Burren Way: 123km Coastal Trail Through Limestone
Complete the burren way: walking through an ancient landscape guide with detailed information. Expert tips, maps, and insider knowledge for the best...
Read article →Cliffs, Aran Islands, the Burren — six days with a proper rest day in music-capital Doolin
The 6-day version is the Burren tour I'd recommend if you want real time on each leg of the route — three proper walking days, plus a full rest day in Doolin to recover, explore, take the ferry to the Aran Islands, or hire a bike and freewheel around the limestone hills.
You start in Liscannor. Day 2 we transfer you up to the Cliffs of Moher visitor centre and you walk the 8 km official cliff path north to Doolin — 200-metre drops, sea-bird colonies, the Aran Islands rising in the distance. The most photographed walk in Ireland, and rightly so.
Day 3 is your rest day in Doolin. Most guests choose to take the morning ferry across to Inisheer or Inishmore — the smallest and largest of the Aran Islands respectively — and spend the day among ancient stone walls, ringforts and Atlantic cliffs that feel even older than the Burren itself. Others hire a bike and ride the quiet Burren green roads. Some just stay in Doolin for live music and a long lunch. The choice is yours.
From Doolin you turn inland on Day 4 and walk up onto the Burren limestone plateau — a 250 km² landscape that looks like nowhere else in Europe — finishing at the sandy strand of Fanore. Day 5 takes you over the dramatic Black Head route with sweeping views across Galway Bay, finishing at Ballyvaughan — quiet harbour village, food capital of County Clare, your last night.
This is the trip for guests who want scale and contrast in a properly paced week — three real walking days, a meaningful day off, and one of the most varied stretches of coast in Western Europe.
Take the ferry across to the Aran Islands, hire a bike for the Burren green roads, or just sit in Gus O''Connor''s with a lunchtime pint and live music. The flexibility is the whole point. Ferry and bike hire are optional extras you can add or arrange directly.
Walk the official cliff path from the visitor centre to Doolin — 8 km of 200-metre drops, sea-bird colonies, Atlantic spray and the Aran Islands rising to the north-west. Far more rewarding than the bus-tour version.
You''ll cross one of Europe''s most extraordinary landscapes — bare grey pavement, rare wildflowers in every crack, ancient dolmens and ringforts, stone walls older than most countries.
The final walking day takes you high above the coast past Black Head Lighthouse with sweeping views across the bay to Connemara, then down through farmland into Ballyvaughan harbour. One of the great Atlantic walks.
Six days, three walking days, one full rest day. The pace lets you genuinely arrive in each place rather than passing through it — and the Doolin rest day means you can fit the Aran Islands into the trip without sacrificing a walking day.
The rest day flexes around what you want — ferry trip, bike ride, long lunch, traditional-music afternoon. Different guests use it differently, and that's the point.
Cliffs of Moher, the Burren plateau, Aran Islands (optional), Black Head and Galway Bay — there's no other six-day window in Ireland that gives you this much landscape variety on foot.
Arrive in Liscannor and settle into your first accommodation — a small coastal village where the Wild Atlantic Way meets ancient Irish landscape. Liscannor has good local pubs (Vaughan''s Anchor and Joseph McHugh''s are the two everyone talks about), a small harbour, a sandy beach to walk along, and the Cliffs of Moher quite literally on your doorstep. Doolin''s traditional music scene is a short drive down the coast.
We will provide you with information on how to get here using public transport in your pre-departure pack — or talk to us about private transfer options from Shannon Airport or Ennis train station, the two closest entry points.
Tonight, rest. Tomorrow is big.
After breakfast we transfer you up the coast to the Cliffs of Moher visitor centre. From there you walk the official cliff path north to Doolin — 8 km of as much drama as Ireland can offer in a single morning. The path runs along the very edge: 200-metre vertical drops, sea-bird colonies on every ledge, the Aran Islands rising white out of the Atlantic to the north-west.
You finish in Doolin, Ireland''s traditional-music capital. Spend the afternoon exploring the village or walking down to the harbour — and tonight, find a seat at Gus O''Connor''s, McGann''s or McDermott''s for live music with your dinner.
Note: there is currently a partial closure on one short section of the official clifftop path. Your route notes route around the closed section. If the closure lifts before your trip, the full path is open.
A full day with no luggage to pack and no schedule to keep. Three popular ways to spend it:
1. Ferry to the Aran Islands. Doolin Pier is a fifteen-minute walk from the village. The morning ferry runs across to Inisheer (the smallest island, around 30 minutes) or Inishmore (the largest, around 45 minutes), with several return crossings each afternoon. Both islands offer a different world — ancient stone walls, ringforts, Dún Aonghasa on Inishmore, sea-cliffs, and the kind of quiet you only get on a small island. Optional extra; we can pre-book or you can buy on the day.
2. Hire a bike for the Burren. Easy to arrange in Doolin on the morning, or we can pre-book for you. The quiet green roads behind the village are spectacular cycling country — limestone hills, distant Atlantic, occasional wildflowers and the odd ringfort. Optional extra.
3. Stay in Doolin. Long lunch at one of the cafés, an afternoon walk down to the harbour, traditional music at lunchtime in O''Connor''s. Many guests do exactly this and don''t regret it.
Today the Burren begins. Out of Doolin you climb gently inland onto the limestone plateau — bare grey pavement scored by glacial fissures, rare wildflowers in every crack, stone walls older than most European cities. It looks unlike anywhere else in Europe.
The route descends through traditional farmland to the long sandy strand at Fanore — one of the few proper beaches on the Wild Atlantic Way. Settle into your accommodation, walk down to the beach for a paddle if the weather plays along, and enjoy a quiet dinner.
Your final walking day is the showpiece. Out of Fanore the path climbs onto high coastal ground above Galway Bay, with views across the water to Connemara that genuinely stop you in your tracks. The dramatic Black Head Lighthouse sits at the northwestern tip of the Burren — you pass within sight of it on the descent.
From Black Head the path drops gradually through traditional Irish farmland into Ballyvaughan — a small harbour village that has quietly become known as the food capital of County Clare. Monk''s Bar, the Tea Junction Café and L''Arco Italian are all within five minutes'' walk; tonight will be a good one.
A leisurely morning. A last full Irish breakfast. A last look at Galway Bay.
Make your way onward — Galway city is around 50 minutes by road, Shannon Airport around 1 hour 30 minutes. Many guests add a night in Galway before heading home; it''s well worth it.
Five nights in carefully chosen B&Bs and guesthouses — one each in Liscannor, Fanore and Ballyvaughan, plus two consecutive nights in Doolin so you can really settle in for the rest day. Every room is en-suite, every breakfast is the full Irish, and every host is someone we've worked with for years.
Your main luggage is transferred door-to-door each walking day, so you carry only a light daypack. The Day-2 transfer to the Cliffs of Moher visitor centre is included — we collect you from your Liscannor accommodation after breakfast and drop you at the trailhead.
Doolin in particular has a beautiful range of family-run guesthouses with views over the Atlantic. Two nights here is exactly the right amount of time.
Note on the Cliffs of Moher path: there is currently a partial closure on one section of the official clifftop trail. Your route notes route around the closed section without affecting the walking experience; if the closure lifts before your trip, the full path is open.
May is best for wildflower enthusiasts: spring gentians turn the plateau vivid blue. Days are long, and accommodation books easier than peak summer.
June and early July offer dense-flowered orchids and ideal photography light.
July and August are the busiest months; book accommodation well in advance and expect large crowds at the Cliffs of Moher.
September brings fewer crowds, settled weather and clear low light perfect for photos.
Time your visit with a festival. Many trails host walking festivals throughout the season — see our complete 2026 walking festivals calendar to plan around one.
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