🇮🇪 Dublin, Ireland
Hilton Dublin
📍 Charlemont Pl, Saint Kevin's, Dublin, D02 A893, Ireland
tu estancia — Hilton Dublin
Pronóstico en vivo para sus fechas · qué hay en · Calidad del aire y polen📅 Pick your check-in & check-out above to unlock your day-by-day forecast, what's on during your stay, and live air quality & pollen for Dublin.
La propiedad — Hilton Dublin
The Hilton Dublin occupies a prime position in the city centre, offering contemporary comfort with reliable four-star service standards despite its three-star classification—a smart-value proposition for business and leisure travellers. The lobby exudes efficient modernity with warm tones and attentive staff, making it feel like a trusted hub rather than a boutique retreat. It suits the practical explorer who values location over luxury theatre, proximity to Temple Bar and the Liffey over Instagram moments. Standing inside, you sense professional competence and accessible comfort: business travellers on weekdays, families and couples seeking central access without pretension.
Crónicas de Dublin
Dublin's founding as a Viking settlement in the 9th century evolved into medieval Hiberno-Norman stronghold, then the Georgian jewel of the Anglo-Irish ascendancy in the 18th century—the elegant squares and townhouses of that era remain its architectural backbone. The 1916 Easter Rising and Irish independence redefined Dublin as a nationalist capital, whilst the city's literary golden age—Joyce, Beckett, Heaney—cemented its cultural prestige. Contemporary Dublin balances Georgian preservation with tech-sector boom (the 'Silicon Docks'), gentrification, and fierce local identity; it remains a city of literary pubs, creative energy, and architectural contrasts between heritage and glass-fronted modernity. The Liffey splits the city's character: north and south sides still carry distinct cultural personalities rooted in class and historical division.
El mejor momento para visitar
Guía completa de Dublin →Los mejores meses
May and September offer Dublin's sweet spot: temperatures 13–16°C, reliable daylight until 21:00+, manageable tourist flow, and cultural events without summer saturation. June borders peak season but retains spring's freshness and longest daylight hours (sunset ~21:30), ideal for exploring Georgian squares and riverside walks.
Peak / Festival Surge
July–August dominates; 4°C warmer, but streets heave with international tourists, temple bar becomes a crush, and hotel rates spike 30–40%. The St. James's Festival and Longitude Festival (July) drive crowds; school holidays flood accommodation. June also sees early-summer festival season (Dublin Writer's Festival, music venues) pushing rates upward.
La temporada del hombro
April, May, and September–October offer 15–25% room discounts versus peak, spring blooms or autumn gold, rain manageable, and a local-to-visitor balance. October has literary festival buzz (Dublin Theatre Festival) without July's chaos.
Tiempo y embalaje
Dublin's maritime Atlantic climate delivers frequent, light rain year-round and unpredictable shifts; locals joke 'four seasons in one day.' Pack a compact waterproof jacket as non-negotiable, layers (temperatures 10–16°C in June despite sun), and comfortable walking shoes (cobblestones punish inadequate soles).
Briefing en vivo de la ciudad — Dublin
- Dublin's Luas tram network expansion and ongoing Bus Connects restructuring (2025–2026) mean transport routes may shift; confirm travel links to attractions via current TFI maps rather than outdated guides.
- Smithfield and the Docklands continue regeneration; the Ark at Dublin's Temple Bar and new cultural venues open regularly, making the north quays increasingly vibrant for evening exploration beyond traditional south-side haunts.
- June 2026 coincides with post-school-term tourism surge and Bloomsday preparations (16 June); literary walking tours and Joyce-themed pub crawls book early; expect elevated footfall around the city's Georgian southside.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Hilton Dublin, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the third floor or above, facing the rear (away from Charlemont Place). These rooms are quieter and less affected by street-level activity and the hotel's bar/restaurant area.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the first and second floors, especially those overlooking Charlemont Place. Street noise from the junction with Hatch Street and the Grand Canal can be noticeable, and the hotel's own bar and function rooms are on these lower levels.
Best views
Rooms on the front (facing Charlemont Place) on floor 4 or above offer views over the Grand Canal and the redbrick Georgian terraces on Hatch Street. The rear views are of the hotel's courtyard and neighbouring rooftops.
Quietest floors
Floors 4 to 6. These are the highest floors with full lift access and sit well above the street and public areas.
🔊 Noise notes
The hotel sits on Charlemont Place, a busy city-centre junction. Morning traffic peaks around 8-9am and evening bar noise from the hotel itself can carry up to the lower floors. The on-site bar has outdoor seating in warmer months, which adds chatter until late.
Insider tips
1. Book the valet parking online in advance at €25/night – the public car park on Charlemont Street is cheaper but has no in-out privileges and fills up by late afternoon. 2. Request a room on floor 4 or above when booking – the front desk can usually accommodate if you ask at check-in and they have availability.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Instalaciones hoteleras — Hilton Dublin
Complimentary high-speed fibre Wi-Fi (100+ Mbps) across property; automatic login via room keycard or email verification
Full lift access to all guest floors; no stairs-only sections in modern wings
Complimentary digital FT and Irish Times via bedside tablet; USA Today available at front desk
Standard 15:00 check-in, 11:00 check-out; early check-in subject to availability (no charge if available); late check-out €50 per hour after 11:00
Complimentary luggage storage available before check-in and after check-out; 24-hour availability upon request
Full step-free access via main entrance; wheelchair-accessible rooms (roll-in showers, grab rails); accessible lift and ground-floor facilities throughout
On-site valet parking €25/night; nearby Charlemont Street public car park €2.50/hour (€15 daily cap); no EV charging on-site
Tarifas, Impuestos y Depósitos
City / tourist tax: €3.00 per room per night (Dublin Tourist Tax)
Deposit & card hold: One night's room rate as advance deposit; €150 incidental card hold at check-in
Faith & Dietary cerca de
- Church: Adelaide Road Presbyterian Church (91 m · ~1 min walk)
- Church: St Finian's Church (276 m · ~3 min walk)
- Church: Newman University Church (544 m · ~7 min walk)
- Church: Saint Kevin's (689 m · ~9 min walk)
Estilo de vida y recreación local
Stephen's Green Shopping Centre — 1.1 km · ~13 min walk
Iveagh Gardens — 357 m · ~4 min walk
Museum of Literature Ireland — 563 m · ~7 min walk
National Concert Hall — 263 m · ~3 min walk
Playground at St. Stephen's Green — 700 m · ~9 min walk
5 minutos de radio esenciales
Ulster Bank — 242 m · ~3 min walk
McCauley Chemist — 296 m · ~4 min walk
Centra — 274 m · ~3 min walk
Dublin Pearse — 1.8 km · ~22 min walk
Dinero y moneda
Get a travel card →Euro, EUR
Use bank ATMs or your home bank's debit card for best rates; avoid airport/tourist exchange bureaux which charge poor margins. Banks and post offices offer fair rates.
Card and contactless payment nearly universal in D02 (city centre); most cafés, shops, and taxis accept cards; some small vendors may request cash but rare.
15% optional in restaurants if service was good; taxi drivers usually rounded up but not expected; hotel staff €1–2 for housekeeping appreciated but not obligatory.
Comer, comprar y viajar en un presupuesto
Cheap car hire →Café chain coffee €2–2.50; independent café slightly less; some chains offer lunch deals bundled with pastry.
Sandwich/wrap shops €6–8; food courts in shopping centres €7–10; pub lunch specials often €9–12.
Casual restaurant mains €12–16; ethnic/takeaway €8–12; pub food €10–14.
Temple Bar and surrounding laneways have takeaway options; Grafton Street area has sandwich chains; food markets appear seasonally near the Spire and Stephen's Green.
Dunnes Stores and Tesco are common budget supermarkets; Lidl and Aldi also present with competitive pricing; shop own-brand lines for best value.
High-street chains (H&M, Zara, Gap) on Grafton Street and Henry Street; Dunnes Stores budget fashion; TK Maxx for discounted branded wear.
Leap Card (rechargeable smartcard) for buses/Luas: single journey €1.35–2.25 off-peak, day cap €7.00; from airport: airport coach/bus around €7–10 cheaper than taxi (€20–25).
Buy a Leap Card immediately for transport discounts; supermarket lunch deals and pub lunch specials (11am–3pm) offer better value than sit-down restaurants. Walking D02 is free and the area is compact and flat.
bueno saber — Dublin
Type G · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ €0.87 · EUR
Emergency Contacts
Dublin999 and 112 both work for any emergency in Ireland. 112 is the EU-wide number. For non-urgent police matters in Dublin, call the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
Book a table →💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Dublin, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Hilton Dublin
🕒 Check-in is from 15:00. Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Ulster Bank — 242 m · ~3 min walk — pharmacy · McCauley Chemist — 296 m · ~4 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →En torno a
City Center (after airport transfer) → Throughout Dublin neighborhoods
💡 Get a Leap Card (€5, reloadable) for seamless tram/bus travel. Red Line passes near O'Connell St; best for day trips to Guinness Storehouse
Dublin Airport (DUB) → LATROUPE Jacobs Inn Dublin (Typicai O'Connell St area)
💡 Use Uber/Bolt apps for transparent pricing; avoid unmetered taxis. Surge pricing applies 8-10am and 4-7pm
Dublin Airport (DUB) → Connolly Station (5 min walk to hotel)
💡 Most authentic experience; connect via 747 bus to airport then DART train. Tap-to-pay with Leap Card available
Dublin Airport (DUB) → O'Connell Street (near LATROUPE Jacobs Inn)
💡 Most budget-friendly option; book online for discounts. Luggage space is generous
Preguntas frecuentes
What are the best rooms at Hilton Dublin?
Request a room on the third floor or above, facing the rear (away from Charlemont Place). These rooms are quieter and less affected by street-level activity and the hotel's bar/restaurant area.
Which rooms should I avoid at Hilton Dublin?
Avoid rooms on the first and second floors, especially those overlooking Charlemont Place. Street noise from the junction with Hatch Street and the Grand Canal can be noticeable, and the hotel's own bar and function rooms are on these lower levels.
Is Hilton Dublin noisy?
The hotel sits on Charlemont Place, a busy city-centre junction. Morning traffic peaks around 8-9am and evening bar noise from the hotel itself can carry up to the lower floors. The on-site bar has outdoor seating in warmer months, which adds chatter until late.
Which rooms have the best views at Hilton Dublin?
Rooms on the front (facing Charlemont Place) on floor 4 or above offer views over the Grand Canal and the redbrick Georgian terraces on Hatch Street. The rear views are of the hotel's courtyard and neighbouring rooftops.
What are insider tips for staying at Hilton Dublin?
1. Book the valet parking online in advance at €25/night – the public car park on Charlemont Street is cheaper but has no in-out privileges and fills up by late afternoon. 2. Request a room on floor 4 or above when booking – the front desk can usually accommodate if you ask at check-in and they have availability.
What time is check-in at Hilton Dublin?
Check-in at Hilton Dublin is from 15:00. Check-out is by 11:00.
Does Hilton Dublin have Wi-Fi?
Complimentary high-speed fibre Wi-Fi (100+ Mbps) across property; automatic login via room keycard or email verification
Is there a city or tourist tax at Hilton Dublin?
€3.00 per room per night (Dublin Tourist Tax)
Where can I eat cheaply near Hilton Dublin?
Sandwich/wrap shops €6–8; food courts in shopping centres €7–10; pub lunch specials often €9–12.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Hilton Dublin?
Leap Card (rechargeable smartcard) for buses/Luas: single journey €1.35–2.25 off-peak, day cap €7.00; from airport: airport coach/bus around €7–10 cheaper than taxi (€20–25).
When is the best time to visit Dublin?
May and September offer Dublin's sweet spot: temperatures 13–16°C, reliable daylight until 21:00+, manageable tourist flow, and cultural events without summer saturation. June borders peak season but retains spring's freshness and longest daylight hours (sunset ~21:30), ideal for exploring Georgian squares and riverside walks.
Principales atracciones en Dublin
💡 Enter from the Fusiliers' Arch side and walk clockwise – the quieter eastern end has fewer tourists and more shade.
💡 Skip the guided tour – the free areas cover the best bits. The library's roof terrace has good city views and is often overlooked.
💡 Head straight to the Treasury on the ground floor first – the Ardagh Chalice and Tara Brooch are there, and it gets busiest after 11am.
💡 Combine your visit with the免費 DUBLINIA exhibition next door – same ticket covers both if you ask at the counter.
💡 Book online at least two days ahead – same-day tickets sell out by 10am. Go on the first tour of the day to avoid crowds.