Oscar Wilde Memorial Statue, Dublin, Ireland
Photograph: Shutterstock.com
Photograph: Shutterstock.com

The 10 best attractions in Dublin right now

Get to know the Irish capital’s history, culture and tipples with our expert guide to the best attractions in Dublin

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The best attractions in Dublin celebrate everything that makes Ireland incredible. That doesn’t always mean fun things, this nation has experienced its fair share of tumult after all, but few people on the planet are as tough as the Irish. This is a place that faces things head-on, armed with a way with words that are the envy of every other nation. Dublin epitomises all that, with no shortage of fantastic restaurants and bars to back it up.

Dublin is a dream place, from its storytellers to its parks and everywhere between. Check out the best of the best that the city has to offer, and immerse yourself in all things Ireland in the process.

Best attractions in Dublin

  • Breweries
  • price 2 of 4

As Ireland’s most-visited attraction for years, there’s no escaping the might of the Guinness Storehouse. Make no mistake, it’s a seven-storey exhibition rather than a working brewery (that’s nearby but off-limits). Linger in the advertising section and look at its famous vintage posters and creative television ads before leaving plenty of time for the finale: a pint of the black stuff in the Gravity Bar, with sweeping views across Dublin.

  • Attractions
  • Historic buildings and sites

Presented without fanfare, the gaunt faces and desperate eyes of Rowan Gillespie’s seven bronze figures are a startling reminder of the Great Irish Famine of the 1840s. As landlords took their fill of other crops, the potato blight caused the population to fall by a quarter as a million died and others emigrated – like these characters on Custom House Quay, where the ‘Perseverance’ began its historic journey to New York. A small but fitting tribute to this scar on Irish history.

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  • Museums
  • History
  • price 1 of 4

Tucked inside a Georgian townhouse on St Stephen’s Green, the Little Museum of Dublin feels like a hoarder’s house. Featuring a wealth of cultural paraphernalia, from vintage posters to U2 memorabilia to a cardboard cut-out of Mrs Brown. Entry is through a guided tour only, which is just as well: the characterful staff have great fun telling the stories behind their favourite items.

  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
  • price 2 of 4

In the fast-developing Liberties area, the Teeling Distillery oozes cool in everything from its super-friendly tattooed staff to a buzzing café that serves artisanal drinks and snacks. Visitors can learn about the distilling process, and there’s a generous tasting at the end of each tour.

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  • Museums
  • Art and design

IMMA is a work of art in itself: it’s set in the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, a former military hospital styled on Les Invalides in Paris, surrounded by serene fields and a manicured formal garden. Its collection is dwarfed by MoMA to its west and the Tate Modern to its east, but go on a quick ramble, and you’ll find works from Pablo Picasso, Lucian Freud and Sean Scully, and often the temporary exhibitions steal the show.

  • Attractions
  • Cemeteries
  • price 1 of 4

As documented in the award-winning film ‘One Million Dubliners’, a trip to Glasnevin Cemetery is far from simply morbid. Instead, you can treat it as a prism to view Ireland’s history. It helps that Glasnevin is the final resting place of prominent figures like Éamon de Valera, James Larkin and Michael Collins and home to mass graves for Dublin’s poor. To really get under its surface, so to speak, guided tours are highly recommended.

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  • Attractions
  • Parks and gardens

The largest park in any capital city in Europe seems within walking distance of the centre, but it’s best to get public transport and save your steps for inside. There’s an abundance of quaint sights, and even a few residents, everyone from the wild deer to the President of Ireland, who lives in the impressive Áras an Uachtaráin. In need of a pitstop? Try Hole in the Wall, a cosy pub and restaurant on the park’s perimeter.

  • Attractions
  • Parks and gardens

The statue of Molly Malone may get all the attention but set back in the northwest corner of Merrion Square, you’ll find Dublin-born Oscar Wilde nonchalantly lounging on a rock, looking dapper in his smoking jacket made of British Columbian jade. Next to it, two pillars are inscribed with his writings, one topped by a figure of his pregnant wife, Constance Lloyd, and another, the muscly torso of Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and ecstasy. Guess which one catches his eye.

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  • Museums
  • History
  • price 1 of 4

An evocative way to bring Ireland’s history to life, Kilmainham Gaol makes for an ideal start to a Dublin trip – everything from street names to the Irish diaspora will make more sense afterwards. Presented with darkness and light, the 90-minute tour shows where Irish rebels like Patrick Pearse, James Connolly and Joseph Plunkett were locked up and executed, and on another note, where ‘The Italian Job’ was filmed.

  • price 2 of 4

If the programme of thought-provoking shows at Smock Alley Theatre doesn’t appeal, the guided tours will. They uncover this long-running theatre’s time as a brothel, the story of how its bell began the route to Catholic Emancipation, and the Kelly Riots, a successful protest for better treatment of female actors. Round off the tour with lunch in the grand Banquet Hall.

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