Dingle Way Walking Holiday — 6 Days (Moderate)
Camp to Ballydavid — four days from sheep country to the wildest tip of the peninsula
6 Days on the Dingle Way — Camp to the Three Sisters
The 6-day version of the Dingle Way takes you a meaningful step further than the 5-day. Four walking days, two travel days, and one extra section past the famous Slea Head Drive into the wildest, most empty corner of the peninsula.
You start in Camp on the eastern shoulder, walk west through sheep country to Annascaul (and Tom Crean's South Pole Inn), then on across the southern flank of the Slieve Mish Mountains to Dingle town itself — Ireland's most beloved harbour town.
Day 4 is the showpiece — out of Dingle along the famous Slea Head Drive past beehive huts, ringforts, and the long sweep of Coumeenoole Beach to Dunquin, the westernmost village in Europe with the Blasket Islands offshore. The 6-day adds Day 5: a long, quiet walk north from Dunquin around Sybil Point and along Smerwick Harbour to Ballydavid (Cuas) — a remote fishing harbour at the foot of Mount Brandon, where the Three Sisters cliffs rise to your right and the ocean opens to your left. This is the wildest section of the entire Dingle Way.
This is the trip for guests who want to get past the famous parts and into the genuinely empty country. By the fifth evening in Ballydavid you'll feel like you've walked off the map.
Highlights
Camp to the Three Sisters in Four Days
Four walking days on a clear, well-marked trail. Camp, Annascaul, Dingle, Dunquin, Ballydavid — every key village along the southern and western coast covered.
The Slea Head Drive on Foot
Beehive huts, ringforts, the Three Sisters cliffs, the Blasket Islands offshore. The kind of landscape Star Wars and Ryan''s Daughter were filmed in — and far more rewarding on foot than from a tour bus.
Sybil Point and the Wildest Stretch
Day 5 is the showpiece — north out of Dunquin around Sybil Point with the Atlantic on three sides, then east along Smerwick Harbour with the Three Sisters cliffs above you. Empty, dramatic, the section guests remember most clearly.
Finish at Ballydavid (Cuas)
A small fishing harbour at the foot of Mount Brandon, with one good pub (Tig Áine), a quiet pier, and the kind of remote-Atlantic feel you''d normally have to take a ferry to find.
Who Is This For?
Walkers who want the Dingle Peninsula at a sensible pace.
Six days, four walking days at 17–23 km. Long-ish days but on rolling rather than mountainous ground. Every important village covered, with one extra section past the famous Slea Head Drive into wilder country.
Couples and friends planning a real week away.
The pace lets you arrive without rushing, walk four real days, and finish in genuinely remote country at Ballydavid. The villages along the way — Annascaul, Dingle town — have proper character and good food.
People who want Atlantic drama and quiet country.
The 5-day stops at Slea Head; the 6-day keeps going. Day 5 around Sybil Point and Smerwick Harbour is the wildest section of the entire Dingle Way and the part guests most often write home about.
Tour Itinerary
Day
1
Arrival in Camp
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Arrival in Camp
Arrive in Camp and settle into your first accommodation — a small village on the eastern shoulder of the Dingle Peninsula and the traditional starting point for the Dingle Way. Camp has a couple of friendly local pubs (Junction Bar and Ashes are both good for an early dinner), a small shop, and views south to the Slieve Mish Mountains and east toward Tralee Bay.
We will provide you with information on how to get here using public transport in your pre-departure pack — Tralee is the closest rail and bus hub, with a regular local bus service onward to Camp — or talk to us about private transfer options from Kerry Airport, Tralee station or Cork Airport.
Tonight, rest. Tomorrow you start walking.
Day
2
Camp to Annascaul
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Camp to Annascaul
Your first walking day, west out of Camp through traditional sheep country to Annascaul. The trail rises gradually onto the southern shoulder of the Slieve Mish Mountains, with sweeping views back across Tralee Bay and forward into the heart of the peninsula. Quiet boreens, stone walls, occasional hawthorn — Kerry as it actually is.
Annascaul itself is a small inland village best known as the home of Tom Crean, the Antarctic explorer. The pub he opened on his return — the South Pole Inn — still pours pints under his portrait, and is the obvious place for dinner tonight.
Day
3
Annascaul to Dingle
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Annascaul to Dingle
The big day — a long, beautiful crossing south-west to Dingle town. The trail climbs gently over the southern flank of the Slieve Mish Mountains, then descends gradually through farmland and the village of Lispole into Dingle harbour. The first sight of the harbour as you come down off the high ground is one of those Irish moments that genuinely stays with you.
Dingle town is Ireland''s most beloved harbour town — traditional music every night, exceptional restaurants, dolphins in the bay. Tonight, find a seat at Dick Mack''s, John Benny''s or O''Sullivan''s Courthouse for live music with your dinner.
Day
4
Dingle to Dunquin (Slea Head)
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Dingle to Dunquin (Slea Head)
The showpiece coastal day. West out of Dingle through Ventry, then onto the famous Slea Head Drive — beehive huts, ringforts, the Three Sisters cliffs, and the long sweep of Coumeenoole Beach where Ryan''s Daughter was filmed. The light here is what brought David Lean to Kerry in the first place.
You finish in Dunquin — the westernmost village in Europe, with the abandoned Blasket Islands offshore. The Blasket Centre on the cliffs is well worth a visit if you have time, and Krugers'' pub by the harbour ramp is one of the most genuinely remote bars on earth.
Day
5
Dunquin to Ballydavid (Cuas Feohanagh)
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Dunquin to Ballydavid (Cuas Feohanagh)
The wildest section of the entire Dingle Way. North out of Dunquin around Sybil Point with the Atlantic on three sides, then east along the long curve of Smerwick Harbour with the Three Sisters cliffs rising to your right. Cliff edges, bog road, ancient ogham stones, and the kind of empty country you''d normally have to take a ferry to find.
You finish in Ballydavid (Baile na nGall) — a small fishing harbour at the foot of Mount Brandon. Tig Áine on the pier is a memorable last stop, with seafood off the boats and views west across the Atlantic. Tonight, sleep with the ocean as your front garden.
Day
6
Departure from Ballydavid
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Departure from Ballydavid
A leisurely morning. A last full Irish breakfast. A last look at the Atlantic.
Ballydavid is roughly 90 minutes by road from Tralee station and a similar drive to Kerry Airport. We can arrange a private transfer for the morning if you''d prefer — just let us know with your booking. Many guests add a night in Dingle town on the way out; it''s an easy decision.
Route & Map
Accommodation
Five nights in carefully chosen B&Bs and guesthouses — one each in Camp, Annascaul, Dingle, Dunquin and Ballydavid. 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 — water, layers, lunch, your camera. This is the trick to enjoying long Dingle Way days: you arrive at the next village with fresh legs, find your bag in your room and head out for dinner.
Ballydavid in particular is a small, quiet harbour where Tig Áine on the pier is a memorable last stop. The Atlantic is your front garden for the night.
What's Included
check_circle What's Included
- doneAccommodation: 5 nights in en-suite B&B or guesthouse rooms (Camp, Annascaul, Dingle, Dunquin, Ballydavid)
- doneBreakfast: Full Irish breakfast every morning
- doneLuggage Transfer: Daily door-to-door transfer of your main bag
- doneMaps & Navigation: Detailed route notes, GPX files, and a waterproof map case
- donePre-Departure Pack: Information pack 4 weeks before you travel
- doneSupport: 24/7 emergency support line for the duration of your trip
block Not Included
- closeFlights: Travel to Ireland is not included
- closeInsurance: You will need travel and walking holiday insurance
- closeMeals: Lunches and dinners (we'll happily recommend pubs, restaurants and cafés en route)
- closeDeparture Transfer: Day-6 transfer from Ballydavid (we can arrange a private transfer to Tralee station or Kerry Airport for an additional fee — Ballydavid is roughly 90 minutes by road from Tralee)
Photo Gallery
Best Time to Visit
May, June and September are optimal.
May brings long evenings, emerging wildflowers and lighter trail traffic.
June offers the longest daylight and reliable weather for mountains.
July and August are busiest: Dingle town fills with tourists, and accommodation needs advance booking.
September has peak fuchsia and montbretia, clear light, quieter trails and easier accommodation booking.
The trail is walkable year-round, but winter requires mountain navigation experience, cold-weather gear and realistic expectations about daylight and weather.
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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Cliff & Louise
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