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Kilkenny, Ireland
Kilkenny

Leinster (South East)

Kilkenny

Take the direct train from Dublin Heuston and stay over: Ireland's best-preserved medieval city saves its pubs on Parliament and John Street for after the day-trippers from the castle and St Canice's have gone home.

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

Best length

Day trip from Dublin, or 1 night to do it justice

Nearest airport

Dublin (DUB), ~120km / 75 miles north

From Dublin

Direct Heuston train ~1h 30m; JJ Kavanagh coach from the airport

Best base

High Street / Parliament Street for the Medieval Mile on your doorstep

In short

Kilkenny at a glance

Kilkenny is a compact medieval city you can see properly in a single day, but it rewards an overnight: catch the direct train from Dublin Heuston, walk the Medieval Mile from the castle to St Canice's Cathedral, pay for the castle State Rooms but spend free time in the parklands, and stay over so you get the pubs on Parliament Street and John Street after the day-trippers have gone home.

The short version

  • The direct train from Dublin Heuston takes about 1h 30m and lands you a flat 10-minute walk from the castle, so you never need a car here.
  • Buy a ticket for the Kilkenny Castle State Rooms, but the 50 acres of parklands and rose garden behind it are free and the better hour.
  • The Medieval Mile is genuinely walkable end to end: castle, Rothe House, the Black Abbey and St Canice's Cathedral with its climbable round tower.
  • Smithwick's Experience is the one paid tour worth booking; the pint at the end is included and it tells Ireland's-oldest-ale story well.
  • Day-trip if you must, but an overnight is the upgrade: the late-afternoon castle light and the trad-music pubs are what most coach trips miss.

Kilkenny is the rare Irish city you can read like a map on foot. The Medieval Mile runs in a near-straight line along the River Nore: Kilkenny Castle and its parklands at the southern end, St Maryโ€™s church (now the Medieval Mile Museum) in the middle, and the 13th-century St Caniceโ€™s Cathedral with its climbable round tower at the top. Between them sit Rothe House, a genuine 1594 merchantโ€™s townhouse, and the Black Abbey, a Dominican church that has been in use since the 1220s. The whole walk is under 20 minutes, which is exactly why Kilkenny works as a day trip and why it punches above bigger Irish towns.

The honest call is day-trip versus overnight. The direct train from Dublin Heuston takes about an hour and a half and lands you a flat five-minute walk from the centre, so a day is doable: castle State Rooms, the cathedral tower, one museum and lunch. But the city changes after the afternoon coaches leave. The castle parklands empty out in the long summer evenings, the light on the riverfront is better, and the pubs on Parliament Street and John Street turn over to locals and trad music. If you can spare one night, take it.

Spend money where it counts and not where it doesnโ€™t. The castle State Rooms, St Caniceโ€™s and the round tower, and the Smithwickโ€™s Experience (Irelandโ€™s oldest ale brand, with the pint included) are the paid stops worth your time. The 50 acres of parkland and rose garden behind the castle, the Black Abbey and the simple act of walking the Mile are all free, and they are some of the best hours of the trip. The structured planning below โ€” where to stay, what to book, how to get down from Dublin, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

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

Top things to do in Kilkenny

Kilkenny Castle

Walk the 50-acre parkland and rose garden first โ€” it's free, open daily, and the best view of the castle is from the lawn rather than the paid interior. To go inside the State Rooms you choose between an โ‚ฌ8 self-guided ticket or a โ‚ฌ12 guided tour; book the guided slot online ahead for a summer weekend, because it's a busy OPW site that warns of admission delays in peak months. Allow about an hour for the interior and another hour for the grounds.

About 1 hour insidโ€ฆ โ‚ฌ8

Kilkenny Castle and parklands

Kilkenny Castle is the Butler family's 800-year-old stronghold above the River Nore, the anchor of the city's medieval core. The paid State Rooms and picture gallery are the formal draw, but the 50-acre parklands, rose garden and riverside walks are free and quietly the better hour โ€” and the part most day-trippers skip in their rush back to the high street.

Allow about 45โ€“60โ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

High Street and Parliament Street (the Medieval Mile)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The spine of the old city, with the castle at one end and St Canice's at the other. Stay here and every sight, restaurant and pub is a short walk; it is the obvious choice for a first overnight and worth the small premium.

Best for: First overnights, walkers, no-car trips

Browse hotels City centre

John Street and the station side

ยฃ value

Just across the Nore, a five-minute walk to the centre and closest to the train station. A cluster of pubs and mid-range hotels makes it convenient if you are arriving and leaving by rail, though it is a touch livelier at night.

Best for: Rail arrivals, nightlife, value

Browse hotels 5 min walk to centre

Castle Road and the edges

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Quieter guesthouses and a couple of larger hotels a short walk south past the castle. Better for a calmer base or a family room, at the cost of being a few minutes further from the late-night pubs.

Best for: Couples, families, quiet stays

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk

Airport to city centre

Kilkenny airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Train, Dublin Heuston to Kilkenny ~1h 30m about โ‚ฌ18-โ‚ฌ25 one way Direct, no changes; book ahead for cheaper fares
JJ Kavanagh coach, Dublin Airport to Kilkenny ~2h 15m-2h 30m about โ‚ฌ18-โ‚ฌ22 one way Best if flying into Dublin and skipping the city
Bus Eireann / coach, Dublin city to Kilkenny ~2h about โ‚ฌ15-โ‚ฌ20 one way Cheaper but slower than the train
Drive from Dublin via M9 ~1h 30m-1h 45m fuel plus one toll Only worth it if touring the wider South East
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: May, June and September are the sweet spot: long evenings for the parklands and walkable weather without the deepest summer crowds. Time it for the Cat Laughs comedy festival over the early-June bank holiday or the Kilkenny Arts Festival in mid-August if the line-up appeals, but book a room weeks ahead because the small city fills fast.

Summer brings the festivals, the long evenings and the day-trip coaches; winter is quiet, cheaper and atmospheric but several gardens and outdoor bits are weather-dependent. Spring and early autumn give you the best balance of open sights and elbow room.

What it costs

There is no Kilkenny airport, so the cost is a UK return flight to Dublin (often ยฃ30-ยฃ90 outside school holidays, more on summer weekends) plus the train or coach south, which adds roughly ยฃ30-ยฃ45 return per person.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic one-night Kilkenny add-on from Dublin for one person is roughly ยฃ180-ยฃ260: about ยฃ35-ยฃ45 return rail, ยฃ80-ยฃ140 for a mid-range city-centre room, ยฃ40-ยฃ60 food and pints, and ยฃ25-ยฃ35 covering the castle, St Canice's and one museum or the Smithwick's tour.

Ireland is not cheap and pints and restaurant mains land close to UK city prices. The savings in Kilkenny are that the best hours are free: the castle parklands, the Black Abbey and simply walking the Mile cost nothing.

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

Kilkenny FAQs

Is Kilkenny worth a day trip from Dublin, or should you stay over?
A day trip works because the train is direct and the sights are clustered, but an overnight is the better trip. Staying lets you catch the castle in late-afternoon light and the trad-music pubs in the evening, both of which the coach day-trips miss entirely.
How do you get from Dublin to Kilkenny?
The simplest way is the direct train from Dublin Heuston, which takes about 1 hour 30 minutes and drops you a flat five-minute walk from the centre. Coaches (Bus Eireann or JJ Kavanagh, the latter direct from Dublin Airport) are cheaper but slower at around two hours.
Do you need to book Kilkenny Castle in advance?
For a normal weekday you can usually buy a State Rooms ticket on arrival, but slots are timed and summer weekends and festival days sell out, so book online ahead if your day is fixed. The parklands behind the castle are free and never need a ticket.
Do you need a car in Kilkenny?
No. The whole Medieval Mile is walkable in under 20 minutes and the train station is a five-minute walk from the centre. Keep any hire car for a wider South East road trip rather than the city itself, where parking the medieval lanes is a nuisance.

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