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Killarney National Park, Ireland
Killarney National Park

County Kerry (South West)

Killarney National Park

Ireland's first national park, on the edge of Killarney town โ€” native red deer, Torc Waterfall and Muckross Lake, and how to do a full car-free day.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 17 Jun 2026

Where

Killarney, Ireland

Opening hours

Open access (always open) for the park itself, which you can walk or cycle into freely. Specific facilities โ€” Muckross House, the visitor points, cafes and toilets โ€” keep their own daytime hours, longer in summer and shorter in winter; trails are busiest in daylight from late spring onward.

Tickets

Free entry โ€” there is no charge to enter the park or walk its trails to Torc Waterfall and the lakeshore. You pay only for optional extras such as Muckross House tours, jaunting-car rides, bike hire, boat trips or car parking at some trailheads.

Time needed

Anything from a couple of hours for Torc Waterfall to a full day on foot or by bike taking in Muckross Lake and house.

In short

Visiting Killarney National Park

Killarney National Park is free to enter and the only place in Ireland with a continuous native red deer herd. From the edge of town you can walk or cycle to Torc Waterfall, a 20m cascade at its best after rain, and on to Muckross Lake and house โ€” a full, low-cost day with no car needed. Lakes, oak woods and mountains in one accessible package.

A free park you can walk into

Killarney National Park is one of those rare big attractions that costs nothing to enter and sits right on the edge of town, so you can step out of Killarney and be among lakes and oak woods within minutes. It is Irelandโ€™s first national park and the only place in the country with a continuous native red deer herd โ€” keep half an eye on the open ground and the woodland fringes and you have a fair chance of seeing them.

The set-piece walk is to Torc Waterfall, a cascade of roughly 20 metres tucked into the trees a short way south of town. It is at its thundering best after rain, which in Kerry is rarely a long wait; in a dry spell it is gentler, so manage expectations. Beyond it the ground opens onto Muckross Lake, ringed by paths, with the mountains rising behind.

How to make a day of it

The real selling point is that you can do the lot without a car. Walk or hire a bike from the town edge and you can string together Torc Waterfall, the Muckross Lake loop and Muckross House under your own steam, which keeps the cost down and the day flexible. The park entry stays free throughout; you spend only on the optional extras โ€” a tour of Muckross House, a jaunting-car ride behind a pony, bike hire, a boat trip on the lakes, or parking at one of the trailheads.

Plan it to taste: a couple of hours if you just want Torc and a lakeside stretch, or a full day on foot or two wheels taking in the house as well. The park is always open, but the visitor points, cafes and Muckross House keep their own daytime hours โ€” longer in summer, shorter in winter โ€” so check those if they matter to your route.

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

More to see in Killarney

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Tours & tickets

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Killarney National Park FAQs

Is Killarney National Park free to enter?
Yes โ€” entry to the park and its walking and cycling trails is free, including the path to Torc Waterfall and the Muckross lakeshore. You only pay for optional extras: tours of Muckross House, jaunting-car rides, bike hire, boat trips, or parking at certain trailheads.
Can you visit Killarney National Park without a car?
Yes, and it is one of its best features. The park runs right up to the edge of Killarney town, so you can walk or hire a bike and reach Torc Waterfall, Muckross Lake and Muckross House under your own steam โ€” a genuinely satisfying car-free day out.
What is there to see in Killarney National Park?
Highlights include Torc Waterfall, a roughly 20m cascade that is most dramatic after rain, the lakes around Muckross, ancient oak woodland and the mountains beyond. It is also the only park in Ireland with a native red deer herd, so wildlife sightings are part of the draw.