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Dublin To Belfast City UK Private Luxury Car Transfer

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Dublin To Belfast City UK Private Luxury Car Transfer

About This Tour

Whether you’re arriving into Dublin Airport or heading off from the city centre, your chauffeur is already there waiting for you. From the moment you’re collected, you’re in a private, air-conditioned vehicle on a direct run north to Belfast - no shared shuttles, no stops, no one else’s schedule to worry about.

The journey between Dublin and Belfast takes roughly an hour to two hours depending on traffic, and the whole thing is sorted from your end: WiFi on board, bottled water, and gratuities are all wrapped into the price. If you need to get back south too, just book the return transfer for your chosen date and pass on the pickup time, location, and where you’d like to be dropped.

What’s Included

  • Private transportation
  • All fees and taxes
  • WiFi on board
  • Bottled water
  • Gratuities
  • One hour complimentary waiting time at the airport
  • Air-conditioned vehicle

Good to Know

  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • This is a private tour

Local Tips

The Dublin-Belfast road is one of Ireland’s better drives - the M1 runs you up through County Louth and on into County Armagh with open motorway most of the way. It’s not particularly scenic, but it’s fast and easy, and on a clear day you’ll catch glimpses of the Cooley Mountains off to the east as you cross the border.

You’re crossing from the Republic into Northern Ireland, which means you’re moving from the euro zone into sterling. There’s no hard border crossing to worry about - you often won’t even notice you’ve passed it - but it’s worth having some pound sterling on you once you’re in Belfast, especially if you’re planning to eat or shop away from the main tourist drag.

Belfast has changed enormously in the past two decades. The city that was once defined almost entirely by its Troubles history now has a genuinely brilliant food scene, a thriving waterfront at the Titanic Quarter, and a craft beer culture that keeps growing. If you have any time at all before or after your main reason for visiting, the Cathedral Quarter around St. Anne’s Cathedral is worth a wander.

On the return leg, if your onward travel is from Dublin Airport, it’s worth booking the transfer with a bit of buffer time built in. The M1 can slow around the Drogheda interchange during morning and late-afternoon peaks, and giving yourself an extra thirty to forty-five minutes is just sensible.

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