

There's nothing quite like the Ryder Cup. Two teams, representing Europe and the USA, battle for supremacy – pitching player against player and continent against continent. The competition is fierce – not just for the pros, but for those watching from around the world.
It was 2006 when Ireland last hosted the event, and Darren Clarke provided the inspiration needed for Europe to clinch its third consecutive win. Fast-forward to 2025, and after the heightened emotions and intense drama of Team Europe’s stunning victory on American soil, Europe will be determined to do it all over again.
It's taken 21 long years, but the Ryder Cup is finally coming back to Ireland. 5-star Adare Manor in County Limerick will host the world’s finest golfers from 13-19 September, 2027 – and if you ask us, it can’t come a moment too soon.


Adare Manor, County Limerick
Ready for action
After a total redesign by renowned golf course architect, Tom Fazio, the golf course at Adare Manor is truly breathtaking. Set against a backdrop of the mansion’s crenellated stone walls and 19th-century turrets, the greens sprawl across 230 acres of parkland, dotted with mature trees and criss-crossed by the River Maigue.
18 holes, 104 regal bedrooms and an award-winning chef make this hotel a dream by anyone’s standards—and that’s before you explore the cute, cosy, cultured village of Adare that surrounds the manor. It’s little wonder the Ryder Cup team made the choice to host its 46th competition here.
Take our advice and book a trip while you can—imagine watching the Cup in 2027, and seeing the world’s best golfer miss the shot you made on the 9th hole?
Most golfers will never have seen anything like this course. It looks and plays like no other course in Ireland.
Tom Fazio, golf course architect
Adare Manor, County Limerick
L-R: Falconry; archery; 1826 restaurant in nearby Adare village; whiskey-tasting at Adare Manor
The home of champions
Of course, Ireland’s world-class golfers are used to world-class courses. Home club to Darren Clarke and Graeme McDowell, Royal Portrush has hosted The Open Championship three times and has been hailed by former Ryder Cup captain Pádraig Harrington as “definitely my favourite links course in the world—a great challenge and one that is always exciting to play”.
Harrington, who himself learned to swing a club at Stackstown Golf Club in Dublin, is also a devoted fan of Ballybunion in County Kerry. "It’s traditional links golf at its best. It’s funky, and all sorts of crazy things can happen, but I love it.”
Head a little further inland and you’ll make your way to Esker Hills, the home club of The 148th Open champion and Ryder Cup hero, Shane Lowry. Described by designer (and Irish golfing legend), Christy O’Connor Jr, as “the only inland links type course I know”, this is a unique spot to test your skills.
Golf on the island of Ireland
L-R: The K Club, County Kildare; Portstewart Golf Course, County Londonderry; Royal Portrush, County Antrim; Esker Hills Golf Course, County Offaly
Beyond the course
But it’s not just the courses that make Ireland a must for the golfing bucket-list: from world-class clubs to passionate people, phenomenal food and a bit of craic (fun) along the way, a trip here will tick boxes you never even knew you had. A day spent on the green might be your dream, but there’s so much more to discover here.
Follow the wind-lashed Wild Atlantic Way – a coastal road on the very edge of Europe; explore the tranquil waterways and majestic forests of Ireland's Hidden Heartlands; discover 5,000 years of history rippling under the green hills of Ireland's Ancient East; embrace the giant spirit and energy of Northern Ireland and experience the buzz of Ireland's cities, from Dublin to Belfast to Limerick.