Roaming charges and fiddly SIM cards are the kind of travel stress nobody needs. WiFicandy is a portable pocket WiFi rental that keeps you online from the moment you land in Ireland right through to departure, covering both Ireland and the UK with unlimited data.
You pick up your device from the WiFicandy partner store in Terminal 2 at Dublin Airport, right in the Arrivals Hall. If you’d prefer, they’ll deliver to any address before you arrive. When it’s time to head home, returning it is straightforward - a prepaid return envelope is included so you can drop it at any Irish post office, or use the post box in T2 before you fly.
Pick it up before you leave the Arrivals Hall. The WiFicandy partner store is in T2 Arrivals, so you can grab the device before you’ve even figured out which bus or taxi you’re getting into the city. That means you’re connected from minute one - useful if you’re navigating public transport or meeting someone who needs to reach you.
The unlimited data covers both Ireland and the UK. If your trip includes crossing to Scotland, England, or Wales at any point - on a ferry from Dublin Port or from Rosslare - the device keeps working without any plan changes. It’s worth knowing this upfront rather than finding out at the border whether you’re still covered.
Charge it each night and you won’t run short during the day. The device is portable and compact, but like any pocket WiFi unit it has a battery life to manage. Charging it overnight at your accommodation is a simple habit that means you never find yourself stuck without signal mid-tour. The USB charging cable is included in the kit.
The prepaid return envelope makes the whole thing low-effort at the end. When you’re packing up to leave, you just pop the device in the envelope and drop it at any Irish post office, or use the post box in T2 before you fly. No queuing, no special counter. The user guide leaflet has all the return instructions written out clearly.
If you’re travelling beyond Dublin, the data holds up in rural areas reasonably well. Ireland’s mobile coverage has improved significantly in recent years, and the main tourist routes - Cork, Galway, the Wild Atlantic Way - are generally well served. You may get patchy signal in very remote parts of Connemara or along the Beara Peninsula, but for most itineraries the coverage is solid throughout.