28 vetted spots

Overnight spots across Ireland

Real places where Irish van lifers actually sleep — vetted for access, legality, and Garda tolerance. Filter by county or type. Submit a spot you know below.

Tolerance ratings are community-reported and can change seasonally. Always read the land and act accordingly.

County
Type
Showing all 28 spots
County guides: Kerry Donegal Galway Clare Cork Mayo Wicklow Antrim
Donegal Wild
🟢 Green

Malin Head

Near Malin village, Inishowen Peninsula

Ireland's most northerly point. The main car park at Banba's Crown is large, well-used by tourists and tolerated for overnight stops off-season. Dramatic cliff views, no facilities, but zero drama from locals or guards. One of the great free spots in the country.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Donegal Wild
🟢 Green

Kinnagoe Bay

Greencastle, Inishowen

A hidden gem. Small, sheltered bay with a concrete slipway area that vans use for overnight. Almost nobody knows it exists outside Donegal — which means no crowds and no hassle. The bay is genuinely stunning at sunrise.

🗓 Best season: May–Sep 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Concrete/gravel
Donegal Harbour
🟢 Green

Killybegs Harbour

Killybegs town

Ireland's largest fishing port. Working harbour culture means large vehicles are entirely unremarkable here. Public toilets nearby. The smell of fish is real but you get used to it fast. Good access to town amenities — gas, water, supermarket.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Public toilets 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Donegal Wild
🟡 Amber

Rossnowlagh Beach

South Donegal coast

Donegal's surf beach and a popular van life spot. Amber because the car park is patrolled in summer — arrivals after 9pm tend to be left alone, early starts help. Brilliant flat sand, surf school nearby, good craic. Known to the community, so expect neighbours.

🗓 Best season: May–Sep 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (seasonal) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Galway Wild
🟢 Green

Killary Harbour

Leenaun, Connemara

Ireland's only fjord. Pull off on the south shore road for some of the most dramatic mountain-meets-water scenery in the country. Remote enough that overnight parking attracts zero attention. This is what people mean when they say Ireland is underrated.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel
Galway Harbour
🟡 Amber

Roundstone Harbour

Roundstone village, Connemara

Small Connemara fishing harbour with a beautiful outlook over Bertraghboy Bay. A few vans here is typical; a fleet is not. Amber because the village is small and parking courtesy matters — arrive late, leave early, and buy breakfast in the village.

🗓 Best season: May–Sep 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Galway Wild
🟢 Green

Lough Nafooey

Near Finny, south Connemara

Remote mountain lake on the Galway–Mayo border that almost nobody visits. The lakeside road has a couple of wide verges where you can tuck in out of sight. Complete silence, no tourists, sheep for company. Worth the bumpy approach road.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Nov 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Grass/gravel
Galway Wild
🟡 Amber

Dog's Bay

Near Roundstone, Connemara

One of Ireland's most beautiful beaches — white coral-shell sand in a protected lagoon. Well known to van lifers which is why it's Amber: busier spots attract more attention. Go in May or September for the sweet spot of good weather and minimal crowd.

🗓 Best season: May–Sep 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac/sand
Kerry Wild
🟢 Green

Ballinskelligs Beach

Ballinskelligs village, Iveragh Peninsula

Irish-speaking village on the quiet side of the Iveragh Peninsula. The beach car park is used by van lifers regularly and the community is relaxed about it. Small shop in the village. This is what the Ring of Kerry looks like without the tour buses.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Kerry Wild
🟢 Green

Glanmore Lake

Lauragh, Beara Peninsula

Remote mountain lake at the head of the Healy Pass — one of the most dramatic road approaches in Ireland. Vans can park at the lake viewpoint. Almost no through traffic. This is the Beara doing its best impression of Norway.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel
Kerry Harbour
🟡 Amber

Dingle Pier

Dingle town

Working fishing harbour in one of Ireland's most visited towns. Vans do stop overnight near the pier — Amber because Dingle is popular and tolerance can shift in high season. Excellent access to town (showers at the leisure centre, shops, restaurants). Best in shoulder season.

🗓 Best season: Sep–May 🚿 Facilities: Town amenities nearby 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Kerry Wild
🟡 Amber

Banna Strand

North Kerry coast, near Ardfert

Long Blue Flag beach on the less-touristed north Kerry coast. The beach car park is large and overnight vans are a regular sight — Amber because summer weekends attract a younger crowd. Go Monday–Thursday for a peaceful night with the Atlantic on your doorstep.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (seasonal) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Clare Wild
🟡 Amber

Fanore Beach

Fanore, the Burren coast

Burren limestone meets the Atlantic. Small village with a shop and pub; the beach car park sees overnight vans regularly. Amber because it's known to the community and Garda patrols are occasional in summer. Spectacular walking out the back into Burren terrain.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac/gravel
Clare Wild
🟢 Green

Loop Head

Loop Head Peninsula tip, west Clare

The far western tip of the Loop Head Peninsula — dramatic cliffs, lighthouse, and almost total solitude even in summer. The car park at the lighthouse is the spot. No facilities but zero attention. One of the few places in Ireland where you can watch the sun set into the Atlantic from the western edge of the country.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Clare Wild
🟡 Amber

Lough Derg Shoreline

Near Mountshannon, east Clare

The east Clare shore of Lough Derg offers several informal waterside parking areas used by anglers and sailors who are very accustomed to people sleeping in vehicles. Quiet, inland alternative when the west coast is battering. Mountshannon has a pub and a shop.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel
Cork Wild
🟢 Green

Barley Cove

Mizen Head, West Cork

Ireland's most south-westerly beach — long, sheltered, and relatively quiet even in July. The dune car park area is used for overnight stops regularly. Green because the Mizen is remote enough that Garda patrols are rare. The beach at sunrise with nobody on it is hard to beat.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (seasonal) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Cork Harbour
🟢 Green

Castletownbere Harbour

Castletownbere, Beara Peninsula

Ireland's largest whitefish port. Working harbour community that's seen it all — large vehicles are completely normal here. Good facilities in town (showers at the pier, shop, pub). The backdrop of the Caha Mountains across Bantry Bay is dramatic. Spanish-influenced from centuries of trade.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Showers, toilets 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Cork Wild
🟢 Green

Sheep's Head Peninsula

Near Kilcrohane, West Cork

The quietest of the West Cork peninsulas. Almost no tourist infrastructure, which means almost no tourist pressure. Pull off near Kilcrohane or further out towards the tip — numerous wide verges and viewpoints. The walking here is excellent and essentially crowd-free.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel/grass
Cork Harbour
🟡 Amber

Schull Harbour

Schull village, Mizen Peninsula

Popular sailing village with a relaxed attitude and good amenities. Farmers' market on Sundays. Overnight vans at the pier are common — Amber because Schull gets busy in summer (Fastnet Race week especially). The harbour view is excellent and there's a ferry to Cape Clear from here.

🗓 Best season: Sep–Jun 🚿 Facilities: Town amenities 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Mayo Wild
🟢 Green

Mulranny Beach

Mulranny, Clew Bay

Blue Flag beach on the south shore of Achill Sound with the Nephin range behind you and Croagh Patrick across the bay. Remote enough to be quiet but the village has a shop and café. One of the cleanest beach overnights in the country — long walk on the sand at sunset, nobody else around.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Tarmac/sand
Mayo Wild
🟢 Green

Delphi Valley

Near Leenaun, south Mayo/Connemara border

Mountain valley between the Sheeffry Hills and the Mweelrea range — one of the most dramatic inland settings in Ireland. The road through the valley has pull-offs that see the odd van but very few people know they're there. Delphi Adventure Centre is nearby if you need a hot shower (day passes available).

🗓 Best season: May–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None (resort nearby) 📍 Surface: Gravel
Mayo Wild
🟡 Amber

Achill Sound

Achill Sound village, Achill Island gateway

The narrow channel between Achill Island and the mainland, crossed by a swing bridge. Pull-offs along the Sound road are used by visiting van lifers — Amber because Achill is popular and the road is busy in summer. Better to push further out to Keem Bay for a longer stay.

🗓 Best season: Sep–May 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel
Wicklow Wild
🟢 Green

Lough Dan

Wicklow Mountains, near Roundwood

A remote mountain lake that most Dubliners don't know exists despite being 40 km away. Rough laneway access (high clearance recommended) leads to the lakeshore. The privacy is remarkable for somewhere so close to the capital. Good for a midweek Dublin escape.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Nov 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Rough track
Wicklow Wild
🟡 Amber

Brittas Bay

South Wicklow coast

Dublin's most popular beach — and for good reason. The car park is vast and overnight vans are tolerated outside June–August. Amber because summer weekends are genuinely chaotic (think convoy of Dubliners). In April or September it's a different place entirely. Blue Flag beach, dunes, clean water.

🗓 Best season: Sep–May 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (seasonal) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Wicklow Aire
🟡 Amber

Glendalough Overflow Car Park

Glendalough, Wicklow Mountains

The overflow car park at Ireland's most visited monastic site sees van lifers arrive after the day-trippers leave and depart before they arrive. Not officially permitted but widely tolerated. Early June to late August is riskier — rangers do check. The walk at first light with nobody else there is special.

🗓 Best season: Oct–Apr 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (during opening hours) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Antrim Wild
🟢 Green

Fair Head

Near Ballycastle, north Antrim

Dramatic 100m dolerite columns dropping sheer to the sea, with Rathlin Island in the foreground and Scotland visible on clear days. The car park at the end of the lane sees the odd overnight van with zero issues. Genuinely remote-feeling despite being close to Ballycastle.

🗓 Best season: Apr–Oct 🚿 Facilities: None 📍 Surface: Gravel
Antrim Harbour
🟢 Green

Ballycastle Harbour

Ballycastle town, north Antrim

Small harbour town with a relaxed, outdoorsy vibe. Rathlin Island ferry departs from here. The harbour area sees campervans regularly — it's the base for Causeway Coast adventurers who want to be away from Bushmills hotel prices. Good town amenities, honest Ulster welcome.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Town amenities 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Antrim Wild
🟡 Amber

Larrybane

Near Carrick-a-Rede, north Antrim

National Trust–managed area near the famous rope bridge. The car park here is used for overnight but the NT are less relaxed about it than locals — Amber because rangers do patrol. Beautiful chalk headland views toward Rathlin. Go in low season when the park is quiet and tolerance rises.

🗓 Best season: Oct–Mar 🚿 Facilities: Toilets (seasonal) 📍 Surface: Tarmac
Galway Farm
🟢 Green

Connemara Farm Stops

Various, Connemara

Several working farms in Connemara quietly accept van overnights for €10–20 — access to a tap, sometimes a toilet. These aren't listed publicly because the farmers prefer word-of-mouth. Ask in the Vanlife Ireland Facebook group for current contacts; the community shares freely.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Tap, sometimes toilet 💶 Cost: €10–20/night
Mayo Farm
🟢 Green

Achill Island Farm Spots

Achill Island, Mayo

Achill has a strong tradition of landowners letting vans stay in sheltered corners. A handful of farms near Keel and Dooagh accept overnights — usually a conversation at the gate and a €15 note. No central booking. Island hospitality at its best.

🗓 Best season: Year round 🚿 Facilities: Varies 💶 Cost: ~€15/night

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These 28 spots came from the Irish van life community. If you've stayed somewhere good — wild, harbour, farm, or a friendly landowner — submit it and we'll vet it before it goes live.

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We check every submission for access, legality, and current tolerance before publishing. We don't list spots on private land without landowner knowledge.

Go deeper by county

Each county guide covers the best route stages, local services (gas, water, waste disposal), seasonal tips, and the spots that didn't make this main list.