48 Best Restaurants in Ireland

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We've compiled the best of the best in Ireland - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Aniar Restaurant

$$$$ | Center Fodor's choice

JP McMahon has caused quite a stir in the Galway dining scene with his tapas at Cava Bodega and the recently opened casual spot Tartare, but award-winning Aniar (meaning "from the west") is his flagship restaurant. A minimalist Nordic decor provides an unfussy backdrop for the chef's equally unfussy approach to food. Each course in the daily menu, ranging from 6 to 10 dishes, is designed to either complement or contrast with the local produce. For those brave enough, try a dillisk starter with its overwhelmingly briny flavor, while awaiting monkfish in a bed of lush foraged salad.

53 Lower Dominick St., Galway City, Ireland
091-533--947
Known For
  • Seaweed ice cream
  • Minimalist furnishings
  • Locally sourced food
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations recommended.

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The Curragower Bar and Restaurant

$ Fodor's choice

It's not just the food that's made this restaurant the most popular in town: guests also like to drink in the views of King John's Castle (particularly when lit up in the evening) from under the heated terrace over sea bass served with crab beignets, salsa verde, and baby potatoes. Scampi comes with big planks of chips and lemon sole arrives in a bed of leek and onion. Burgers, steaks, and vegetarian option are aplenty on the menu, along with a good selection of beers on draft. Before or after dining, wander around the corner to see the Treaty Stone, the site where the Williamite-Jacobite war ended.

Clancy Strand, Limerick City, Ireland
087-701--4723
Known For
  • Vegetarian options
  • Excellent views
  • Good selection of beers on draft
Restaurant Details
Booking advisable

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The East Room

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Chef Derek Fitzpatrick creates a refined and concise menu from local ingredients that have been foraged, or grown by local artisanal suppliers or on the restaurant's rooftop garden. There's a choice between an evening tasting menu (sensibly priced at €60 given the options) with six courses that could include scallops, beef, or fresh catch. Top-notch à la carte menu choices include venison loin with maple squash, spiced lentils and sausage, or wild halibut with crubbeen chorizo, peas, and mussel sauce. The setting is full-on white linen in one of Ireland's finest country mansions, with views through sash windows across the wooded countryside or over the tumbling waters of the Shannon. Allow time to view the Visual Art Collection at Plassey House, which includes the works of Jack B. Yeats and Paul Henry.

University of Limerick, Limerick City, Ireland
061-202--186
Known For
  • Elegant ambience
  • à la carte menu options as well
  • Views of the waters of the Shannon River
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Tue., no dinner Sun.

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Forbes Street by Gareth Mullins

$$$ Fodor's choice

Located on the ground floor on the Anantara Marker Hotel, this spot offers the chance to have a fine dining experience in Dublin that is approachable yet still luxurious. Chef Gareth Mullins is Irish through and through, and brings a sophisticated sensibility to the modern Irish cuisine served here, consistently highlighting the best of Irish-raised beef, seafood, produce, and cheese. The frequently changing menu might feature hand-carved Howth Bay smoked salmon, roasted king scallops with butternut squash and king oyster mushrooms in a chicken jus, or sea trout pastrami with Teeling whiskey and mustard creme fraîche. If you’re a carnivore, the From the Flame Grill section of the menu can’t be missed with its select cuts of succulent Irish beef. For dessert, go for the Irish cheese plate (the crackers are served on foraged sea stones from a local beach). There is a smart casual dress code, but this never feels overwrought or exclusionary.

Grand Canal Sq., Dublin, Ireland
01-687–5104
Known For
  • Some of the best Irish steaks in the city
  • Local oysters and smoked salmon
  • Impressive wine list
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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L. Mulligan Grocer

$$ | Dublin North Fodor's choice

This gem of an old Dublin boozer—which was once also the local grocer—has been turned into a gastropub and world-beer emporium, without losing too much of its real Dublin feel. It's the perfect spot for a quick pint of ale and a plate of black pudding (with pear relish and red chard) if you don't feel like a full sit-down meal. Microbrewery beers are hard to come by in Ireland, so the wide selection of small-label ales, lagers, and stouts is reason enough to make the trip to the evocatively named village of Stoneybatter on the Northside. The menu doesn't fuss around with too many choices, but the potted crab with sourdough soldiers is a great starter and the rib-eye steak with whiskey butter and twice-cooked chips is the pick of the hearty mains.

18 Stoneybatter, Dublin, Dublin 7, Ireland
01-670–9889
Known For
  • Huge beer selection
  • Popularity with hipsters
  • Welcoming, friendly staff
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Langton's

$$ Fodor's choice

A landmark since the 1940s, Langton's is a labyrinth of interconnected bars and eateries. Up front is one of Ireland's most famous "eating pubs," often crammed to the rafters of its low ceiling with a lively crowd. For more tranquil environs, head out back, where you can enjoy a neo-Gothic garden framed by a stretch of the old city walls. Most of the seating areas, all with open fires, have different personalities—from the leather-upholstered gentlemen's club in the Langton Bar to an attempt at Art Deco in the spacious dining room. The main restaurant offers well-prepared traditional dishes, including (of course) Irish stew and a mean cod in beer batter. There are 34 Art Deco–style hotel rooms upstairs.

Linnane's Lobster Bar

$$$ Fodor's choice

It doesn't get much better than this 300-year-old, slated, whitewashed cottage with a turf fire and full-length windows that open out onto a terrace overlooking Galway Bay. The specialty is seafood; clams, scallops, salmon, crab claws, and lobster—the restaurant's cornerstone dish. Chicken and beef make the occasional guest appearance. Seat yourself in the conservatory to keep one eye on your crab cakes and Guinness, and another on the crystal clear waters of the bay. 

Cartron, Oughtmama, Ireland
65-707--8120
Known For
  • Crab claws with butter sauce
  • Great wine list
  • Live music in the evenings
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Thurs. Nov.--Mar.

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Loam

$$$$ | Center Fodor's choice

The industrial facade and simply furnished interior of this Michelin-starred restaurant and wine bar just off Eyre Square betray nothing of head chef Enda McEvoy's daily creations; he scours, forages, and travels the coast for the finest and most offbeat indigenous ingredients like reindeer moss or trout caviar. Plates are imaginatively presented, and the tasting menu has a cult following across the country (but is fairly priced at from €85 for seven courses). 

Geata na Cathrach, Fairgreen, Galway City, Ireland
091-569--727
Known For
  • Multi-award-winning chef
  • Mostly organic, biodynamic wines
  • Foraged local and all-Irish ingredients
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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The Moorings-Bridge Bar

$ Fodor's choice

The dramatic location of this simple bar on the windswept waterfront of the tiny fishing village of Portmagee has led the Bridge to feature in ads as "the quintessential Irish pub." A simple menu with the emphasis on local seafood, fish-and-chips, and lamb is served in the low-beamed bar's rustic pine interior. From May to September the pretty, adjoining Moorings restaurant serves a more ambitious, pricier menu most evenings. There are also 17 rooms overhead and an ace craft shop next door, as well as set dancing every Tuesday and Friday evening during summer and live music on weekends.

Call to confirm availability of bar food between October and April, as the kitchen closes some days during the off-season, depending on how many visitors are around.

Main St., Portmagee, Ireland
066-947–7108
Known For
  • Local seafood chowder
  • Unpretentious hospitality
  • Popularity with locals

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The Olde Post Inn

$$$$ Fodor's choice

A restored, stone former post office in an elegantly landscaped garden, the Olde Post Inn has won a clutch of awards and, as a result, is often booked solid. Sea bass, steak, game, and bacon and cabbage terrine are main-course favorites and highlight local and seasonal ingredients. The wine selection will appeal to Europhiles: Valpolicella, Pouilly-Fuissé, Sancerre, or if you feel like a splurge, try the flamboyantly fruity Puligny Montrachet at a cool €85. Artwork by some top Irish artists decorates the redbrick and stone walls. Staying overnight is strongly advised; six guest bedrooms, all in the original part of the postmaster's residence, have been modernized with fabrics in bright jewel tones alongside contemporary bathrooms. Special events such as gin evenings or a French wine and game night are held and are available for guests as part of a package.

N54, Cavan, Ireland
047-55555
Known For
  • Outstanding venison
  • Impressive wine selection
  • Dreamy rural location
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. Closed Wed. off-season. No lunch Wed.–Sat.
Reservations essential
Early dinner menu available €49

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An Port Mór Restaurant

$$$ Fodor's choice

Nestled down a narrow laneway just off Bridge Street, this charming and intimate restaurant harbors the finest of local produce, exquisitely crafted into one of the best menus in Mayo by owner-chef Frankie Mallon. Daily specials include anything from warm pork-cheek salad and black pudding served with apple and vanilla or pan-seared Clew Bay scallops. Shabby chic decor and a leafy courtyard make it one of the most romantic places in town. Mains priced from €25 to €28.

Westport, F28 KP70, Ireland
098-26730
Known For
  • Reservations recommended
  • Vibrant dishes made from local produce
  • Gluten-free and vegetarian options

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The Purple Onion

$$ Fodor's choice

Originally a standard public house with low ceilings, this Shannon-side resting place on the main street of a tiny village to the west of Longford Town has been transformed into a gourmet's delight—a special gastropub, bustling with locals and tourists alike. Specialties include Thornhill duck, baked sea bream, and renowned John Stone steaks from an artisanal butcher specializing in Irish grass-fed beef. Potatoes and vegetables are abundant and even served al dente. The good-value early-bird menu stretches from Tuesday to Thursday 5 to 9:15 pm, Friday and Saturday 5:30 to 7 pm, and Sunday 4 to 6 pm (when the restaurant is also open for lunch). It's worth leaving space for the Toblerone cheesecake, which has become the sweet talk of Longford and has been a fixture on the dessert menu since 2000. An upstairs gallery has work by some of the finest and best-known Irish artists, including Paul Henry, Graham Knuttel, and Kenneth Webb, the latter noted for his expressionistic, thickly painted landscapes of Connemara.

Main St., Tarmonbarry, Ireland
043-335–9919
Known For
  • Duck and artisanal-butcher steaks
  • Delicious Toblerone cheesecake
  • Good-value early-bird menu
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. No lunch Tues.–Thurs.
Reservations essential

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Restaurant Chestnut

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The last thing you would expect to find behind the typical, small pub facade located along a long street filled with a row of modest vernacular buildings, is a heightened level of dining experience with a sophisticated, inventive menu. Schull man Rob Krawczyk runs the kitchen a few miles from his hometown in Ballydehob, and he's impressing professional food critics and novices alike with his inventive taster menus. Expect the unexpected: butter comes with a turf-infused flavor, quail eggs are accompanied with caviar and oysters, while herbal tea to clear the palate has a snap of whiskey. Restaurant Chestnut opens from 6 pm, and you should plan to park yourself for just shy of three hours to sample all nine offerings on his daily changing menu.

Roundwood Inn

$ Fodor's choice

Travel back to the 17th century at this evocatively furnished inn, distinguished by its wooden floors, dark furniture, and diamond-shape windows. The place is best known for its wonderful, hearty game and seafood lunches and dinners that are served in a nook of the bar—try the glorious cream of seafood soup. They also do a mean Sunday lunch. The menu blends Continental and Irish cuisines, reflecting the traditions of the German proprietor, Jurgen Schwalm, and his Irish wife, Aine. Highlights include an excellent seafood platter of salmon, oysters, lobster, and shrimp, along with a rich Hungarian goulash.

Main St., Roundwood, Ireland
01-281–8107
Known For
  • Hearty Sunday lunch
  • Historic setting
  • Game and seafood dishes
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Town Hall Bistro

$ Fodor's choice

Slate flooring, rich timber fixtures, a large bay window, and whitewashed walls hark back to an earlier time of midmorning scones and cakes with afternoon tea---both of which are available at this gorgeous former town hall, a local landmark right on the southern corner of O'Connell Street. Lunch and evening meals are special too, making use of the rich County Clare produce like artisanal cheese or sea catch. Try grilled halibut with crab meat or a ravioli made from mushroom, courgette, spinach, and basil. 

Ahoy Café

$

Catch a sunny day and it's hard to beat an outside table at this small family-run whitewashed café on the waterfront overlooking the busy harbor. The breakfast menu runs until midday while lunchtime sandwiches with soup and salad are served all afternoon. Daily seafood specials may include mussels, haddock, monkfish, calamari, and a delectable chowder, followed by cheesecake and washed down with a choice of wine, craft beer, tea, or coffee as you watch the river of life float by.

Shore Rd., Killybegs, Ireland
074-913--1952
Known For
  • Nourishing soups
  • Local mussels
  • Scenic setting

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The Baltimore Room

$$

When it comes to an organically sourced menu, it's hard to match the offerings at the Casey family's wonderful, oceanfront restaurant close to the tiny, roadside hamlet of Baltimore. The mussels come from their farm at Roaring Bay, water from the property's spring well, and root vegetables travel a couple of feet from their garden to the kitchen, while the bread arrives warm to the table as it's freshly baked on-site. The produce they can't source on-site hails from local West Cork trawlers and farms. To cap it all off, the craft beer by bottle and on tap like Sherkin Lass Pale Ale comes from the family's nano-brewery in the garden. Of course, none of this would amount to anything if they didn't bring it all together with culinary perfection and precision (as they do) at the hands of their pedigree chefs.

The Bianconi

$$

This busy Victorian-style pub (with guest rooms) was once the coaching inn for the national network of horse-drawn coaches known as Bianconis; today, it serves local seafood and traditional Irish food. Its dark-wood interior has a rambling barroom with a tile floor, leatherette banquettes, and ancient stuffed animals above the booths. The menu includes such favorites as Dingle Bay prawns, local oak-smoked salmon, a steaming pot of garlic mussels in white wine broth, and braised shank of Kerry lamb.

Advance booking is advisable in summer and on weekends.

Lower Bridge St., Killorglin, Ireland
066-976–1146
Known For
  • Hearty portions of bistro-style food
  • Warm, friendly atmosphere
  • Divine desserts
Restaurant Details
No lunch Sun.
Reservations recommended.

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Bricín

$$

Candles and an open fire cast a warm light on Persian-style rugs and dark red walls hung with antique engravings of Killarney at this cozy little eatery set above a ground-floor craft emporium on the main street, while simple country-style wooden tables and stick-back chairs are set within "snug" areas created by stained-glass panels. The good-value menu features boxty (Irish potato pancake) with a choice of fillings, including vegetarian. Other options include baked salmon stuffed with crabmeat, char-grilled beef fillet, and roast rack of lamb. And, in the unlikely event you didn't hit a craft shop in Killarney, you can browse the shelves before making your way to the restaurant.

26 High St., Killarney, Ireland
064-663–4902
Known For
  • Warm and friendly staff
  • Offers a great €40 set menu
  • Amazing dessert selection
Restaurant Details
Closed Jan. 7–early-Mar., Sun. and Mon. Mar.–Nov., and Sun.–Wed. Nov.–Jan

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Connemara Hamper

$

Whether you're stocking up on local supplies for your Airbnb, stocking up on snacks for a Wild Atlantic Way drive, looking for picnic supplies or hamper gifts, or just stopping for a decent coffee and quick bite, this cute little artisanal food shop offers a wide variety of Irish farmhouse cheeses, meats, Connemara salmon, jams, pâtés, wines, and coffees, as well as a small nook to sit awhile.

Cupán Tae

$ | Center

For anyone seeking an authentic tea-drinking experience, à la the Irish grandma who serves tea as an art form, the Cupán Tae ("the cup of tea" in Irish) serves it up with fussy crockery and much nostalgia. Breakfast is top-notch, and the popular afternoon tea comes complete with fresh-baked pastries served on a tiered china stand (of course). Add prosecco if you're feeling celebratory.

Elbow Lane Brew and Smoke House

$$ | City Center South

The small, dark, L-shape room (hence the name) on the ground floor of a handsome town house is dominated by a blue-tiled chimney with a wood-smoke grill, whose aroma pervades the room. There's a masculine ambience here, as befits a brewery and smokehouse renowned for hearty portions of grilled food and triple-cooked chips. The always-buzzy atmosphere is encouraged by helpful, welcoming staff.

4 Oliver Plunkett St., Cork City, Ireland
021-439–0479
Known For
  • Slow-smoked pork ribs with smokehouse sauce and house brews
  • Grilled whole fish of the day
  • No reservations, creating a wait at peak times
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Emma's Café and Deli

$

A tempting array of both savory and sweet delights are on display at this central daytime café and deli counter. Nourishing soups at lunchtime, such as colcannon (cabbage and potato) or mushroom come with freshly baked brown bread. Other breads, including ciabatta, bagels, or panini wraps are filled with cured meats or cajun chicken and salad, while a selection of fruit and gluten-free scones deserve to be smothered with delicious raspberry jam.

31 Main St., Birr, Ireland
057-912–5678
Known For
  • Colcannon soup
  • Meat-filled sandwiches
  • Superfresh scones

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Farmgate Café

$ | City Center South

One of the best—and busiest—informal lunch spots in town is on a terraced gallery above the fountain at the Princes Street entrance to the atmospheric English Market. All ingredients used at the café are purchased in the market below. One side of the gallery is self-service; the other side is glassed in and has table service (reservations advised). Weekend dinner available.

Princes St., Cork City, Ireland
021-427–8134
Known For
  • Separate weekend dinner menu
  • Delicious traditional Irish comfort food like corned beef and colcannon
  • An artistic clientele including many poets
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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The Fatted Calf

$$$

One of the Midlands food heroes, chef-owner Feargal O'Donnell uses fresh, locally sourced ingredients at his popular Irish restaurant in the town center, where you can sink into comfortable orange chairs made of cowhide leather for signature dry-aged steak. Starter nibbles to excite the taste buds might be crispy pig's ear or silver darlings (herring), while main courses may include panfried cod fillet, 30-day dry-aged beef tenderloin with a scene-stealing pepper sauce, or honey roast farmhouse chicken. If you have space, try the strong-flavored Young Buck blue cheese from County Down; for a divine dessert, an affogato with moondust espresso and a dash of Bailey's liqueur will leave a long afterglow on your taste buds. A notice on the wall advises "Keep Calm and Drink Wine," a small exhortation to sample the recommended French house red: Lue Lapeyre Amour Grenache Syrah, a rich and concentrated blend where the ripe tannins are said to dance across your palate and at €36 won't leave a large dent in your wallet.

Church St., Athlone, Ireland
090-643–3371
Known For
  • John Stone dry-aged Irish steaks
  • Young Buck blue cheese
  • Calm, contemporary atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Flipside

$

Opened in 2018, Flipside burger joint has quickly become a triumph across Sligo with its "Serious Burgers," served with flamin' fries or garlic butter and Parmesan fries. The modern corner building, heavy with glass, steel, and dark wood tables, hums with happy diners. Irish Angus beef from William Clarke butchers in town are used along with other local produce. Cider, lager, and pale ales—try the local brew from White Hag—alongside a large wine selection or milkshakes are on the drinks menu.

Rockwood Pde, Sligo, Ireland
071-932–6928
Known For
  • Best burgers in town
  • Local produce and brews
  • River views
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Goosers

$

One of the most famous landmarks in town, complete with thatched roof, turf fire, and stone flooring, this classic Irish pub is a cozy retreat from the lake in winter and a popular spot for alfresco dining in summer. Goosers is directly across the lake from St. Flannan's Cathedral and close to the town bridge that links County Tipperary to County Clare (Goosers is technically on the Tipperary side, but just barely), and serves traditional fare like Irish stew, seafood chowder, and bacon and cabbage.

Ballina Rd., Killaloe, Ireland
061-376--791
Known For
  • Lakeside setting
  • Traditional Irish fare
  • Lively weekend trade
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed.

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Kingfisher

$ | Dublin North

Don't let the down-at-heels canteen decor put you off—this place has been around for a long time and is a master of the art of fish-and-chips. Their menu is full of seafood surprises like such Dublin favorites as cod and ray (or more unusual choices like mackerel) and you can even order a whole sea bass and rainbow trout. Kingfisher's huge Irish breakfasts have won awards, with all the meats sourced fresh from the owners' own farm. The Northside locals love this place and give it a lively community atmosphere.

166–168 Parnell St., Dublin, Dublin 1, Ireland
01-872–8732
Known For
  • Homemade tartar sauce
  • Friendly, warm atmosphere
  • Great value menu

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Leo Burdock

$ | Dublin West

Old man Burdock has moved on and the place hasn't been the same since, but the hordes still join the inevitable queue at Dublin's famous 100-year-old takeout fish-and-chips shop. You can't eat here, but why would you anyway, when you can sit in the gardens of St. Patrick's Cathedral a few minutes away. Fresh cod is a classic, and the battered sausage a particular Dublin favorite, but the real stars here are the long, thick, freshly cut chips, which have a slightly smoky aftertaste.

Look like a local and ask to season your chips with "crispy bits."

2 Werburgh St., Dublin, Dublin 8, Ireland
01-454–0306
Known For
  • Fresh cod and chips
  • Battered sausage
  • A line outside

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The Maigue Restaurant

$$$

If you like good, old-fashioned country service from a bygone era, with a tried and tested traditional menu that pleases guests across the generational divide, the Maigue Restaurant fits the bill. It offers some of the finest local ingredients in a short but crowd-pleasing menu. Rib of beef, a speciality, arrives on its own time upon a trolley (of course!) for carving, along with other local favorites such as in-season game, like pheasant or wild salmon. Similar to its home setting in the Dunraven Arms Hotel, the Maigue is stuffed with antiques and other paraphernalia and has retained the very essence of a provincial village inn.