The following list includes the tourist attractions on the island of Ireland which attract more than 100,000 visitors annually. It includes attractions in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.[1][2][3]
D
- Donegal
- Down
- Dublin City, largest city on the island, capital and cultural and economic centre of the Republic of Ireland
- Christ Church Cathedral, seat of Anglican Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin[2]
- Chester Beatty Library[2]
- Croke Park, one of Europe's largest stadiums, with the Museum of the Gaelic Athletic Association
- Dublin Castle, former seat of British rule, now a major Irish government complex[2]
- Dublinia, museum and "historical recreation" attraction[6]
- EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, diaspora museum[8]
- General Post Office building, headquarters of the 1916 Easter Rising rebels, on O'Connell Street, the main thoroughfare of Dublin's Northside
- Glasnevin Cemetery, burial location of Éamon de Valera, Michael Collins, Roger Casement, and many others[9]
- Grafton Street, one of the main shopping streets in Dublin
- Ha'penny Bridge, Victorian pedestrian bridge across the River Liffey
- Hugh Lane Gallery[2]
- Irish Museum of Modern Art[2]
- Old Jameson Distillery, Smithfield[10]
- Kilmainham Gaol, a former prison where, among others, most of the rebels of 1916 were held and executed; now a museum[2]
- National Aquatic Centre, Blanchardstown[2]
- National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin, Dublin (Northside)[2]
- National Gallery of Ireland, houses the Irish national collection of Irish and European art[2]
- National Library of Ireland, has a large quantity of Irish historical, literary and Irish-related material[2]
- National Museum of Ireland for Archaeology (in Kildare St) and Decorative Art and History (in the former Collins Barracks)[2]
- Phoenix Park, "largest inner city park in the world"; within the park are Farmleigh Estate and Dublin Zoo[2]
- Guinness Storehouse[2]
- St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, Ireland's "national cathedral"[2]
- St Stephen's Green, a landscaped inner-city centre public park in Dublin
- Temple Bar, a mainly cobblestonequarter, directly on the Southern banks of the Liffey, popular for its cultural and nightlife spots
- Trinity College, Dublin (also called the University of Dublin), Ireland's oldest university, home of the Book of Kells and the Book of Durrow[2]
- Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown
"The Geopark". burren.ie. Burren Ecotourism. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
"Tralee's Aqua Dome still making a splash after 20 years". irishexaminer.com. Irish Examiner. 4 June 2014. Retrieved 10 May 2019. [Tralee's Aqua Dome] is also among the top 20 tourist attractions nationally [..] However, numbers have fallen from a peak of 260,000 per year to 140,000 last year
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for
Ireland.