St Patrick's Cathedral tickets & tours | Price comparison

St Patrick's Cathedral

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St Patrick's Cathedral (also written as Saint Patrick's Cathedral) rises over St Patrick's Close in south-central Dublin, where Gothic stone, memorials, and over 800 years of church history meet in one calm interior. You feel the shift from street noise to vaulted quiet within minutes.

Start with a timed entry ticket for flexible pacing, or choose a guided Dublin combo for faster city context, and book early for weekend demand.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Entry tickets

Best if you want direct, self-paced access inside St Patrick's Cathedral without committing to a city-wide guided route.
St Patrick's Cathedral: Self-Guided Cathedral Admission
4.5(2865)
 
getyourguide.com
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Saint Patrick's Cathedral: Entry Ticket
4.6(223)
 
tiqets.com
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Saint Patrick's Cathedral Dublin Entry Ticket
4.7(299)
 
viator.com
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Guided Dublin tours

Choose this if you want St Patrick's Cathedral as part of a broader guided route with less planning friction.
St Patrick's Cathedral, Book of Kells and Dublin Castle Tour
4.8(904)
 
viator.com
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Dublin Skip the Line Full Day Highlights with Top Attractions
4.8(47)
 
viator.com
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Dublin City & St Patrick's Cathedral Half-Day Tour by Car
5.0(1)
 
getyourguide.com
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Skip-the-line St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Dublin City Tour
5.0(4)
 
getyourguide.com
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See all Guided Dublin tours

City passes

Great when St Patrick's Cathedral is one stop in a packed multi-attraction day across Dublin.
Go City | Dublin All-Inclusive Pass
4.5(12)
 
musement.com
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6 tips for visiting the St Patrick's Cathedral

1
Book morning slots early
If you want calmer interiors and cleaner photos, lock in an early slot at St Patrick's Cathedral, especially on Friday and Saturday. Late-morning flow gets busier as city tours stack up around Dublin. This usually lowers queue stress and gives you a smoother start to the day.
2
Use guided times for fast context
If your priority is historical context without extra prep, aim for the free guided starts at 10:30 am or 2:30 pm, Monday to Saturday. At busy moments, confirm the next departure at the welcome desk right away. That way you avoid waiting around and keep your route efficient.
3
Treat Sunday as self-guided
On Sunday there are no regular guided tours, and access runs in split windows at St Patrick's Cathedral. If you want a guided format, switch to Monday-Saturday instead. This small scheduling choice prevents last-minute disappointment.
4
Ask for the step-free route
If you or someone in your group prefers step-free access, speak to staff at the gate before entering St Patrick's Cathedral. The main entrance has steps, but there is an alternative route and lift support. Doing this first makes the visit calmer for everyone.
5
Prebook groups of 10+
If you are arriving with 10 or more people, book your group slot online before the day of visit. Walk-ins outside the booked slot can be hard to accommodate when flows tighten. This avoids awkward delays at the door and keeps the group together.
6
Pair one nearby highlight
After St Patrick's Cathedral, pair just one nearby stop: Dublin Castle for a castle-and-state-history sequence, Christ Church Cathedral for a cathedral-to-cathedral comparison, or Guinness Storehouse for a heritage-to-brewing contrast. One extra stop beats a three-stop sprint every time. You keep your energy for what you actually came to enjoy.

How to plan a St Patrick's Cathedral stop in Dublin

A strong visit here is mostly about sequence: pick your format first, work around the Sunday pattern, and add one nearby stop.

Pick your ticket format first

Best for independent pacing: direct-entry tickets focused on St Patrick's Cathedral. Choose guided Dublin formats if you want broader context and fewer route decisions, or use a city pass when this is one stop in a packed day. Decide this first, secure your slot, then keep the rest simple. Book now.

Work around Sunday time windows

Sunday access at St Patrick's Cathedral runs in three windows and does not include regular guided tours, while Monday-Saturday normally includes guided departures at 10:30 am and 2:30 pm. If this is your first day in Dublin, weekday mornings usually feel less rushed. That timing choice gives you more breathing room for your second stop.

Add one nearby stop, not three

A practical route is St Patrick's Cathedral plus Dublin Castle for a church-to-castle narrative, or Christ Church Cathedral if you want a two-cathedral comparison in one afternoon. If your group wants a broader culture contrast, switch to Guinness Storehouse later in the day. Families and limited-mobility travelers usually benefit most from one clear add-on.

History and highlights of St Patrick's Cathedral

What you see today is the result of repeated medieval damage, major Victorian rebuilding, and continuous conservation in the heart of Dublin.

Medieval foundations from 1220 to 1259

The current scale and footprint of St Patrick's Cathedral were established between 1220 and 1259 on a site linked to an older well tradition tied to Saint Patrick. This helps explain why the building feels both civic and spiritual in equal measure. Pause outside on St Patrick's Close first, then enter with that long timeline in mind.

Storms, fire, and tower rebuilding

The cathedral endured a spire collapse in 1316, major fire damage in 1362, and a later tower-collapse phase around 1394 before rebuilding continued. These disruptions still shape how different sections feel as you move through the building. If you like architectural storytelling, this is where the visit becomes especially rewarding.

Guinness restoration and Swift legacy

A major restoration funded by Benjamin Lee Guinness from 1860 to 1865 reset much of the interior experience you see now. The cathedral also holds the burial place of Jonathan Swift, linking the site to literary history as well as church history. This mix of architecture and biography is why even repeat visits rarely feel flat.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which ticket format works best for St Patrick's Cathedral?

Choose direct entry if you want to move at your own pace inside the cathedral. Pick a guided Dublin format if your priority is wider city context with fewer route decisions. If you plan many attractions in one day, a city pass can be the better value.
Read more.

Are guided tours available on Sunday?

No regular guided tours run on Sunday. If you want a guided visit, Monday to Saturday is the safer choice, usually with starts at 10:30 am and 2:30 pm.
Read more.

Do groups need to book in advance?

Yes for groups of 10 or more. Group tickets are expected to be prebooked online, and arriving far outside your booked slot can make entry difficult at busy times.
Read more.

Can you enter for worship without paying admission?

Yes. Worship attendance is possible without the attraction admission fee, while sightseeing visits use the standard visitor ticket model.
Read more.

Is St Patrick's Cathedral wheelchair accessible?

Yes, most public areas are step-free, and staff can direct you to the alternative step-free route and lift support. An accessible toilet and hearing loop are available, and a wheelchair can be borrowed when available.
Read more.

Can you use a Go City Dublin Pass at the cathedral?

Yes, pass holders can use their Go City Dublin Pass for entry at St Patrick's Cathedral. It works best when the cathedral is one stop in a wider multi-attraction day.
Read more.

What nearby stops pair well after the visit?

For a compact heritage route, continue to Dublin Castle or Christ Church Cathedral. If you want a stronger contrast after church architecture, add Guinness Storehouse. Choosing one clear add-on keeps your pace comfortable.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Published visitor windows are Monday to Friday from 9:30 am to 5 pm, Saturday from 9 am to 6 pm, and Sunday in three slots: 9 am to 10:30 am, 1 pm to 2:30 pm, and 4:30 pm to 6 pm. Free guided tours usually run Monday to Saturday at 10:30 am and 2:30 pm, while Sunday has no guided tours. Services and special events can adjust access, so recheck same-day timings before you go.

tickets

Current listed rates (retrieved 2026-03-03) are Adult €11.50, Student/Senior (60+) €10.00, Child (6-12) €5.50, Family (2 adults and up to 3 children) €31.00, and joint entry with Marsh's Library €17.00. Groups of 10+ need advance online booking, with listed group rates from €10.00 adult and €9.00 student/senior. Go City Dublin Pass entry is also accepted.

address

St Patrick's Cathedral
St Patrick's Close
Dublin 8 D08 H6X3
Ireland

how to get there

St Patrick's Cathedral sits at the junction of Patrick Street and Upper Kevin Street, and is easy to reach on foot from central Dublin. Several bus stops are directly outside and are served by Dublin Bus and other operators, with taxis usually available nearby. City-center parking is limited, but a small number of disabled bays are on the Cathedral Close.

accessibility

For step-free entry, speak to staff at the gate: the main entrance has steps, but an alternative route and lift support are available. Most areas have step-free access, with ramps between two floor levels, and there is a designated accessible toilet in the main public zone. A hearing loop is available, and a wheelchair can be borrowed depending on availability.
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