Lahinch Beach
The beach is at the sea-front of Lahinch town and is one of the best sandy beaches in the west of Ireland. The beach is popular and can get busy during peak times and you will have surf tuition groups in the sea. This area is also good for coastal walks.
The beach is excellent for surfing and particularly good for beginners, also an excellent sea kayaking and kitesurfing beach.
The beach is in the town and facilities a large car park, toilets, shops, places to eat and seasonal lifeguards.
Lahinch Beach is a Blue Flag Beach.
Dog Friendly Beach?
We have no current information on dog restrictions for Lahinch Beach.
Why not check other beaches nearby as we have 10 beaches in Clare, or check our list of Clare Dog Friendly Beaches.
Planning your visit to Lahinch Beach
Lahinch Beach, Promenade, Lahinch, Clare V95 E9DD, Ireland
TripAdvisor
No Records Found
Sorry, no records were found. Please adjust your search criteria and try again.
Maps failed to load
Sorry, unable to load the Maps API.
(Get directions)
Lahinch Beach 7 Day Weather Forecast
Lahinch weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
You may also like ...
In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can do near Lahinch Beach? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, places to eat and upcoming events.
Whitestrand beach is a small sandy beach with a rocky shoreline.
Read more…
Spanish Point beach is sandy and is one of the more popular surfing beaches in County Clare. Spanish point is named after the Spanish who died here in 1588, when ships of the Spanish Armada were wrecked during stormy weather.
Read more…
Fanore beach is a sandy beach on the Atlantic coast of Ireland backed by large areas of sand dunes known as the “Rabbit Warren”, and at low tide, you have exposed limestone. This beach is an unspoilt beach located in the heart of the Burren and Cliffs of Moher Global Geopark that makes this particularly interesting to botanists. Facilities at
Read more…
The Cliffs of Moher rise 120 metres (390 ft) above the Atlantic Ocean at Hag’s Head and reach a maximum height of 214 metres (702 ft) just north of O’Brien’s Tower. the Cliffs of Moher Visitor Experience is built into a hillside approaching the cliffs to be sympathetic to the environment. Charges apply and include parking with money helping conservation
Read more…
Crab Island is a famous surfing location for the advanced surfer. Takes a bit of getting to with a paddle of some 200 metres across a channel and around the island which keeps this location only for the few dedicated surfers. If you don’t want the long paddle then Doolin Bay itself can provide some lesser but good waves.
Read more…
Caherconnell is a medieval, exceptionally well-preserved stone ringfort, features a circular drystone enclosure wall with a diameter of 42 metres. Walls are up to 3 metres thick and up to 3 metres high although the amount of loose stones suggests a larger original height. The Caherconnell Visitor Centre is open daily from mid March to late October.
Read more…
Aillwee Cave is a cave system of over a kilometre of passages leading into the heart of the Burren mountainside. The cave was discovered in 1944 by a local farmer but was not explored and mapped until late 1970’s when he told people about it. Features of the cave include an underground river and a waterfall as well as some
Read more…