Quick Verdict
Pick Belfast for Falls-and-Shankill black-cab tours, Titanic Belfast's slipway museum, and Crown Liquor Saloon's gas-lit snugs. Pick Dublin if Trinity's Long Room, Mulligan's $7 Guinness, and Phoenix Park wild deer pull harder.
🏆 Belfast wins 80 OVR vs 77 · attribute matchup 0–4
Dublin
Ireland
Belfast
United Kingdom
Dublin
Belfast
How do Dublin and Belfast compare?
The two-Irelands decision — both Guinness, both green, completely different histories under the surface. Belfast is Northern Ireland's capital and a Troubles-era recovery story — the black-cab tours of the Falls Road and Shankill Road murals, the Titanic Belfast museum at the slipway where the ship was built, the Cathedral Quarter's cobbled lanes with the Duke of York pub, Crown Liquor Saloon's gas-lit Victorian snugs across from the Europa Hotel, and the Giant's Causeway day trip up the Antrim coast. Dublin is the Republic's capital and Joyce's city — the Trinity College Long Room and the Book of Kells, Temple Bar's tourist-trap pubs (skip them) and Stoneybatter's craft-beer corner, the Guinness Storehouse on James's Gate, $7 Guinness at Mulligan's on Poolbeg Street, and Phoenix Park's wild deer west of the Liffey.
Belfast runs £55 hostel / £130 mid / £350 luxe (in pounds — Northern Ireland uses sterling), safety around 82. Dublin runs €60 hostel / €150 mid / €405 luxe (in euros), safety around 82. The headline is that Dublin has gotten genuinely expensive — a pint that's £5 in Belfast is €7-8 in Dublin, hotel rates are 20-30% higher, and a bowl of stew at a Dublin gastropub easily clears €18. Both are uniformly safe with the usual late-night drunk-fight risk near pub clusters. Climate is identical — wet, mild, wind off the Atlantic, summer 18°C and winter 6°C. Cultural depth tilts to Dublin for literary heritage (Joyce, Beckett, Yeats, Wilde) and the Book of Kells; Belfast wins on raw recent history — the Troubles murals are still being painted, the Peace Walls still close at 6 p.m.
Both peak May-September with the longest light and best chance at dry days; September is the underrated month — fewer crowds, still 16°C, and the rugby season starting. Pro tip: in Belfast take a black-cab Troubles tour with a driver from each side of the wall (some companies pair them) — it's the single best history lesson; in Dublin skip Temple Bar entirely and pub-crawl Stoneybatter, Portobello, or the Liberties — the music is better and the pints €2 cheaper. Pick Belfast for Troubles history, the Antrim coast, and prices that still feel reasonable. Pick Dublin for literary pilgrimage, the Guinness Storehouse, and Ireland's best pub-and-trad-music density — but expect to pay London-adjacent rates.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Dublin
Dublin is generally safe for visitors. The main concerns are petty theft (especially pickpocketing on crowded streets and public transport), occasional street harassment in certain areas at night, and scams targeting tourists in Temple Bar. Use normal city awareness and Dublin is a welcoming, friendly place.
Belfast
Belfast is a safe city for tourists. The Troubles ended with the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and violence against visitors is essentially unheard of. Occasional community tensions persist in interface areas but are rarely visible to tourists. Standard urban safety practices apply.
🌤️ Weather
Dublin
Dublin has a mild maritime climate — rarely very hot or very cold but frequently damp. Rain falls on average 150 days per year, usually as drizzle rather than downpours. Pack layers and a waterproof jacket regardless of season. The Irish saying "there's no bad weather, just bad clothes" applies.
Belfast
Belfast has an oceanic climate — mild and wet year-round, with no extreme cold or heat. Summer days can be genuinely pleasant but rain is always possible. The city gets 850mm of rain annually spread fairly evenly across the year. Wind is the defining feature — pack a windproof layer regardless of season.
🚇 Getting Around
Dublin
Dublin's public transport includes the DART commuter rail, Luas tram lines, and Dublin Bus. Get a Leap Card (reloadable travel card) for cheaper fares — it works on all services. A single bus fare with Leap is €1.70 versus €2.70 cash.
Walkability: Dublin's city center is very walkable and flat. The main tourist zone (Trinity College to Temple Bar to Grafton Street to St Stephen's Green) is easily covered on foot in 20-30 minutes. The north and south sides of the Liffey each have their own character and are connected by numerous bridges.
Belfast
Belfast city centre is very walkable. Translink buses and the Glider (rapid transit) cover the wider city. Metro buses reach the suburbs. Black taxis are culturally embedded and affordable. A car is needed for the Causeway Coast and Giant's Causeway.
Walkability: High in city centre and Cathedral Quarter. West Belfast murals require bus or taxi.
📅 Best Time to Visit
Dublin
May–Sep
Peak travel window
Belfast
May–Sep
Peak travel window
The Verdict
Choose Dublin if...
you want Irish literature, Temple Bar trad sessions, Guinness Storehouse, Trinity College's Book of Kells, and Dublin Bay coastal rambles
Choose Belfast if...
you want the Titanic's birthplace, Game of Thrones filming locations, dark tourism from the Troubles era, and some of the UK's most welcoming pub culture — the craic is mighty
Belfast
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