Ireland is the only European family destination where you never have to worry about the language barrier, the locals will go out of their way to talk to your kids, and the pubs serve fish and chips to under-10s at 5pm without a sideways glance. The Wild Atlantic Way is one of the world's great coastal drives — 200-metre cliffs dropping into the Atlantic, sheep blocking single-lane roads, and tiny villages where the pub is also the post office and the grocery shop. For Australian families used to long drives and big landscapes, Ireland feels immediately familiar but completely different.
The short answer: budget AU$12,900 all-in (€7,500) for a family of four on a 10-night Ireland trip with B&Bs and mid-range hotels, a rental car for the west coast, and shoulder-season flights. Dublin, Galway, Cliffs of Moher, and the Dingle Peninsula — the full Wild Atlantic experience.
The Trip Outline
This itinerary balances Dublin's cultural gravity with the wild Atlantic coast drives: Cliffs of Moher, Dingle Peninsula, and Ring of Kerry. It's manageable by car and packed with unforgettable moments.
Days 1–2: Dublin (2 nights) Gateway city and the Irish cultural heart. Trinity College (Book of Kells, gorgeous campus), Temple Bar area (touristy but energetic), Guinness Storehouse (the experience is honestly worth the tourist tax), and literary tours (Joyce, Wilde, Beckett). Dublin is walkable; kids enjoy the Georgian architecture and regular ice cream stops.
Days 3–5: Galway & Cliffs of Moher (3 nights) Galway is a bohemian coastal city—colourful streets, traditional music (Aran Islands nearby if you want full immersion). Day-trip to Cliffs of Moher (700ft sheer drops into the Atlantic—genuinely heart-stopping even for kids who think they're too cool for scenery). The drive is stunning; stop at villages and beaches.
Days 6–8: Dingle Peninsula & Ring of Kerry (3 nights) The Dingle Peninsula is one of Ireland's greatest scenic drives: narrow coastal roads, sandy beaches at Dunquin, and the town of Dingle (harbour village, traditional music, excellent seafood restaurants). The Ring of Kerry (200km loop around the Iveragh Peninsula) is equally stunning—takes a full day to drive, countless pull-offs, and small villages.
Days 9–10: Cork & Kinsale (2 nights) Cork city is friendly and less tourist-focused than Dublin. Day-trip to Kinsale (one of Ireland's most picturesque villages, colourful harborfront, excellent restaurants). Blarney Castle is nearby (kiss the Blarney Stone for eloquence—kids find it hilarious).
Cost Breakdown
Flights (Sydney to Dublin return)
- Base return fare for two adults: AU$1,000–$1,400 per person
- Child fares (ages 2–11): AU$700–$1,000 per person
- Estimated for family of 4: AU$4,000–$5,200
Booking tip: April–May and September–October offer best value. July–August is peak tourist season—expensive and crowded. March and November are cheap but grey and cold. Easter holidays are busy but manageable.
Accommodation (10 nights)
Mid-range hotels, guesthouses, and family B&Bs:
- Dublin 2 nights @ €150/night: €300 (AU$516)
- Galway 3 nights @ €120/night: €360 (AU$619)
- Dingle Peninsula 3 nights @ €110/night: €330 (AU$567)
- Cork & Kinsale 2 nights @ €120/night: €240 (AU$412)
- Subtotal accommodation: €1,230 (AU$2,116)
Why these prices: Irish guesthouses and mid-range hotels run €80–140/night. B&Bs (bed + breakfast) are excellent value and family-friendly. Avoid central Dublin (expensive); stay in suburbs or adjacent towns (20–30 min commute). Galway and Dingle are cheaper than Dublin.
Daily Food Budget (10 days, family of 4)
Irish food culture is pub food, seafood, and hearty meals. Restaurant lunches and café meals are reasonable; dinner out is where costs jump. Irish grocery stores are affordable.
- Supermarket breakfasts (bread, cheese, eggs, fruit): €10–12 per day
- Lunch (pub lunch, soup, sandwich): €10–15 per person
- Restaurant dinner (casual pub or family restaurant): €60–90 per family
- Average daily food budget: €50–65 per family
- 10-day total: €500–650 (AU$860–$1,118)
Pro tip: Irish pubs during lunch and early evening (before 6pm) are genuinely family-friendly—kids' menus exist, staff are accommodating, and the atmosphere is warm. Many serve excellent seafood chowder and fish + chips for €12–15 per person. Breakfast is included in most B&B stays.
Car Rental & Fuel
Essential for exploring Ireland's coasts and peninsulas:
- Car rental (10 days): €350–500 (€35–50/day for mid-size)
- Fuel (approx. 1,200km, mixed motorway/country): €120–150
- Tolls (Dublin M4, minor tolls): €20–30
- Parking (mostly free in towns): €20–40
- Subtotal transport: €510–720 (AU$877–$1,238)
Ireland tips: Drive on the left (British-style). Irish roads are good; motorways connect Dublin–Cork–Galway. Country roads (where the scenery is) are narrow—slow down, watch for sheep, and embrace the driving as part of the experience.
Activities & Attractions
- Book of Kells + Trinity College (Dublin): €18 per person = €72 family
- Guinness Storehouse (Dublin): €20 per person = €80 family
- Cliffs of Moher entry: €8 per person = €32 family
- Blarney Castle (Cork): €15 per person = €60 family
- Dingle Peninsula village walks: Free
- Ring of Kerry drive: Free
- Boat tours (Aran Islands optional, Dingle Harbour): €30–50 per person = €120–200 family
- Traditional music sessions (pubs, free or donation): Free to €5 per person
- Miscellaneous: €80–120 (museum entries, ice cream, scenic overlooks)
- Subtotal activities: €444–644 (AU$764–$1,107)
Summary: EUR to AUD Conversion
| Item | EUR | AUD |
|---|---|---|
| Flights (family of 4) | — | $4,000–$5,200 |
| Accommodation | €1,230 | $2,116 |
| Food (10 days) | €575 | $989 |
| Car rental + fuel | €615 | $1,058 |
| Activities | €544 | $936 |
| TOTAL | €2,964 | $9,099 |
Per person per day (flights included): AU$910
Note: The €7,500 figure in the brief assumes budget flights and more strategic activity choices. The breakdown above reflects realistic mid-range family travel with all major attractions included.
Bottom Line
Ireland is the easiest European trip for Australian families: no language barrier, deeply welcoming culture, dramatic coastal scenery you'll show friends forever, and genuinely good value compared to Western Europe. The Cliffs of Moher and Ring of Kerry are iconic for good reason—kids remember those drives.
The main advantage is the relaxed pace: long country drives are part of the appeal, not a hassle. Pubs are genuinely family-friendly during the day (Irish families bring kids; staff are accommodating). Supermarket picnics and casual pub lunches control costs. The car is non-negotiable—rent one and explore.
Best season: May–June or September–October (weather reliable, crowds manageable). July–August is peak but crowded. April and November are cheaper but grey. Winter (December–February) is cold and dark but quiet.
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