14 Best Restaurants in Ireland

Background Illustration for Restaurants

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.

Bastion

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Prosecco on tap sets the tone for fun at this wine bar and restaurant in the heart of Kinsale. There's a bar in the funky front parlor, along with some tables beside its street windows, supplemented by a more private back room. The eight-course tasting menu has a bouquet of carefully chosen indigenous produce: pigeon, rabbit, seaweed-infused potato, cured mackerel with ginger pickle, and sweet fruit with homemade sorbet---all offered with an imaginative take on traditional recipes.   

5 Main St., Kinsale, Ireland
021-470–9696
Known For
  • Experimental small plates
  • More than 100 wines
  • Range of prix-fixe and tasting menus
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Tues. Closed last wk of Nov. and all Feb.
Booking advised
No children's menu

Something incorrect in this review?

Dede at The Customs House

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Ahmet Dede, formerly of the exquisite Mews just down the street, bestows his culinary magic on his in season tasting menu that can include Wagyu beef, black sole, red mulberry, and brown butter—or even brown butter ice cream for that matter. This chef is living proof that with talent, a restaurant does not need the pomp and trappings of fine dining to offer a feast of flavor---because he's wowing critics both nationally and globally with his local ingredients served with Turkish flair in his stripped-back, casual eatery in the delightful seaside village of Baltimore.

Baltimore, Ireland
28-48248
Known For
  • Seasonal menu
  • Guided wine pairings
  • Reservations are essential
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.--Wed. (Phone ahead; owner Dede changes the schedule regularly.)
Booking highly recommended as there is a long waiting list

Something incorrect in this review?

Everett's

$$$ Fodor's choice

Located in an atmospheric, vaulted 15th-century house at the heart of the city, this new, award-winning bistro has a young local chef who trained with some of the best in Ireland. Start with seared Wexford scallops with broccoli, smoked bacon, and hazelnut. Modern Irish hearty mains include the fillet and braised feather blade of dexter beef with roast onion purée, kale, and confit turnip. It's a popular pre-theater spot. 

Recommended Fodor's Video

Fishy Fishy Café

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Originally a café in a fish shop, this place has moved up in the world, now located in a sumptuous two-story former art gallery in the town park. TV chef Martin Shanahan, who trained in San Francisco, brings California pizzazz to his dishes. There is an unrivaled selection of seafood available here. Stylish young staffers seem thrilled to be part of the show. Lunch is the big event, although service does continue until 9 pm (except for most of January).

Crowley's Quay, Kinsale, Ireland
021-470–0415
Known For
  • Surf 'n' turf of scallops and black pudding on parsnip puree
  • "fishy fish pie" served with mash au gratin in a hot cream sauce
  • Spicy seafood chowder
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.–Wed. in Nov.–Feb.
Advised
Nonfish options available on the menu

Something incorrect in this review?

Forest Avenue

$$$$ | Georgian Dublin Fodor's choice

Named after the street in Queens where chef-owner Sandy Wyer grew up, Forest Avenue is a star on the Dublin food stage. The menu is a five-course taster, and while choice is limited, quality and value are off the charts. The open kitchen gives the place a lively vibe and Sandy and her Irish husband, John, are only too willing to discuss each dish with interested guests. A floor-to-ceiling glass frontage allows the light to flood in across the elegant white-brick walls. Try the confit cod with pumpkin and crab velouté. They do a cheaper three-course lunch menu Thursday to Saturday.

The House Restaurant

$$$$ Fodor's choice

The compact, award-winning dining room of the Cliff House looks out over the crashing sea, and the dramatic location clearly inspires the menu. The food is locally sourced---including foraging raids on nearby woods and beaches---but prepared with dashes of modern and experimental cuisine. Dinner is a fixed-price, eight-course affair including such delights as the Bantry Bay salmon with cured cucumber, beetroot, and horseradish or Ardmore lobster with carrot and oyster sauce served with a milk bun. And you can't go wrong with the butter-poached turbot, Ardmore potatoes, and duck egg sauce. Go in summer, when you can dine on the expansive terrace, which winds its way down toward the sea. The staff will even match the perfect glass of wine to each delicious course.

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.

Something incorrect in this review?

Munster Room

$$$$ Fodor's choice

Inside the Waterford Castle Hotel, the Munster Room's luxe decor—with oak paneling darkened with age and ancestral portraits in gilt frames—hints at one of the most sophisticated menus around. Options include a fixed-price, three-course menu featuring adventurous starters such as ballotine of quail with celeriac foam, winter slaw, and cinnamon and apple jelly. The dress code is smart (jackets for the men) and the surroundings suggest a big night out. Main-course winners include the best of Irish steaks or the roasted goose breast with potato-and-orange stuffing and burnt-orange sauce.

One Pico

$$$$ | Southside Fodor's choice

Chef-owner Eamonn O'Reilly cuts quite a dash, but it's his sophisticated, daring, contemporary cuisine that tends to seduce visitors to his little restaurant tucked away in a quiet lane only a few minutes from Stephen's Green. As is usual with Dublin's luxe eateries, the fixed-price lunch and pre-theater menus offer great value. Try the incredible scallop ceviche to start. Dishes such as pigeon with chicory, salsify, and baked celeriac puree demonstrate the mix of traditional and cutting-edge cuisine. 

5–6 Molesworth Pl., Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland
01-676–0300
Known For
  • Gregarious chef-host
  • Daring ingredient combinations
  • Passion-fruit soufflé
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.
Reservations essential

Something incorrect in this review?

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.

Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud

$$$$ | Georgian Dublin Fodor's choice

Also known as "Dublin's finest restaurant," this Michelin-starred place on the ground floor of the Merrion Hotel boasts a menu described as French, but chef Guillaume Lebrun's genius lies in his occasional daring use of traditional Irish ingredients—so often taken for granted—to create the unexpected. The ambience is just as delicious, if you're into lofty, minimalist dining rooms and Irish modern art (the Roderic O'Conors and Louis le Brocquys are all from the owner's private collection). The best dishes are flawless, such as the roast red leg partridge. Follow that, if you can, with the assiette au chocolat (a tray of five hot and cold chocolate desserts). Nearly as impressive are the 70-page wine list, the view of the Merrion's manicured gardens, and the two-course lunch special. Soaring white vaults and white walls won't make you feel warm and cozy, but you can always go somewhere else for that.

Max's

$$$

Polished tables, a large stone chimney, and bay windows are the cornerstone of this contemporary space behind this double-fronted town house. At dinner, owner-chef Olivier Queva's classical French background is evident in his treatment of the daily catch directly from the pier, including fresh grilled lobster in the summer, and clever ways with unusual cuts of meat. In winter, the catch of the day is replaced by game: quail, pheasant, wild duck, or venison. The wine list is long and includes a good selection of French and new-world wines to complement serious and well-judged cuisine.

48 Main St., Kinsale, Ireland
021-477–2443
Known For
  • Good value early-bird menu
  • Excellent seafood
  • Reservations required on summer weekends
Restaurant Details
Closed Dec.–Feb.

Something incorrect in this review?

Roly's Bistro

$$$ | Georgian Dublin

While the bistro food at this Ballsbridge stalwart is always top-class, it's the jovial atmosphere and superb service that keep locals coming back. It's famed for the wine list, with great options by the glass, and that certainly helps to explain the wonderful buzz that always seems to be about this popular neighborhood place. For a starter try the Dublin Bay prawn bisque. The grilled hake with linguine, wild mushrooms, artichokes, and tarragon cream is a standout main course.

7 Ballsbridge Terr., Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland
01-668–2611
Known For
  • Separate vegan and vegetarian menu
  • Traditional Sunday lunch offering
  • Heated terrace

Something incorrect in this review?

Sika

$$$$

Local produce and stunning views are the stars of this hotel restaurant, with the Wicklow lamb a thrilling house specialty in season. Low ceilings give the very formal dining room a slightly overbearing feel, but floor-to-ceiling windows look out onto the serene Sugar Loaf mountain. The food focuses on Wicklow produce with a twist, and a favorite starter is the pheasant consommé with fairy ring mushrooms (also known as Scotch bonnet mushroom). You can follow that with the pan-fried halibut with purple potato chips, mussel and mushroom puree, citrus hollandaise, and seaweed salad.