Ireland · Where to Live

A small country.
Big price gaps.

Everything in Ireland is within a half-day's drive, but a home in Dún Laoghaire costs 3.4 times one in Donegal. Where you land decides your budget, your access to healthcare, and whether you need to pass the Irish driving test before you can buy milk. The honest comparison, priced with official data.

Last verified: 8 July 2026

The map, priced

AreaMedian home priceAverage rentThe honest one-liner
Dublin€500,000≈ €2,200/mo (new tenancies)The jobs, the airport, the culture — at prices that rival US metros.
CorkBelow national median≈ €1,413/mo (city)The real second city: harbour, food scene, serious hospitals and pharma.
GalwayBelow Dublin≈ €1,409/mo (city)Arts, university energy, and the Atlantic — with a small city's limits.
LimerickCheapest big cityRising fastest: +12.6% y/y (new tenancies)The value city — and the market has noticed.
Donegal / LongfordFrom ≈ €200,000Thin rental marketHalf the national median price — with services to match.

Sources: CSO Residential Property Price Index, 12 months to March 2026 (national median €390,461; Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown €685,000); RTB Rent Index Q4 2025 — Cork and Galway figures are city averages; basis (new vs existing tenancies) per RTB release.

Match the place to the reader

Dublin

City person, direct flights home

The only Irish city with a full international airport hub — direct flights to a dozen-plus North American cities, plus US pre-clearance. Every service, every hospital, every show. The trade: €500,000 median prices, ≈€2,200 new-tenancy rents, and vacancy under 1% in much of the city. If you need Dublin, budget for Dublin.

Cork

Second city, first choice for many

A working harbour city with a genuine food culture, strong healthcare and pharma employment, and its own airport. City rents around €1,413 — some €800/month less than Dublin. The trade: fewer direct North American flights, and the best neighbourhoods are competitive.

Galway

Arts, ocean, university town

The west-coast favourite: festivals, traditional music, a university that keeps the city young, and Connemara on the doorstep. Rents around €1,409. The trade: small-city healthcare capacity, Atlantic weather at full strength, and a tight housing market.

Limerick

The value play with momentum

The cheapest of the big cities, mid-country with Shannon Airport nearby. New-tenancy rents rose 12.6% in the year to Q4 2025 — the fastest in the country — so the discount is shrinking. The trade: less polish than Cork or Galway, though that's changing.

Kerry & the southwest

The postcard, full-time

Killarney, Kenmare, Dingle — the Ireland from the brochures, with an established tourism infrastructure that keeps towns alive and English-speaking visitors flowing. The trade: seasonal crowds, rural healthcare distances, and a car-dependent life (Americans: see the driving-licence problem).

Donegal & the northwest

Maximum Ireland per euro

Median prices from about €200,000 — the country's cheapest — with wild coastline and real communities. The trade is real too: thin rural transport and services, distance from major hospitals and airports, and vacancy around 10% in some rural towns tells you which way the young people went.

The supply crisis is your house-hunting reality everywhere. Ireland completed 36,284 homes in 2025 — the best year since records began in 2011, and still short of the ~50,000+ a year housing bodies say is needed. National vacancy is about 3.3%, and under 1% in much of Dublin. Whatever county you choose, start the housing search before the plane ticket — the full picture is in the housing reality check.
The one rule we repeat: rent in your target town for a full year — including a west-of-Ireland winter — before buying. A harbour village that's perfect in June is a different proposition in the third week of horizontal January rain.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

Dublin's neighbourhoods for newcomers

Where movers actually settle, what €2,200/month rents in each, and the commuter-town alternative.

Coming soon

Cork vs Galway vs Limerick

The three regional cities compared on healthcare, flights, rents, and everyday life.

Coming soon

Rural Ireland with your eyes open

The €200,000 counties: what you gain, what you give up, and the services checklist before you commit.

Sources

  1. Prices: CSO Residential Property Price Index, 12 months to March 2026 (national median €390,461; Dublin €500,000; Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown €685,000; Donegal/Longford ≈€200,000), cso.ie
  2. Rents: RTB Rent Index Q4 2025 (published May 2026) — national new tenancies €1,755; Dublin ≈€2,200; Cork City ≈€1,413; Galway City ≈€1,409; Limerick +12.6% y/y, rtb.ie
  3. Completions and vacancy: CSO New Dwelling Completions Q4 2025 (36,284 homes, +20.4%); CSO/GeoDirectory-based vacancy (~3.3% national, <1% much of Dublin, ~10% some rural towns)
  4. Area characterisations reflect editorial judgment informed by the data above — trade-offs are real but subjective.
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