Waterford
- For other places with the same name, see Waterford (disambiguation).
Waterford is a city in County Waterford in the south of Ireland. Founded over 1100 years ago, it's famous for its fine glassware, though the glassworks has closed down and Waterford Crystal is nowadays made abroad. The city's main attraction is its Viking, medieval and Georgian heritage, reflecting its importance as a port. With a population of 60,000 in 2022, Waterford is the largest conurbation in the area and has the best range of visitor amenities.
Understand

The River Suir is tidal here, and navigable by sea-going craft. This attracted the Vikings, who settled in 853 and called it VeΓ°rafjΗ«rΓ°r, the rams' fjord. They were ousted by the native Irish in 902 but returned and held on from 914. This precedes Dublin's settlement in 988 so Waterford is Ireland's oldest city. Its landscape is dominated by walls and fortifications from the Anglo-Norman period, and architecture of the 18th century when it grew rapidly as a port. The Suir was bridged in 1793 but the city remained on the south bank: a strip along the north bank has the railway station and suburb of Ferrybank, then the boundary with County Kilkenny.
Get in
By plane
Dublin Airport (DUB IATA) is usually the best option, for its range of flights and good onward transport. See below for the direct bus to Waterford.
You might also fly into Cork or Shannon and hire a car from there.
Waterford Airport, 7 km south, lost its scheduled flights in 2016. Grand plans for its extension and revival are announced from time to time, but come to nothing.
By train
Trains from Dublin Heuston take 2 hr 15 min via Newbridge, Kildare, Athy, Carlow, Bagenalstown / Muine Bheag, Kilkenny and Thomastown. There are eight M-Sa and six on Sunday.
Two trains run M-Sa from Limerick Junction (for Dublin, Cork and Limerick city) via Tipperary, Cahir, Clonmel and Carrick-on-Suir. The railway from Rosslare was axed in 2010, use the bus.
π Plunkett is the railway station, just north of the river bridge. Of the many illustrious Plunketts that it might be named for, it commemorates Joseph Plunkett (1887-1916), executed for his part in the Easter Rising.
By bus
Expressway Bus 4 runs every couple of hours from Dublin Airport, taking 3 hours via Dublin BusΓ‘ras and Heuston, Carlow and Thomastown.
JJ Kavanagh competes on this route, with Bus 736 every hour or two from Dublin Airport and several city stops via Carlow and Kilkenny to Waterford, with some buses continuing to Tramore. They have one overnight run.
Expressway Bus 55 runs daily every two hours from Limerick via Tipperary, Cahir, Clonmel and Carrick-on-Suir.
Expressway Bus 40 runs hourly from Tralee and Cork via Youghal and Dungarvan to Waterford. Every 2-3 hours it continues to New Ross, Wexford and Rosslare Harbour, for ferries to Wales and the Continent.
Bus Γireann 73 trundles across the Midlands from Athlone to Tullamore, Portlaoise, Carlow, Kilkenny, Thomastown and Waterford. There are two M-Sa, plus a third on Sunday that starts from Longford.
π Waterford bus station is on Merchants Quay by the riverside.
By road
By road from Dublin follow N7 / M7 onto M9, 160 km and reckon 2 hr 30 min.
From Wexford follow N25. You can also take that route from Rosslare, but there's a shortcut along the minor roads and across the π Passage East Ferry from Ballyhack. It sails 7AM-8PM every 15 min or so. In 2025 a car and its passengers is β¬10 single and β¬14 return.
The N25 bypassing the city to the west has a toll bridge: cars β¬2:30.
From Cork or Limerick takes about 2 hours.
Get around
Walking is generally the best option. The area of interest is compact, and you should avoid bringing a car into the centre.
By bus: Bus Γireann operate five city routes, which start from the Quays near the Clock Tower. See the bus network map, but in summary:
- W1 loops clockwise via Cork Road, Waterford Institute of Technology, Ballybeg, Cannon Street and back to the Quays, every 20-30 min.
- W2 loops anticlockwise via Cannon Street, Waterford Institute of Technology, Cork Road and back to the Quays, every 20-30 min.
- W3 runs south to St Johns Park every 20-30 min.
- W4 runs west via Peter Street to Browne's Road every 30 min.
- W5 shuttles cross-town between University Hospital in the east, the Quays, and Oakwood in the west, every 30 min.
Bus Γireann also run the hourly Bus 360 / 360A to Tramore from the bus station.
The fare within the city (as of July 2025) is β¬2 adult and β¬1 child by cash, or β¬1.55 adult, 65c child by Leap Card.
In addition Kavanagh Coaches run buses between the housing estates, college and shopping centres.
Taxi: fares are nationally regulated and taxis must use the meter. As of 2025, fares M-Sa 8AM to 8PM are β¬4.40 flagfall then β¬1.32 per km. 8PM to 8AM and Sunday is β¬5.40 flagfall then β¬2.20 per km.
Operators include Rapid Cabs +353 51 858585, Waterford Taxi +353 51 331033, and Newtown Taxi +353 89 220 9682
The ferry to Little Island may only be used by guests of the hotel (see Sleep) or clients of resort facilities eg the golf course. See above for the public ferry from County Wexford.
See

City centre
- Waterford Treasures consists of two museums: Medieval Museum and Bishop's Palace. Both have a guided tour lasting 45 min, after which you can explore at liberty. (A third, Reginald's Tower, is closed in 2020 for restoration.) They're open daily M-F 10AM-5PM, Sa Su 11AM-5PM. Admission to one is adult β¬10, conc β¬8, under-12 with paying adult free. For both museums it's adult β¬15, conc β¬14. There's also a combi-ticket with Mount Congreve Gardens.
- π Medieval Museum (Treasures of Medieval Waterford), The Mall, β +355 761 102501. Hours and prices as above. Descend by spiral staircase into the 1270 Choristers' Hall, which extends into the wine vaults - Waterford had extensive trade with Bordeaux, which was ruled by the English. Religious artifacts include a relic of the True Cross (it must be a true relic if Pope Paschal II deemed it so in 1110, but no wonder Europe was rapidly de-forested in that era) and a pilgrim badge (violently anti-Semitic). There's a sumptuous gold brooch of 1210, a charter roll stating Waterford's precedence over a rival nearby port (which they destroyed just to be on the safe side), and a ceremonial sword presented by Edward IV. The Cloth of Gold clerical vestments were woven circa 1460 with Florence silk and embroidered in Bruges: they were hidden in the cathedral from Cromwellβs army in 1650, and only rediscovered 123 years later. They were in an ornate Spanish iron chest, also displayed. The "cap of maintenance" was presented by Henry VIII; the Great Parchment Book is the city records from 1356 to 1649. The Luker chalice is from 1595. Finally the Mayor's Treasury is a summary of civic history.
- π Bishop's Palace (Treasures of Georgian Waterford), The Mall (next to Medieval Museum), β +355 761 102501. Hours and prices as above. Grand Georgian residence with decor and items mostly from that era, including a 1789 piece of Waterford Crystal and a Napoleon Mourning Cross. The Hucklebuck shoes are from 1963 (from pop group Royal Showband) yet resemble the attire of a Regency buck.
- π Reginald's Tower, Parade Quay. Closed. It's named for RΓΈgnvaldr, a common name among Viking rulers, so he may or may not be the fellow who founded Waterford in 914. The tower was probably built in the late 13th century. Prince (and later King) John began fortification of the city with stout walls and towers a century earlier. It's been variously a mint, a prison, a military bastion and munitions store, and the residence of the Chief Constable. It's part of the "Museum of Treasures" complex and normally displays the Viking era, but in 2020 it's closed for restoration.
- Other towers: seven still stand: π Semi-Lunar Tower, π Beach Tower, Turgesius's Tower, π St Martin's Gate, The π Watch Tower, The π Double Tower and The π French Tower. Sections of the city walls remain, linking the towers, west crossing Patrick St and south in a loop across Parnell St and John's Lane.
- π The French Church (Greyfriars Abbey). A ruin next to Reginald's Tower. It was built in 1241 and the bell tower added in the 15th century; the friary was dissolved in 1540.
- π King of the Vikings. daily 11AM-5PM. A virtual-reality museum next to the tower. Adult β¬10, child under 12 β¬5.
- π Christ Church Cathedral. The Church of Ireland (Protestant) building in Cathedral Square next to the two museums. It was built in Georgian style 1773-79 replacing the 13th-century Gothic cathedral, from which the Catholics had been ejected at the Reformation. When the old one was demolished, they found the remarkable medieval vestments now in the museum.
- π Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity. The Roman Catholic building on the Quays. It was completed in 1793 on the site of a chapel when the Penal Laws against Catholic assemblies were relaxed. It's in Romanesque style resembling a particularly august bank.
- π Edmund Rice Heritage Centre, Mount Sion, Barrack St X91 KH90, β +353 51 874 390. M-F 9AM-5PM, Sa 10AM-2PM. Chapel, shrine and museum commemorating the work of the Blessed Edmund Ignatius Rice (1762-1844). Widowed young, he gave up his business and threw himself into the education of the city's impoverished youngsters. Others joined him and by 1803 Mount Sion was established as a school, monastery, and teacher-training centre, in an era when Roman Catholic education was slowly recovering from the Penal days of "hedge schools". But as the initiative expanded, Rice as a layman had no authority in the church, and had to laboriously seek permission from the local bishop whenever one of his teacher-priest Brothers was to be relocated. In 1820 he obtained papal authority to manage these Christian Brothers, and the scheme extended geographically and to secondary education. A minority remained subject to the bishops under the earlier arrangements and these were called the Presentation Brothers. Both societies remain active internationally, but the Christian Brothers' regime in the 20th and 21st centuries was marked by systematic physical and sexual abuse of their pupils. Rice lived in retirement at Mount Sion and died there. In the 20th century a campaign began for his beautification. In 1976 a boy who seemed sure to die of a gangrenous colon had a relic of Rice placed at his bedside and recovered fully; post hoc ergo propter hoc and in 1996 Rice was declared a saint. Free.
- House of Waterford Crystal, 28 The Mall (opposite Medieval Museum), β +353 51 317000. Mar-Oct daily 10AM-5PM, Nov-Feb M-F 10AM-3PM. Waterford Crystal is the brand name of a fine flint glass used in tumblers, chandeliers, decorative bowls, trophies and similar luxury wares. The brand is owned by the Finnish company Fiskars. It's almost all manufactured abroad: the main factory in Kilbarry, south edge of Waterford city, closed in 2009 but there's small-scale production here. Visits are by guided tour, taking 50 min and demonstrating the glass-making process. Then, of course, you troop to the gift shop. Adult β¬18, conc β¬16, child β¬10.
Further out
- π Mount Congreve Gardens, Kilmeaden X91 PX05, β +353 51 384 115. Daily 10AM-4PM. 70 acres (28 hectares) of woodland garden and a 4-acre walled garden, a riot of colour in summer. The Georgian mansion isn't open to visit. Adult β¬11.50, conc β¬10, child free.
- π Kilmeadan Castle is the stump of a tower house built late 17th century, glimpsed from the Greenway between Mount Congreve and the WSVR station (see below). It's not worth thrashing through the undergrowth for a closer view.
- π Fairbrook House, Kilmeaden X91 PX05, β +353 51 384 657. May-Sep F-Su 10:30AM-4PM. An old wool mill turned into an art-space and gardens. No dogs. Adult β¬7.
- π Curraghmorehouse is a palatial grand mansion, mostly 18th and 19th century, the home of the Marquess of Waterford. It can only be visited by pre-arranged group tour; its grounds sometimes hold events.
- County Kilkenny lies just north of the city, and some of its sights are easier to reach from Waterford than from there.
- π Grannagh Castle is a crumbling medieval turret, off N24 about 500 m west of Meagher Bridge. It was wrecked in 1650 by Cromwell's forces.
- π Mooncoin: great name, too bad it's just a nondescript modern village straggling along N24 10 miles northwest of the city. But then again, MΓ³in Choinn means "the bogland of Coyne". You might look into the parish church. Or you might croon "Rose of Mooncoin", the mawkish ballad penned by Watt Murphy, sundered from his dear Molly (aka Elizabeth) by her flint-hearted father the vicar. The first problem was, Watt was 56 and Molly was 20. And second, he had rebel sympathies, with the Young Irelander rebellion of 1848 threatening a return to the bad old days. Molly's father had every reason to believe he was saving his entire family's lives by decamping to London. The ballad has been adopted as the anthem of Kilkenny GAA, who can have no complaints if their sporting hopes are crushed by teams half their age.
- π Piltown has a "sham castle", a Napoleonic-era monument that's now a water tower. However it's not the birthplace of the sham "Piltdown Man", that's near Uckfield in East Sussex, England. Stay on N24 to cross into County Tipperary and the genuine castle of Carrick-on-Suir.
- π is 16 km north, with Poulanassy waterfall 1 km west of the village.
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What's on? Listen to WLR FM on 95.1 MHz or Beat 102 103 on, yes you guessed; or read Waterford News & Star, Munster Express or Waterford Today.
- π Theatre Royal, The Mall, β +353 51 874 (box office).
- π Garter Lane Arts Centre, O'Connel St, β +353 51 855 038 (box office). Has theatre, film and dance.
- Cinema: the π Omniplex is on Patrick St, the π Odeon is 500 m south on Poleberry Link Rd.
- π People's Park. The pleasant green space just south of the smaller river.
- Gaelic games: the County GAA plays hurling and Gaelic football at π Walsh Park, on Keane's Road 1 km southwest of city centre. Its capacity is expected to increase to 14,000 in 2025. There's a secondary home stadium in Dungarvan.
- Football: Waterford FC were promoted in 2023 so they now play soccer in the Premier Division, the Republic's top tier. They play at the π Regional Sports Centre (capacity 5150) on Tramore Rd 1 km south of town centre. The playing season is March-Nov.
- π Waterford Golf Club is north bank of the river on Newrath Road. Blue tees 5652 yards, par 70.
- π Waterford and Suir Valley Railway, Kilmeadan Station, β +353 51 384 058. Apr-Oct 11AM-4PM. The WSVR is a 3-foot (914-cm) railway along the south bank of the river, along the bed of an abandoned standard-gauge railway. Its diesel-hauled trains ply 10 km from Kilmeadan towards Waterford, with a halt at Mount Congreve. You normally have to board at Kilmeadan, as only occasional specials run as far as the city. Adult β¬10, conc β¬9, child β¬3.
- Deise Greenway is a 46-km walking and cycling route along an old railway track. It heads west from Waterford along the south bank of the river, alongside the WSV Railway as far as Kilmeadan. It continues west cross-country then turns south to the coast at Dungarvan.
- Altogether Now is a modern music festival held on Curraghmore Estate over the three days of the early August holiday weekend. It's Irelandβs largest independent festival and won the IMRO 2024 Festival of the Year award.
Buy
The main retail mall is a block back from the Quay.
Eat
- A blaa is a floury bread bun unique to this region; see County Waterford#Eat. Walsh's Bakehouse and Hickey's Bakery still produce blaas in Waterford by the traditional method, as does Barron's Bakery in Cappoquin near Lismore.
- π BodΓ©ga, 54 John Street XW2R, β +353 51 844 177. W-Su 4:30-9:30PM. Spanish name but French cuisine, seafood a speciality.
- Dry Dock Bar, 36 Merchant's Quay (within Dooley's Hotel, opposite bus station). daily 09:00-00:00. It wins good reviews as much for its food as its ambiance and has live music at weekends, see Sleep.
- π Espresso, Parnell Street, β +353 51 874 141. W-Sa 5-9PM, Su 1-8PM. Cheap and cheerful Italian pizza and pasta restaurant in city centre.
- π Kyoto, John Collyn House, High St X91 EF8F, β +353 51 854 762. M-Th 12:30-2:30PM, 4-10:30PM; F-Su 12:30-10:30PM. Not that you'd admit to wanting a break from trad Irish fare, but here are all the staple Japanese offerings. Inexpensive.
- π Momo, 47 Patrick St X91 DX49, β +353 51 581 509. Tu-Sa noon-3PM, 5-10PM; Su 1-8PM. Eclectic modern cuisine with plenty of choice for veggies, vegans and GF. Gets great reviews.
Drink

- π Geoff's Cafe Bar, 9 John St X91 WP98. Daily 11:30AM-midnight. Big lively pub, good choice of beer and food.
- π Henry Downes, 10 Thomas St. Grand old pub, a Waterford institution.
- π Jordan's, 123 Parade Quay X91 CP89. Trad Irish pub, popular with visitors and locals alike.
- π Kazbar, 57 John St X91 F974. Daily 12:30-11PM. Buzzing bar, good food, TV sport, live music most nights.
- π Katty Barry's (previously Queen's), 2 Mall Lane. M-F 4-11:30PM, Sa Su 12:30PM-midnight. Cosy trad Irish bar, often has live music.
- π The Tavern, 5 Lower Yellow Road X91 W6FH. Cosy friendly pub, good food.
- Other popular pubs are π The Gingerman, π Phil Grimes, π The Tap Room, π The Three Shippes and π Tom Maher.
Sleep
- π Fitzwilton Hotel, Bridge St X91 RC9A, β +353 51 846 900, info@fitzwiltonhotel.ie. Modern midrange hotel, very central. The car park is cramped, only 7 spaces which fill early. B&B double β¬130.
- π Treacey's Hotel, 1 Merchants Quay St X91 AV9W, β +353 51 877 222. Decent midrange hotel on Quays. B&B double β¬130.
- Dooley's Hotel, 30 Merchant's Quay X91 P86C (opposite bus station), β +353 51 873 531. Midrange modern hotel with 112 rooms and conference suite. With Ship Restaurant and Dry Dock Bar, see Eat. B&B double β¬140.
- π Granville Hotel, 62 Meagher's Quay X91 XH5R, β +353 51 305 555. Good modern hotel within riverside shopping centre. Some street noise, but great reviews for comfort and service. Cheap parking. B&B double β¬140.
- Tower Hotel, The Mall X91 VXE0 (next to Reginald's Tower), β +353 51 862 300. Bright modern hotel on riverside, has parking, good reviews for comfort, service and food. B&B double β¬150.
- π Travelodge Waterford Hotel, Cork Road X91 YV04 (retail park 1 km south of centre), β +353 51 358 885, waterford@travelodge.ie. Basic chain hotel, clean and value for money. Free parking. B&B double β¬100.
- π Waterford Castle Hotel, Little Island X91 Y722 (ferry from Ballinakill), β +353 51 878 203. Gothic mansion built in 1895 over a medieval turret, and since the 1980s a plush hotel and golf resort. Gets great reviews for comfort, service and dining. Often booked for wedding parties, and also has self-catering lodges. B&B double from β¬300.
- π Viking Hotel Waterford, Cork Road X91 Y657 (jcn with ring road, 3 km southwest of centre), β +353 51 336933, info@vikinghotel.ie. Decent budget-to-mid-range place at edge of town, convenient for motorists. B&B double β¬140.
Stay safe
Standard advice about road safety and avoiding drunks. The city centre is safe day and night, and the revellers are noisy rather than threatening.
Connect
As of July 2025, Waterford and its approach roads have 5G from all Irish carriers.
Go next
- Along the coast nearby are the resorts of Dunmore East and Tramore; further west is the "Copper Coast" towards Dungarvan.
- The Comeragh Mountains form the border with Tipperary to the northeast, similarly the Knockmealdown Mountains northwest. They're scenic and easy to access.
- Cahir, across the mountains in County Tipperary, has a river-island castle and the playful Swiss Cottage.
- Inistioge is a picture-postcard village north in County Kilkenny.