This walking map has details of the many different walking routes around the surrounding areas of Portrush. The distance and sections highlight different areas around the North Coast that consist of beautiful scenery and locations to visit on the way.
The Springhill Bar is a traditional family pub, we welcome customers with a warm atmosphere, friendly staff, and plenty of drinks and a fair amount of craic. The Springhill Bar hosts traditional Irish music sessions weekly which is fantastic to hear old traditional music in this truly Irish bar.
55 North is a 150 seat capacity restaurant offering a range of contemporary eclectic cuisine. We produce freshly prepared food using only the finest local ingredients. There is also a cafe in the lower level which serves lunch throughout the day.
Enjoy your meal in comfort whilst taking in the magnificent coastline and beaches that form the backdrop to the restaurant in Portrush. There is also a coffee shop downstairs which plays live music every weekend.
Whilst the English branch of the family has been busy expanding the Morelli brand in such exotic locations, the Northern Irish branch of the family has been busy establishing Morelli’s ice cream across Ireland. Having celebrated our centenary in 2011, they now operate scoop franchises throughout the country and our retail packs of ice cream are available in leading retail outlets and supermarkets right across Ireland. In 2012, they secured two first prizes in the UK National Ice Cream Awards for their famous Double Cream Vanilla and in March of that year, they also scooped the prestigious Champion of Champions shield at a special ceremony in London.
Something is most definitely brewing in Portrush – beer is making a quiet and classy comeback! By forging strong links with domestic, individual, artisan brewers Kiwi’s Brew Bar is able to source suds that you simply can’t get elsewhere along with the best-known beer brands. Also now offering bar snacks and food throughout the day, consisting of burgers, chips, and nachos.
Live acoustic music is available several times per week and at the weekends with ‘Brews and Blues’ Sundays being particularly popular with the patrons.
Spanish inspired restaurant serving fresh local seafood and freshly prepared dishes using locally sourced produce. Quality restaurant on the north coast of Ireland close to the Giant’s Causeway in the seaside town of Portrush. With a great selection of wines and local beers. Serving fresh local seafood and freshly prepared dishes using locally sourced produce. In a relaxed and friendly atmosphere. Also accommodating vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free dietary requirements. Children’s menu is available.
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The upstairs Gin Bar offering a huge selection of premium gins & spirits, wood-fired snacks, and live entertainment on the house 7 nights a week. With many respected artists performing nightly, this bar is lively every night for people of all ages!
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
One of the oldest bars on the North Coast the traditional “Front Bar” offering renowned Guinness, a warm welcome by host Willie Gregg, including the now famous “Thirsty Thursdays”. This bar is a must visit when coming to Portrush, famous for its brilliant atmosphere and dog-friendly residents.
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The Neptune & Prawn is a new addition to The Ramore Restaurants complex which gives customers a feeling of summer all year round. An informal dining experience serving many Asian inspired dishes which are perfect for sharing, along with an upstairs cocktail bar with amazing sunset views.
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The Harbour Bistro is The Ramore Restaurants answer to barbeque eating. Offering wood-fired grilled meats, chicken, fish, and famous steaks from JD Hart & Sons Butchers, with a wide selection of bistro dishes in the restaurant with rustic charm. The restaurant also offers a wide range of different wines, beers and spirits to accompany your meal.
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The Mermaid is the fine dining experience that The Ramore Restaurant complex offers at a fair price. This is one of the best restaurants you can find in Portrush and is highly recommended for special occasions. A casual and relaxed style of full-service dining offering fresh fish & local specials.
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The tourist is the newest addition to the Ramore Restaurants complex. A Mexican style restaurant that offers many different burritos, tacos, pizzas and burgers. The restaurant also includes a cocktail bar and main bar if a drink is all you are looking!
Situated on the stunning coast of North Antrim in the seaside town of Portrush, the Ramore offers a unique range of restaurants & bars serving highly renowned dishes & drinks for all tastes.
The Ramore winebar is a family friendly restaurant that is open for lunch and dinner service. The Ramore winebar also consists of a cocktail bar offering a range of different drinks for everyone. The Ramore Restaurants complex is famous for its low priced food and delicious desserts and is highly recommended!
A popular seaside resort, Portballintrae village is situated just off the Causeway Coastal Route Road, to the north of Bushmills and to the east of Portrush and Portstewart. Originally a fishing village, nestled around the horseshoe-shaped Ballintrae Bay, it was a cluster of whitewashed fishermen’s cottages nestling around the bay. Today, many of its earlier buildings have been restored and maintained, with several of its original houses still standing along the seashore. It also features buildings of historical interest such as the Seaport Lodge, built in the 1770s by the Leslie family as a bathing lodge.
You’ll find this seaside cottage at the western end of White Park Bay with great views all around. Listen to the waves crashing on the craggy shores. Nestled in the western end of White Park Bay in the old fishing hamlet of Portbradden, you’ll have all-encompassing views of the beach and out towards the western cliffs of Rathlin Island.
The hamlet has an ancient salmon fishing station. A popular saying states that Portbraddon contained the smallest church in Ireland, and the building in question was constructed in the 1950s as a cow byre, which the government listed without prior research. The church, which was named after St.Gobban, and measured 11 feet 4 inches long, 6 feet and 9 inches wide, was demolished in 2017 by the new owner.
Portrush Coastal Zone is the Department of the Environment’s main coastal and marine centre. Discovery pools and tanks along with displays and activities give visitors the chance to learn more about Northern Ireland’s marine and coastal wildlife and heritage.
At the rear of the centre is a viewing platform which affords excellent views towards the sea. From here dolphins, seals and harbour porpoises can sometimes be seen.
The spectacular sandy beach forms a white arc between two headlands on the North Antrim Coast. Its secluded location means that even on a busy day there is plenty of room for quiet relaxation.
The beach is also backed by ancient sand dunes that provide a range of rich habitats for bird and animal life.
Enjoy lazy summer days, picnics, making sandcastles and long walks. You’ll find that even on a busy day, this is a secluded and relaxing place to be.
Welcome to Game of Thrones Tours! The epic HBO series is filmed in stunningly beautiful places, most of which are remote and hard to find. We trek you deep into old growth forests, along wild sea cliffs, across rocky beaches, into caves and crumbling medieval ruins. We have Stark and Iron Born cloaks, swords, shields and banners available for use, at no extra cost. So choose Game of Thrones Tours, where every day is a Westeros day!
Although this is a coach tour, please note that this coach tour also includes two long walks, one in the morning at Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge (2kms), the other in the afternoon at the Giant’s Causeway (2kms). Accordingly, this tour is not recommended for anyone with limited mobility.
Royal Portrush Golf Club is home to one of the best and most challenging links golf courses in the world, the Dunluce Links, and the hidden gem, the Valley Links. The only club in Ireland to have hosted The Open Championship, Royal Portrush is a members club which welcomes visitors all year round to face the challenges of its courses and to brave the testing conditions. The former is one of the courses on the Open Championship rota and will next host the tournament in 2019.
Surfing Packages for beginners and advanced, all ages welcome. We believe surfing is a sport for absolutely everybody no matter age, shape, size or fitness. Our classes are suitable for kids from five years and upwards, there is no upper age limit, the record is a 77-year-old and we hope we can break that record this year!
Alive is the longest running surf school in Northern Ireland and we pride ourselves on our philosophy – ‘be safe and have fun’.
Barry’s Amusements is the largest theme park in Northern Ireland. Barrys Amusements offers out of doors but largely under cover fun with options ranged across the board, so you should find something to amuse everyone, whatever their age!
There are 6 rides aimed at younger children including a miniature caterpillar train, wet roller coaster and towering helter-skelter slide. There are also mini dodgems, an express train through a land of make-believe, and Monte Carlo, which has a good variety of brightly coloured rides to enjoy.
Bushmills Irish Whiskey is made at Ireland’s oldest working distillery in County Antrim, Northern Ireland on the beautiful North Coast. The original grant to distil was signed in 1608 by King James 1st and there has been distillation on this site since then, using the unique water from their own stream and Irish barley.
The Bushmills Brand Experience encompasses guided tours around a working distillery with all the associated sights and smells, tutored whiskey tastings, a specialist whiskey shop and a well-stocked gift shop with exclusive Bushmills merchandise.
Kinbane Castle is situated in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, on a long, narrow limestone headland projecting into the sea, approximately 5 km from Ballycastle on the road to Ballintoy. The name Kinbane means White Head and refers to the white limestone on which the castle stands. The area surrounding Kinbane Castle is a Scheduled Historic Monument, it also offers spectacular views of Rathlin Island and Dunagregor Iron Age fort.
The town of Portstewart and the Strand are located just west of Portrush. Walk along the promenade through town and on to the Strand. You can enjoy the impressive Gothic mansion and coastal views, and relax or walk along the two miles of golden sand beach. This area of natural beauty and of scientific interest is owned and managed by the National Trust.
Portstewart Strand holds the prestigious Blue Flag award for the management, cleanliness and quality of water and it is also one of the few remaining beaches in Ireland where cars still have access and permission to drive onto the beach- perfect for families who wish to picnic on the golden shores.
The small fishing harbour can be found at the end of a small narrow steep road down Knocksaughey Hill, which passes by the entrance to Larrybane and Carrick-a-Rede Rope Bridge. The village itself, which is just one kilometre from the harbour, has a charming array of small shops, two churches, including the quaint white Ballintoy Parish Church on the hill above the harbour, as well as tourist accommodation, restaurants, commercial and social facilities.
It has been used as a filming location in HBO’s epic series Game of Thrones. This stunning harbour location has been used for exterior Pyke shots and as the Iron Islands.
Downhill Forest is a small mixed woodland of 83 hectares just inland from the North Coast of Northern Ireland, near Castlerock. The Forest was originally part of the estate of Frederick Harvey, the 4th Earl of Bristol and Bishop of Derry, which included Downhill Castle, now maintained by The National Trust.
A walk through Downhill Forest will allow you to view one of Northern Irelands fattest Sitka spruce (in 1962 the girth was approximately 6m), an Early Christian Promontory Fort and an old water-powered sawmill with its lade running around the small lake in the middle of this woodland.
Mussenden Temple is located in the beautiful surroundings of Downhill Demesne near Castlerock in County Londonderry. It perches dramatically on a 120 ft cliff top, high above the Atlantic Ocean on the north-western coast of Northern Ireland, offering spectacular views westwards over Downhill Strand towards Magilligan Point and County Donegal and to the east Castlerock beach towards Portstewart, Portrush and Fair Head.
The temple was built in 1785 and forms part of the estate of Frederick Augustus Hervey, Bishop of Derry and Earl of Bristol. The temple was built as a summer library and its architecture was inspired by the Temple of Vesta in Tivoli, near Rome. It is dedicated to the memory of Hervey’s cousin Frideswide Mussenden.
This beautiful avenue of beech trees was planted by the Stuart family in the eighteenth century.
It was intended as a compelling landscape feature to impress visitors as they approached the entrance to their Georgian mansion, Gracehill House. Two centuries later, the trees remain a magnificent sight and have become one of the most photographed natural phenomena in Northern Ireland. In fact, the iconic trees have been used as a filming location in HBO’s epic series Game of Thrones®, representing the King’s Road.
Awarded the prestigious Blue Flag Award again in 2015, Whiterocks Beach has become a favourite with locals and a must-see destination for international visitors.
The beach, situated just off the Causeway Coastal Route, enjoys a stunning natural coastal location, with the limestone cliffs of the White Rocks stretching from Curran Strand to Dunluce Castle. These soft, sedimentary rocks have been carved through centuries into a labyrinth of caves and arches.
Not to be missed on a trip through the Causeway Coastal Route, Dunluce Castle is one of Northern Ireland’s most famous and most photographed landmarks. The medieval ruin stands on the edge of a cliff and can be approached only by a bridge. Dating from 1500, it has a fascinating history – it was once owned by Winston Churchill – tea room, café and amazing sea views. Well worth a trip.
Giant’s Causeway, Northern Ireland’s first UNESCO Heritage Site, is a geological wonder and home to a wealth of history and legend. The 40,000 basalt stone columns left by volcanic eruptions 60 million years ago intrigue and inspire visitors.
State of the art interpretation within the award-winning Visitor Centre unlocks the mystery and stories of this amazing place and offers a unique glimpse into the wonder that is the Giant’s Causeway.
Visitors can explore way-marked trails and enjoy spectacular coastal scenery accompanied by an innovative audio-guide available in 11 languages.