Skip to content
Departly.
Guinness Storehouse, Ireland
Guinness Storehouse

Leinster

Guinness Storehouse

How to visit the Guinness Storehouse: book the cheaper online price, when to go to dodge the crowds, and whether the Gravity Bar pint is worth €22+ when a real Dublin pub charges €7.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Where

Dublin, Ireland

Opening hours

Open daily, roughly 09:30–19:00 with last admission at 17:00; in July and August it opens later to about 21:00 with last admission around 19:00. Hours shift on public holidays, so confirm your date on guinness-storehouse.com when you book.

Tickets

Adult from about €22 (~£19) booked online; dynamic pricing pushes busy peak-time slots to roughly €30–€36 (~£25–£30). One pint of Guinness, Guinness 0.0 or a soft drink at the Gravity Bar is included. Children's and family tickets cost less; under-12s should be accompanied.

Time needed

1.5–2 hours across the seven self-guided floors, including time for your Gravity Bar pint. Add 10–15 minutes for the entry queue even with a timed ticket, and longer on summer weekends.

In short

Visiting Guinness Storehouse

Book a timed Guinness Storehouse ticket on the official site before you go — the online from-price (about €22) undercuts the gate and dynamic pricing pushes peak-time slots past €30, so the slot you pick changes what you pay. It's a slick, self-guided seven-floor museum, not a working-brewery tour, and the real payoff is the included pint at the top-floor Gravity Bar with its 360° glass view over Dublin. Allow 1.5–2 hours, take a morning or late-afternoon weekday slot to dodge the worst crowds, and go in knowing many Dubliners rate a proper pub or the Jameson distillery as better value.

How to visit without overpaying

First, drop the expectation: this is not a working-brewery tour where you watch Guinness being made. The Guinness Storehouse is a slick, self-guided museum spread over seven floors of an old fermentation building, ending at the rooftop bar. Knowing that before you go is the difference between a fair afternoon and feeling sold to.

Book a timed ticket on the official guinness-storehouse.com site before you travel. The online from-price is about €22 (~£19), which undercuts buying at the door, and the Storehouse uses dynamic pricing — busy afternoon and weekend slots climb to roughly €30–€36, so the slot you choose directly changes what you pay. Pick a morning or late-afternoon weekday slot for the cheapest price and the thinnest crowds; midday on a summer weekend is the worst of both. Skip the pricier “premium” packages unless you specifically want the connoisseur tasting — the standard ticket already includes the bit everyone comes for.

The Gravity Bar, getting there, and is it worth it?

Your standard ticket includes one drink at the seventh-floor Gravity Bar — a pint of Guinness, a Guinness 0.0 or a soft drink — in a glass-walled room with a 360° view over Dublin. That view, and the pint in your hand while you take it in, is the genuine payoff; the floors below are a mix of well-staged brand history and queuing to read display boards. On the way up you can pour your own pint at the Guinness Academy, which is the most hands-on part of the visit.

Getting there is easy: it’s about a 20-minute walk west from College Green via Dame Street and Thomas Street, or take the Red Line Luas towards Tallaght to the James’s stop (a 7-minute walk) or Dublin Bus 123. A taxi from the centre is only 5–10 minutes.

If it’s your first time in Dublin and you want the rooftop pint with the city laid out below, it’s worth the €22 online ticket — just go in treating it as a museum-with-a-view, not a brewery. Allow 1.5–2 hours. What plenty of Dubliners will tell you, and we agree with: if you’d rather drink Guinness the way the city actually drinks it, a pint in a good old pub costs about €7 with no ticket, and the Jameson distillery tour is the more involving spirits experience. Do the Storehouse for the view; don’t expect it to show you the real Dublin.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Dublin city guide.

More to see in Dublin

Book the essentials

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide
See the full Ireland guide

Guinness Storehouse FAQs

Do you need to book Guinness Storehouse tickets in advance?
Yes — book online on the official guinness-storehouse.com site before you go. The online from-price (about €22) is cheaper than buying at the door, and the timed slots for popular afternoons sell out in peak season. Booking also locks in a cheaper dynamic-pricing slot, since walk-up peak times cost the most.
Is the Guinness Storehouse worth it?
It depends what you want. As a polished, self-guided museum with a genuinely good 360° rooftop bar and a pint included, it's a fair first-timer Dublin experience. But it's a brand attraction, not a working-brewery tour, it gets busy and conveyor-belt-like, and many Dubliners will tell you a proper pub pint or the Jameson distillery tour is better value. Go for the Gravity Bar view; don't expect a hidden side of Dublin.
Is a pint included in the Guinness Storehouse ticket?
Yes. Standard admission includes one drink at the seventh-floor Gravity Bar — a pint of Guinness, a Guinness 0.0 or a soft drink — so non-drinkers and under-18s aren't paying for a pint they can't have. You can also learn to pour your own at the Guinness Academy as part of the visit.
How do you get to the Guinness Storehouse from Dublin city centre?
It's about a 20-minute walk west from College Green via Dame Street, Christ Church and Thomas Street. The easiest public-transport option is the Red Line Luas tram towards Tallaght to the James's stop, a roughly 7-minute walk away, or Dublin Bus route 123. A taxi from the centre is only 5–10 minutes if you'd rather not walk.

Ready to book?

Check tickets & tours

Go