two nights covers the city and one big day trip; three nights lets you do both Connemara and the Cliffs without rushing. The structured planning below — where to stay between the Latin Quarter and Salthill, the airport-to-Galway options, the day-tour prices and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here.

Plan your Galway trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Galway

Cliffs of Moher day tour

The Cliffs of Moher are the headline day trip from Galway: 214m sea cliffs on the Wild Atlantic Way, usually paired by coach tours with the Burren or a Doolin-to-Aran ferry. Going independently by car is doable, but a tour handles the long drive, the timing and often a cliff cruise. Tours run from about €60-€80.

A full day From about €60-€80

Latin Quarter and Spanish Arch

The Latin Quarter is Galway's compact medieval core: Quay Street and Shop Street, packed with pubs, buskers and shopfronts, running down to the 16th-century Spanish Arch on the river Corrib. It is free to wander and best done slowly on foot, with pub and trad-music stops, rather than ticked off as a sight.

An afternoon to wa…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Latin Quarter and city centre

£££ premium

The obvious first-timer base: cobbled lanes, the trad pubs, restaurants and the Spanish Arch are all on foot, and the train station at Ceannt is a five-minute walk. You pay a premium and it is noisy at weekends, but you save every taxi.

Best for: First-timers, couples, short stays, nightlife

Browse hotels City core

Eyre Square

££ mid-range

The square sits right by the bus and train station, so it is the easiest landing spot off the Dublin coach and still a two-minute walk into Shop Street. Slightly more business-hotel in feel than the lanes below it.

Best for: Easy arrivals, transport links

Browse hotels Beside the station

Salthill

£ value

The seaside suburb along the prom, about a 30-minute walk or short bus from the centre. Cheaper guesthouses and hostels, sea views and the Blackrock diving tower, but you will walk back and forth for nightlife.

Best for: Value, sea air, families

Browse hotels 2-3km, ~30 min walk

The West End

££ mid-range

Across the river from the Latin Quarter, quieter and more local with a strong independent-restaurant and craft-beer scene. Walkable to the centre but a calmer base if weekend hen-and-stag noise is a worry.

Best for: Food-led trips, repeat visitors

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk

Airport to city centre

Galway airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Dublin Airport to Galway by Citylink/GoBus coach ~2h 45m direct about €16-€20 booked online Direct from the airport, runs through the night
Dublin city to Galway by Irish Rail train ~2h 30m web fares from about €14, walk-up €25+ Cheapest booked ahead on the Irish Rail app
Shannon Airport (SNN) to Galway by bus ~1h 50m about €16-€22 Best for west-coast-only or Ryanair trips
Knock Airport (NOC) to Galway by bus ~2h about €15-€20 Handy for some UK regional flights
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June and September are the sweet spot: long days, the lowest rain odds on a wet coast, and either side of the peak-summer crowds. September in particular keeps mild temperatures around 14°C while the summer pricing drops.

July and August are the busiest and priciest, stacked with the Arts Festival, the Races and school holidays, so book months ahead or go midweek. Winter is cheap and atmospheric for pubs and music but wet and dark, and the Cliffs cliff-cruise and some Connemara tours wind down outside roughly March to October.

What it costs

There are no direct UK flights to Galway because it has no commercial airport. Most UK travellers fly to Dublin (often £30-£90 return off-peak) and add the coach or train, or use Shannon/Knock for west-coast trips; budget the onward transfer into your total.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range Galway break for one person is roughly £400-£600 before flights: £180-£300 hotel share, £70-£110 food and pints, £55-£70 for one Cliffs of Moher or Connemara day tour, plus the £30-£60 train or coach from Dublin each way.

Galway gets expensive fast during the July Arts Festival, the late-July Galway Races and the September Oyster Festival, when hotel rates can double. A pint of Guinness runs under €6 in the city; the hidden cost is usually the day-trip transport, not the city itself.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Ireland

See the full Ireland guide

Galway FAQs

How do you get from Dublin to Galway?
The fastest, simplest option is the Irish Rail train from Dublin Heuston, about 2 hours 30 minutes city centre to city centre, with web fares from around €14 booked ahead. The Citylink or GoBus coach takes a similar time and is the better choice if you are landing at Dublin Airport, since it runs direct from the terminal.
Do you need a car in Galway?
Not for the city, which is fully walkable. You only need a car if you want to explore Connemara or the Cliffs of Moher on your own schedule; otherwise organised day tours from Eyre Square cover the same ground without the rural-road driving. If you do hire, pick it up the day you head out rather than paying for unused city parking.
How many days do you need in Galway?
Two nights is the practical minimum: one day for the city and a trad session, one for a Cliffs of Moher or Connemara day trip. Three nights lets you do both big day trips without choosing between them, which is what most first-timers regret skipping.
Is Galway worth visiting for the Cliffs of Moher?
Yes, Galway is the most popular base for the Cliffs because the coach tours are frequent and well run, usually combining the cliffs with the Burren or an Aran Islands ferry. The cliffs themselves are technically in County Clare, about 90 minutes south, so you are committing to a full day out either way.

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