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We have a great range of Dublin stag hotels & apartments suitable for all groups.

Belvedere Hotel
3 STAR Hotel
Modern rooms and a tasty on-site restaurant
Just north of the Liffey set amongst cool coffee bars you’ll find the stylish Belvedere Hotel. Providing all the creature comforts you’ll need, this 3-star hotel not only has the basic necessities you need for your stay in Dublin, but also hosts a bar and restaurant as well.
Generator Dublin
Budget Hotel
Next door to Jameson Distillery
This contemporary hostel is bang-on for stag weekend location, just next door to the Jameson Distillery. You are surrounded by alcohol – the hostel bar is even furnished with old Jameson bottles – and the venues of the Temple Bar are also close.
Clayton Hotel Cardiff Lane
4 STAR Hotel with Leisure Facilities
Four star comfort right next to the River Liffey
Unwind at this fabulous four-star hotel. Located just a stone's throw from the banks of the River Liffey, you will be based right in the heart of Dublin ready to enjoy all the Guinness and craic the city can chuck at you. And if you need to recoup the next day, then the hotel has an in-house spa to help get some much-needed minerals back into you!
Moxy Hotel
3 STAR Hotel
Boutique hostel with 24/7 bar in walking distance of Temple Bar
Moxy Dublin is a boutique hotel, situated in the heart of Dublin's lively city centre, just 1km from Temple Bar. We offer twin rooms, that have two comfy single beds, and double rooms with a large comfy bed. Each room comes with a 49inch flat screen smart TV, complimentary high speed wi-fi, coffee/tea and a private bathroom, with a shower, WC and a hairdryer. Oh and there's a 24/7 bar!!
Travelodge Dublin City Centre, Rathmines
3 STAR Hotel
Quiet location to sleep off that hangover
You can’t go wrong with a clean and comfortable Travelodge and Dublin’s City Centre Rathmines doesn’t disappoint. Set to the south of the city centre, this 3-star hotel provides the perfect place to stay while exploring the city and celebrating your last night of freedom.
Camden Court Hotel
3 STAR Hotel
Comfortable and stylish 3-star with pool, sauna and jacuzzi
Found 1.5km from Temple Bar, and a six-minute walk from Wexford Street (another top Dublin nightlife area), this three-star hotel places you in the prime position to party. There are several food options at the hotel, choosing from the classy Iveagh Restaurant and the chilled out and stylish Lobby and Mezzanine. There’s also a leisure centre onsite that’s inclusive of a heated 16m indoor swimming pool, plus a jacuzzi, sauna and steam room.
Brooks Hotel
4 STAR Hotel
Classy 4 star hotel with amazing bar and restaurant close to Temple Bar
The rooms of Brooks Hotel are tastefully decorated with soft pastels and quality furnishings. Every room will come with high-speed internet, complimentary water, air conditioning, a Mini-Fridge (making pre-drinking easier!) and a powerful hairdryer.Within the hotel you have Francesca’s Restaurant, which is one of the top restaurants in Dublin city centre and Jasmine Bar, which was voted one of the ‘Great Whisky Bars of the World’ by Whiskey Magazine - impressive!
Leonardo Hotel Dublin Parnell Street
4 STAR Hotel
City centre location
This stylish and comfortable chain hotel serves up the perfect crash pad for lads looking to throw a stag do in Dublin. Each room is equipped with WiFi and comfortable beds and the hotel also has an on-site bar and restaurant which is perfect before a big night out.
Kinlay Hostel
Hostel
This hostel is set close to Dublin's best selection of bars
Situated directly on the edge of the vibrant Temple Bar district – the hub of the Irish capital's notorious nightlife, with stream after stream of pubs, bars and clubs – you couldn't find a better budget friendly base for your last night of freedom. This hostel has a selection of room types available, including single, double, twin and triple, and many have private en-suite bathrooms – or there are dorms for the bigger groups.
If your Dublin knowledge is limited to a ginger bloke called Paddy and a potent black beer, you probably should get yourselves a bit more cultured on your stag weekend in Dublin. Here's exactly how you can, with our top 10 ways to tick the cultural box in Dublin. Note: a lot of them are pubs - so it's a win-win.
Guinness Storehouse
St. James' Gate, Ushers, Dublin 8, Ireland
Guinness Factory Tour
It’s number one for a reason. This one’s essential to tick off any stag do in the Irish city. The birthplace of the country’s best expat (other than Robbie Keane) is the city’s most popular attraction, with seven floors of Guinness history to explore. The giant pint glass of a building (which can hold 14.3 million pints of the good stuff, FYI), has seen the likes of Taylor Swift, Barack Obama, Tom Cruise, the entire Lord of the Rings cast and even The Queen pass through its gates – and if it’s good enough for them, it’s good enough for your stag do. A trip to the Guinness Storehouse is educational, cultural and you can sink a few pints in the Gravity Bar at the top, too. Everyone’s a winner.
Old Jameson Distillery
Bow St, Smithfield Village, Dublin 7, Ireland
Visit Website
The Old Jameson Distillery is the former home of the world’s best-selling whiskey, Jameson. The enchanting distillery is packed full of history and insights into producing the liquid nectar. Similarly to the Guinness Factory, any trip here is semi-cultural, semi-p*ss up – our favourite kind of semi. It’s also got a huge bar where you can sample your favourite tipples. All in the name of absorbing the culture, of course…
Croke Park / GAA Museum
10 St Joseph's Ave, Ballybough, Dublin 3, D03 NF29, Ireland
Visit Website
Croke Park is as much an icon in Dublin as the Temple Bar. This is the home of the Gaelic Games, Ireland’s traditional (and complicated) sport. It’s steeped in over a century of history, has a massive capacity of 82,000 and you can even take a tour around it. The weird and wonderful sports include Gaelic football, Gaelic handball and even hurling (a hockey-come-cricket-come egg and spoon race hybrid, obvs). We’re not going to pretend we understand all of the intricate rules to the sport, but we’ll happily try our hand at a spot of Gaelic Games. When in Rome ‘n’ that.
Temple Bar
Temple Bar, Dublin 2, Ireland
Temple Bar, Dublin’s cultural quarter, is known the world over for its lively atmosphere 24/7 and its unmissable nightlife scene. You’ll recognise the Temple Bar itself from pretty much every iconic photo you’ve ever seen of Dublin, but the area boasts lots more than just the lively red corner building; there’s The Auld Dubliner, Oliver St John Gogarty and The Porterhouse Central to name but a few huge pubs in the area, all boasting live music, free-flowing drinks and enough craic to sink a battleship.
Dublin Castle
Dame St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Visit Website
Dating back to the 13th century, on the site of a Viking settlement, Dublin Castle is an impressive building, with six iconic towers to its name. It’s €8 to get in, making it one of the cheaper Dublin tourist attractions – leaving plenty cash left in your stag do drinking fund. Plus, as it’s just on the outskirts of the Temple Bar, you won’t have to walk far from the very best Dublin bars to tick this one off your list.
The Brazen Head
20 Lower Bridge St, Merchants Quay, Dublin 8, D08 WC64, Ireland
Visit Website
The Brazen Head is Dublin’s oldest pub, set just a 10-minute walk from the Temple Bar. Dating back to at least 1613, with word on the street that the site has housed a tavern or alehouse since 1198, it’s worth a visit for the history alone, but it’s also renowned for serving some of the best pints in the city (ah, so now you’re listening). Its castle-like exterior will lure in your inner child and the huge range of beers will keep any stag group occupied all day and night. It’s a great place to spend the afternoon and is widely regarded as an excellent 'warm up' before you head over to the Temple Bar area.
St. Stephen’s Green
St Stephen's Green, Dublin 2, Ireland
Located in the very centre of Dublin, St. Stephen’s Green offers a whopping nine hectares of plush green park land, ideal for a bit of chillaxing (read: sorting those hangovers out) after a heavy previous night. Just a stone’s throw away from Camden, Harcourt and Wexford streets (and all of their edgy, alternative bars), once you’ve recharged your batteries, you can get right back on it.
Kilmainham Gaol
Inchicore Rd, Kilmainham, Dublin 8, D08 RK28, Ireland
Visit Website
A former prison may not be the first thing you think of when you think ‘stag do’, but this one is pretty cool. Structurally, the building is very interesting and has been used as the set for several movies and even the BBC drama, Ripper Street. Now a museum, this place has housed some pretty famous crooks, including the likes of Irish revolutionaries, who were imprisoned and executed here.
Little Museum of Dublin
15 St Stephen's Green, Dublin, Ireland
Visit Website
This much-loved museum in central Dublin will give you a rundown of Dublin history from the 20th century, right up to date. So, if your Dublin knowledge is limited to Guinness and a ginger-bearded man in a green suit called Paddy, you might just learn a thing or two here. Plus, similarly to St. Stephen’s Green, it’s just seconds from the Camden, Harcourt and Wexford streets grid of bars – including the world famous music haunt, Whelan’s – meaning you won’t have to travel far for your next pint.
The Church Bar
Junction of Mary St. and Jervis St., Dublin 1, Dublin, D01YX64, Ireland
Visit Website
Checking out the local architecture is all well and good, but you’re missing out on valuable drinking time on your stag do – which is why The Church bar and restaurant is the ideal haunt to kill two birds with one stone. Housed in an actual former church, this venue now houses a cafe, nightclub and fantastic outdoor BBQ area for those balmy Dublin nights. There’s a main bar, cellar bar and tower bar, all selling a wealth of craft beers and contemporary cocktails, leaving you lot with plenty of space to spread out and get your rounds in. Amen to that.
Dublin is a tourist hotspot and with tourist hotspots it's always worth being mindful of a few simple safety tips to make sure your trip is memorable for the right reasons. Here are our top six safety tips:
By bearing these simple safety tips in mind we're sure you'll have a fab weekend full of endless craic.
Out of 65 locations, Dublin is one of our most well-connected. In 2016, Dublin airport had its busiest year, with over 900 low-cost airliners flying to the capital from all over the world – including the likes of Aer Lingus, Ryanair and Easy Jet. It takes around one hour and 15 mins to get to Dublin from our very own capital, and only one hour from the likes of Manchester. You can even get the ferry from Liverpool if you’ve got strong sea legs.
Airport | Duration | Airline |
---|---|---|
Aberdeen International Airport ABZ | 1h 40m | British Airways Aer Lingus |
Birmingham Airport BHX | 1h 5m | Ryanair Aer Lingus |
Bristol Airport BRS | 1h 05m | Ryanair Aer Lingus British Airways |
Cardiff Airport CWL | 1h 05m | Ryan Air |
East Midlands Airport EMA | 1h 5m | Ryanair Aer Lingus |
Edinburgh Airport EDI | 1h 10m | Ryanair Aer Lingus British Airways |
Exeter International Airport EXT | 1h 5m | Flybe |
London Gatwick Airport LGW | 1h 50m | Ryanair Aer Lingus British Airways |
Glasgow Prestwick Airport GLA | 1h 10m | Ryanair Aer Lingus British Airways |
London Heathrow Airport LHR | 1h 20m | Aer Lingus British Airways |
Newcastle Airport NCL | 1h 10m | Ryanair Aer Lingus |
You could travel to Dublin the old-fashioned way, on a boat. A ferry is a comfortable option for those that don’t have a head for heights (albeit not those who don’t have the stomach for water…), with cosy on-board cabins, bars and meals included. Setting off from the port of Liverpool, it’s a small dip in the stag weekend wallet - starting at £59 each way on P&O Ferries – and you can even take your car on board. However, the travel will eat into your time away, as it takes an average of eight hours to get to Dublin. From the port, it’s a further 20 minute drive to the city centre (around €25).
Travel From | Ferry | Duration |
---|---|---|
Port of Liverpool | P&O Ferries | 8h |
If you're already based in Ireland or Northern Ireland, lucky you. Dublin is a breeze to access via the open road, with most major locations around two hours away in the car.
Start Destination | Duration |
---|---|
Belfast | 1 hr 55 mins via M1 and A1 |
Cork | 2 hr 55 mins via M7 and M8 |
Galway | 2 hr 24 mins via M6 |
Limerick | 2 hr 24 mins via M7 |
Dublin is home to loud nightlife and, you’re in luck, as it’s easy to get to all the different parts (bars) in the city on foot.
Not one of the cheapest stag do destinations in the world, Dublin might set you back a little more than its Eastern European counterparts. Here are the average prices you'll be paying once you're over there.
If we’re honest, Irish weather has a bit of a reputation… However, (you’ll be pleased to hear) Dublin is the driest place in Ireland, experiencing cool summers and mild winters. This city even reaches a whopping 19°C in July – pack those short shorts.
July 2025
Your Costa del Dublin stag do is scorching in July. You’ve got highs of 19°C in July, so you better pack that Factor 50. There’s no escape from the sun, with lows of 12°C.
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Dublin is in our top five popular stag do destinations, so it makes sense to try out the city’s mega activities and accommodation. It just so happens we have done exactly that, and this is what happened…
We have a great range of Dublin stag hotels & apartments suitable for all groups.
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