Since · 841 CE

A city dossier

Dublin.

In Ireland Leinster

Dublin is the capital of Ireland, sitting at the mouth of the River Liffey on the east coast, with Trinity College, the Guinness Storehouse, and a literary heritage from Joyce, Yeats, Beckett, and Shaw.

Population
1.4M
Area
115 km²
Founded
841 CE
Region
Leinster
Coordinates
53.3498°N · 6.2603°W
04 · About

On the city.

Dublin is the capital of Ireland, sitting at the mouth of the River Liffey on the east coast, with Trinity College, the Guinness Storehouse, and a literary heritage from Joyce, Yeats, Beckett, and Shaw.

Location, geography & climate

Dublin sits in the Leinster region of Ireland, at approximately 53.35°, -6.26°. The metropolitan area covers around 115 km² and falls within a cold-temperate climate band, which shapes the city’s seasons, architecture and street life. Local geography — coastline, river basin, hills or plain — typically dictates the layout of historic neighbourhoods, the route of public transport and the choice of building materials seen across Dublin.

History & founding

Dublin was founded around 841 CE and has grown into one of the principal urban centres of Ireland. Successive waves of migration, trade, conquest and reconstruction have layered the city’s street pattern: older quarters often follow medieval, colonial or pre-industrial street plans, while later expansion reaches outward in planned grids, ring roads or transit corridors. Reading the city’s map is, in many ways, reading its history.

Districts, character & architecture

Like every great city, Dublin is built from neighbourhoods rather than blocks. A historic core typically anchors civic and religious landmarks; commercial districts cluster around transport hubs; residential areas radiate outward at different densities and price points. Architecture across Dublin reflects the eras of greatest investment — sometimes a single decade dominates the skyline, sometimes a thousand years of building history sits visible on a single street.

Population, economy & daily life

The metropolitan population of Dublin is around 1.4M. Major employment sectors usually include services, public administration, retail, hospitality and (where applicable) finance, technology, manufacturing or maritime industry. Day-to-day life moves to the rhythm of commuter flows, school timetables, market days and the city’s major stadiums, theatres and venues.

Culture, food & nightlife

Cultural life in Dublin plays out across museums, galleries, music venues, places of worship, sports arenas and an outdoor calendar of festivals and parades. Cuisine usually reflects both regional traditions and the influence of immigrant communities, with everything from family-run cafés to fine-dining institutions and street-food markets. Nightlife clusters in identifiable districts and tends to peak at weekends and during major celebrations.

Getting around & visiting

Dublin is best understood on foot in its older districts, with public transport — metros, trams, buses or commuter rail — bridging the longer distances. Cycling is increasingly common in many cities of comparable size. Visitors typically base themselves near a transport hub to reach landmarks, museums and dining quickly. Time of year matters: peak tourist season tracks the city’s climate, with shoulder seasons often offering the best balance of weather, opening hours and crowd levels.

At a glance

Sort or filter the table to compare values for the city.

Field Value Note
Country Ireland
Region Leinster within country
Population 1.4M metropolitan area
Area 115 km²
Founded 841 CE
Latitude 53.3498 degrees
Longitude -6.2603 degrees
Climate band cold-temperate derived from latitude

Did you know?

Dublin has more Nobel Prize winners in literature per capita than any other city, with four laureates: Yeats, Shaw, Beckett, and Heaney.

Frequently asked questions

Where is Dublin?

Dublin is located in Ireland, in the Leinster region. The city sits at coordinates 53.3498°N, -6.2603°E.

What is the population of Dublin?

Dublin has a population of approximately 1.4M, with a density of around 12,174/km².

When was Dublin founded?

Dublin was founded in 841 CE, making it about 12 centuries old.

How big is Dublin?

Dublin covers an area of approximately 115 km².

05 · Essentials

Things to know.

Practical information pulled from country-level data — useful before you travel.

Languages
Irish, English
Currency
Euro (EUR) · €
Time zone
GMT (UTC+0)
Calling
+353
Plug type
G
Drives on
Left
Climate
Temperate
Best season
May – Sep (warm)
Density
12,174/km²
Age
about 12 centuries old
Dispatch 14 · MAY · 26

A small thing, worth noting.

Dublin has more Nobel Prize winners in literature per capita than any other city, with four laureates: Yeats, Shaw, Beckett, and Heaney.

— filed from Dublin

Reference

Knowing Dublin

Practical, computed reference: where the city sits on the planet, what to expect from the climate, and how it connects to the rest of the world.

Geography & climate of Dublin

Hemisphere
Northern hemisphere
Latitude
53.3498°
Longitude
-6.2603°
Time-zone band
UTC
Daylight at June solstice
16h 45m
Daylight at December solstice
7h 15m

A continental or maritime cool-temperate climate. Summers are mild and short; winters are long and cold, often with significant snowfall. Daylight varies dramatically through the year.

When to visit Dublin

June through August — the only months with reliably long daylight, mild temperatures, and most attractions open. Outside this window, expect short days, cold weather, and limited services.

This is a climate-band heuristic — the best time for any specific traveller depends on what they want to do (festivals, beach, mountains). Treat as a starting point.

How far is Dublin from the major hubs?

Great-circle distances — the shortest distance over the surface of the Earth, used by long-haul aircraft. Actual flight time is roughly distance ÷ 800 km/h plus an hour or two for the climb, descent, and headwinds.

  • London 463 km / 288 mi
  • New York 5,115 km / 3,178 mi
  • Dubai 5,915 km / 3,675 mi
  • Tokyo 9,585 km / 5,956 mi
  • Singapore 11,199 km / 6,959 mi
  • Sydney 17,214 km / 10,696 mi

Cities near Dublin

Other cities in the encyclopedia, sorted by great-circle distance. Some are realistic day trips; others are regional context. Always check actual road or rail journey times — they differ from straight-line distance by a lot in mountainous or island geography.

The antipode of Dublin

If you drilled straight through the centre of the Earth from Dublin, you'd come out at -53.3498°, 173.7397°, in the South Pacific Ocean — coordinates -53.3498°, 173.7397°.

About 71% of the planet is ocean, so most antipodes land in the sea — a little geographic curiosity for the next pub quiz.