
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Beneath the polished cobblestones of Dublin lie centuries of blood, gold, and betrayal waiting to be unearthed. This city wears its history like a frayed velvet coat, hiding scars of rebellion and whispers of long forgotten scandals behind every Georgian door. Take control of this self-guided audio tour and peel back the layers that most tourists walk past without a second glance. Venture deep into the National Museum and wander the quiet corners of St Stephen's Green to hear the city truly speak. Who ignited the spark that turned this park into a violent frontline? What phantom presence still haunts the corridors of the National Gallery after the lights go dark? Why was a perfectly ordinary afternoon in 1922 stained by a singular act of betrayal? Traverse the shifting landscape of Ireland’s capital as the past collides with the present. Uncover the drama, find the truth, and rewrite your perception of Dublin. Start your journey into the shadows now.

A shining needle pierces the Dublin sky while ancient columns whisper secrets below—this city is layered with bold dreams, rebellion, and unexpected twists. Trace Dublin’s wild spirit on a self-guided audio tour that plunges you into stories and corners most travelers overlook. What crack of thunder tore the silence when an icon was obliterated in O’Connell Street? Who risked everything behind the General Post Office’s battered columns as bullets flew and revolution flared? Which ceremony left Dubliners debating if their cathedral was a gem or just not grand enough—and why do musical notes linger like ghosts beneath its vaulted ceiling? Stride through political upheavals, fires, fierce debates, secret symbols, and sly nicknames as every step unlocks untold drama. Feel the energy shift as lost legends, daring schemes, and heroic voices echo along bustling streets. Raise your gaze to the clouds—Dublin’s hidden history is waiting for you to press play.

Beneath the clatter of tram tracks and the rush of city life, Dublin’s heart beats with secrets most never glimpse. This self-guided audio tour invites you to wander where ancient Norse kings might lie beneath College Green, fortunes are bartered behind Euronext Dublin’s heavy doors, and Temple Bar thrums with tales both legendary and scandalous. Which statue was defaced during a midnight protest that shook the nation? What deals unfolded in Euronext’s shadowy corridors that changed Ireland’s destiny overnight? Why did Temple Bar nearly vanish beneath a bus terminal—and who pulled off the strangest rescue in Dublin history? Move from elegant plazas to riotous cobbled lanes, tracing rebellions, schemes, celebrations, and mischief every step of the way. By journey’s end, you’ll see Dublin not just as a city but as a living storybook of drama, resilience, and relentless reinvention. Ready to let Dublin reveal what’s hidden beneath its surface? Press play and start your adventure.

Beneath Dublin’s refined façades, secret melodies and rebellious whispers echo down the centuries. Every corner hides a clash of ideas, ambition, and art. This self-guided audio tour leads you through the city’s beating heart—revealing stories and corners most visitors never notice. Let your footsteps unlock vanished scandals, revolutionary dreams, and creative sparks still crackling in the air. Which fateful night did an accountant’s protest upend a quiet institution? Who vanished inside the Douglas Hyde Gallery without a trace of explanation? And how did an illicit concert at the Royal Irish Academy of Music send shockwaves through high society? Stroll past everyday traffic as Dublin’s mysteries swirl around you. Trace forgotten footsteps between politics and passion, genius and rebellion. Unravel a city where every plaque hides a pulsing drama—and every building has its secrets. Ready to listen closely? Your path through hidden Dublin begins now.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Dublin has produced more writers per square kilometre than almost any comparably sized city on earth, and it is not shy about this. Oscar Wilde was born on Westland Row in 1854. Bram Stoker, who wrote Dracula, was born in Clontarf. Samuel Beckett and George Bernard Shaw both took their Nobel Prizes in literature home to the city where they grew up. James Joyce set Ulysses on the streets of Dublin on June 16, 1904, a day now celebrated annually as Bloomsday, when people walk the route Leopold Bloom walked through the city eating the very kidneys he ate in Eccles Street. The National Library of Ireland holds the original manuscript of Ulysses. Trinity College holds the Book of Kells, an illustrated gospel from around 800 AD that remains the finest example of Insular manuscript art in existence.
The Guinness Brewery at St James's Gate has been operating since Arthur Guinness signed a 9,000-year lease on the site in 1759.
The Storehouse is now a museum and the most visited tourist attraction in the country, with the Gravity Bar at the top offering a 360-degree view of the city with a complimentary pint. Georgian Dublin, the terraces of red-brick townhouses around Merrion Square and Fitzwilliam Square built in the 18th century when Dublin was the second city of the British Empire, remain largely intact and house much of the professional class today. The Ha'penny Bridge over the River Liffey, a cast-iron footbridge from 1816 named for the toll that was charged to cross it, is as close to a city symbol as Dublin has.

Before you walk.
Central Dublin is walkable from end to end in under an hour. The city is divided by the River Liffey into Northside and Southside, with multiple bridges connecting them. The DART coastal rail, Dublin Bus and the Luas tram lines cover a wider area. A Leap Card covers all public transport modes and is available from convenience stores and machines at Luas stops.
Completely. The main areas of interest, Trinity College, Temple Bar, Merrion Square, St Stephen's Green, the Liberties, the Guinness Storehouse and Phoenix Park, are all connected by walkable routes from the city centre. The Liberties to Phoenix Park gate is a twenty-minute walk. From Phoenix Park to O'Connell Street is similar.
Soda bread, which you will find in every cafe, is the bread staple worth trying properly. The full Irish breakfast (rashers, sausages, black and white pudding, eggs, tomato and brown bread) is the most robust way to start a walking day. The Boxty House on Temple Bar does the best boxty (Irish potato pancake) in the city. For a proper Guinness, the Pour takes two minutes at minimum and you wait for it.
Temple Bar is both. The weekend nights are extremely busy with hen and stag parties from across the UK, which is not everyone's preference. But during the day or on a weekday evening, the area has a genuine atmosphere, good food markets (the indoor market on Meeting House Square on Saturdays is excellent), the Irish Film Institute and some genuinely old pubs. The Wetherspoons and themed Irish pubs are easily avoided.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.