Your private chauffeur meets you at Dublin Airport arrivals or at your Dublin city address - no hunting for buses, no shared transfers, no guesswork. You get in, and someone else takes care of the two-to-three-hour drive to Ennis.
All tolls, taxes, and parking are included in the price, so there are no surprises at the end. There’s WiFi on board and bottled water waiting for you when you step in. The vehicle is fully air-conditioned, which matters on a warm summer’s day on the motorway through Tipperary.
If you need the return trip covered too, book the same transfer for your return date and include your pick-up time, pick-up location, and drop-off details when you book. Service animals are welcome, and this is a private transfer - no other passengers sharing your vehicle.
Ennis is Ireland’s traditional music capital, and it takes that seriously. Pubs like Cruise’s and Brogan’s have sessions running most nights of the week, not tourist-facing entertainment but proper local musicians who’ve been playing together for years. Show up, find a seat near the music, and let the evening unfold.
The town is genuinely walkable. Ennis grew up around a medieval friary, and the street plan still reflects that - narrow, winding lanes that open onto unexpected squares. The Ennis Friary on Abbey Street is well preserved and often overlooked by people passing through on their way to the Cliffs of Moher. It’s worth 30 minutes of your time.
The Burren is about 30 minutes north. Clare’s karst limestone landscape is one of the most distinctive natural environments in Ireland - a grey, otherworldly plateau dotted with wild orchids in May and June. Poulnabrone Dolmen sits right alongside the road if you just want a quick stop, but Mullaghmore in the Burren National Park is the place to really get into it.
Lahinch is 25 minutes west and has the Atlantic. The surf school there is well run, the beach is wide and sandy, and Vaughan’s Anchor Inn in nearby Liscannor does excellent seafood chowder if you’ve worked up an appetite on the water.