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Dublin To Dingle Private Transfer

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Dublin To Dingle Private Transfer

About This Tour

When you land, your chauffeur will already be in the arrivals hall, name card in hand. The team tracks your flight in real time, so the pickup is timed around when you actually touch down - not some optimistic estimate made the night before. You get a full hour of complimentary waiting time at the airport, so there’s no stress if bags take a while.

The vehicle is a Mercedes MPV or Chrysler Voyager Executive Class - air-conditioned, WiFi-connected, and fully licensed and insured under the Irish Government Transport Authority. It comfortably holds up to 7 passengers with standard luggage, or 4 passengers if you’re travelling with golf bags.

Dingle is a long way from Dublin - 4 to 5 hours of genuinely beautiful Irish countryside. You’ll roll through the midlands, past the Shannon, and into Kerry, where the light starts to change and the landscape gets properly dramatic before you reach the peninsula. It’s a comfortable, stress-free way to start your time in one of Ireland’s most loved corners.

What’s Included

  • Private transportation
  • WiFi on board
  • Bottled water
  • Air-conditioned vehicle
  • All fees, taxes and tolls

What’s Not Included

  • Gratuities

Local Tips

Dingle town is small, so arrive with a plan for the first evening. The main street fills up fast in summer, and the best spots - Dick Mack’s pub, the fish and chip shops near the pier - get busy early. If you’re arriving late afternoon, your chauffeur can drop you right in the town centre so you can walk to wherever you’re staying.

The Dingle Peninsula is best explored over more than one day. The Slea Head Drive alone takes a few hours if you stop at every viewpoint, and you’ll want to. The Blasket Islands are visible on clear days, and the Gallarus Oratory - one of Ireland’s best-preserved early Christian structures - is just a short detour from the main loop.

Fungi the dolphin put Dingle on the map, but the town has real depth beyond the tourist trail. The local fishing fleet still goes out daily, and the catch ends up on the menus in the better restaurants that evening. Ask your accommodation where the fishermen drink - that’s usually the best pub in town.

If you’re travelling with golf bags, the Dingle Links is worth knowing about. It’s ranked consistently among the finest links courses in Ireland, with views that make concentration tricky. Book well in advance if you’re visiting in summer.

The drive itself is part of the experience. As you come through the mountains on the approach to Dingle, you get your first view of the bay below - it’s one of those moments that makes the whole journey worthwhile.

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