Howth Pubs: A Local's Guide to the Best Bars on the Peninsula
Five pubs, five different reasons to visit. A Dubliner's honest take on where to drink in Howth, from the legendary Abbey Tavern to the Summit Inn's unbeatable view.
Howth's pub scene isn't complicated. It's small enough that every pub has a clear identity, and the fishing village character runs through all of them. You've got serious traditional spots that have been here for centuries, a couple of newer bars that have carved out their own niche, and one pub with one of the best views in County Dublin. The best bit: none of them feel like they're performing for tourists.
The Bloody Stream
If you want to drink where actual Howth people drink, the Bloody Stream is it. Named after a skirmish in August 1177 during the Norman invasion, when blood from the fighting is said to have run through the little stream that still flows under the building, it sits right on the harbour road and feels properly local: relaxed, unpretentious, good food alongside the drinks. You'll see the same faces most evenings, which is exactly what a village pub should be.
Sunday sessions happen here regularly and are genuinely worth catching. Not polished, not for show, just people who know each other playing music in a pub they actually drink in. The food is proper pub food done well, which is harder than it sounds. If you're looking for a pint with actual locals rather than other visitors, this is where you come.
The Abbey Tavern
This is the one that gets famous, and for good reason. 15th-century building, thick stone walls, open fires that actually work. If you want the Ireland postcard version of an old pub, this delivers it without feeling like a museum piece. The trad music sessions are the main draw, and they're legitimately good: not a performance for tourists to photograph, but actual musicians who know their material.
Thursday and Friday nights are the traditional session nights, but check their current schedule before heading up, as timing can vary. There's a restaurant upstairs for something more formal, and the standard pub menu downstairs is solid. It's the kind of place people travel from abroad specifically to see, and unlike many pubs of that description, it's actually worth the visit. Expect it to be busy on session nights, but the atmosphere justifies the crowd.
Findlaters
Slightly more polished than the others. Better wine list than you'd expect in a village pub, solid food, a good outdoor terrace in summer. It's a gastropub by modern standards, but it doesn't feel like it's trying too hard. Lunchtime is busy with workers, early evening is when you'd bring someone you were trying to impress. Less of a late-night destination, more a place for a proper drink before dinner. If the other pubs feel a bit too local for a first visit, Findlaters is where you ease in.
The Summit Inn
You climb the hill to get here. That's the point. The pub itself is a straightforward local boozer, nothing fancy. But on a clear day, you're looking at Dublin Bay, the Wicklow Mountains, and Ireland's Eye all from the same window. A pint with that view is hard to beat anywhere in the county.
Locals do come here, but it's also the natural destination pub for visitors who've walked the cliff path. The food is pub standard: but that's not why you come. Come after the walk, come for the view, come with good weather. On a grey afternoon when you can't see past the car park, you'll understand why everyone else didn't bother.
The Brass Monkey
A West Pier seafood and tapas restaurant with a cocktail-leaning bar room, open since 2010. It trades more as a pre-dinner drinks spot than a traditional pub, which is where the younger crowd tends to land for an early drink before heading somewhere else for food. Less character than the older places, stronger drinks list. Sometimes that is exactly what you want.
Practical Tips
All the harbour pubs (the Bloody Stream, Findlaters, the Brass Monkey) are within walking distance of each other and the DART station. You can do a crawl if the mood takes you. The Abbey Tavern is a few minutes' walk up from the harbour on Abbey Street, worth it especially on a session night.
If you're planning to catch trad music, the Abbey Tavern's Thursday and Friday sessions are the main event. Check their current schedule before you go, as timing can shift. The Bloody Stream's Sunday sessions are more casual and neighbourhood in character.
The Summit Inn is the outlier location-wise. Make it part of a walk: the cliff walk finishes near there, or you can do a loop from the village. A pint after walking the headland makes perfect sense; a dedicated trip to the Summit Inn on its own only works if the weather is clear.
Because the village is compact, you can comfortably visit three or four pubs in an evening without it feeling rushed. Start at the Bloody Stream or Findlaters, move to the Abbey Tavern if there's music on, and finish wherever the mood takes you. The geography works in your favour. That's rarer than you'd think.
Keep Reading
Fish & Chips in Howth: A Local's Guide
Where to eat fish and chips in Howth, from harbour-side takeaway to sit-down seafood, and why Howth's fish is different from anywhere else in Dublin.
WalkingHowth Cliff Walk: 5 Routes for Every Fitness Level
A practical guide to all five colour-coded cliff walk trails in Howth, covering distances, durations, difficulty, and what you'll actually see on each one.
Planning a trip?
Explore restaurants, activities, accommodation, and more.