Ireland  ·  Munster

Eco Hotels in Clare

280 eco-friendly hotels — from €65/night — every booking removes 1 tonne CO².

280 hotels
from €65/night
Lowest price guarantee — same as Booking.com or better
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Why stay in Clare

Clare — Cliffs of Moher & The Burren

Clare is where Atlantic drama meets ancient landscape. The Cliffs of Moher drop 214 metres into the ocean and draw 1.5 million visitors a year. The Burren is the opposite — 360km² of limestone pavement where Arctic, Mediterranean and Alpine plants grow side by side, a phenomenon found nowhere else in Europe. Lahinch has been a surf village since the 1960s and Doolin is Ireland's spiritual home of traditional music, with live sessions every night of the year.

  • Cliffs of Moher — 214m sea cliffs, puffin colony April–July, Aran Islands visible
  • The Burren — 360km² limestone pavement, rare wildflowers, Iron Age forts
  • Doolin — traditional music every night, gateway to the Aran Islands
Cliffs of MoherThe BurrenSurfingTraditional MusicWild Atlantic Way
At a glance
CountyClare
ProvinceMunster
Hotels280
From€65/night
AirportShannon (SNN) — 45 min
Drive to Galway1 hr

Best areas to stay in Clare

Whether you want to be in the heart of things or prefer a quieter base with easy access to the main attractions, Clare has options across every budget. Book through IMPT — lowest price guarantee — same as Booking.com or better on every property, with 1 tonne of CO² removed from the atmosphere per booking at no extra cost to you.

Getting to Clare

Ireland's transport network connects the major towns by bus and rail. For rural areas, a hire car gives the most flexibility. Most airports and ferry ports have car hire desks. Bus Éireann covers all major routes; Irish Rail serves the main corridor towns.

Why carbon-neutral travel matters in Clare

Choosing sustainable accommodation in Clare is one of the most direct ways to reduce the environmental impact of your trip. IMPT lists green-certified hotels, eco-friendly guesthouses, and responsible travel options across the county — all at the same price as major booking platforms. Whether you're looking for a low-carbon city stay or an environmentally friendly rural retreat, every booking removes 1 tonne of verified CO₂.

Ireland's landscapes are among the most climate-sensitive in Europe. Atlantic sea temperature rise, shifting seabird populations, and bog ecosystem changes are all measurable here. Every IMPT booking removes 1 tonne of CO² — approximately 28 times the carbon produced by the average hotel night — verified on-chain and publicly auditable.

Where to Stay in Clare — Towns & Neighbourhoods

Clare has distinct pockets of character, each suited to a different style of eco travel. Here's how to choose the right base for your stay.

Ennis

County Clare's capital and largest town (population 25,000). Ennis has a compact medieval core — narrow winding streets around the 13th-century Ennis Friary and the neo-Gothic Clare County Museum. The town is Ireland's Traditional Music Town Award winner multiple times; O'Connell Street and the surrounding lanes have live sessions most evenings. Well-connected by train and bus, Ennis is the best practical base for exploring all of Clare. Shannon Airport is just 30 minutes south.

  • 🎵 Traditional music most nights
  • 🚆 Direct trains to Dublin (2.5h) and Limerick
  • ✈️ Shannon Airport 30 min

Doolin

A small coastal village that punches far above its weight as Ireland's trad music capital. McDermott's and Gus O'Connor's pub have hosted live sessions without interruption since the 1960s. Doolin is also the embarkation point for the Aran Islands ferries (Doolin2Aran runs daily in season) and sits 1.5km north of the Cliffs of Moher. Accommodation here is mostly guesthouses and small hotels — eco-conscious and locally owned. Parking can be tight in peak season; arrive by bus from Ennis if possible.

  • 🎶 Ireland's trad music HQ
  • ⛴️ Aran Islands ferry daily
  • 🌊 1.5km from Cliffs of Moher

Lahinch

Clare's surf capital — Lahinch Beach has consistent Atlantic swell and several surf schools teaching beginners and intermediates year-round. The town also hosts Lahinch Golf Club, one of Ireland's great links courses (opened 1892), and has a vibrant café and restaurant scene that punches above its size. Lahinch sits on Liscannor Bay with views of the Cliffs from the beach on clear days. It's the most social and youthful base in Clare, with accommodation ranging from surf hostels to boutique hotels.

  • 🏄 Surf schools & consistent breaks
  • ⛳ Championship links golf
  • 🌊 Liscannor Bay views

Kilkee

A horseshoe-shaped Victorian seaside resort on the southern Wild Atlantic Way coast of Clare. Kilkee's sheltered bay has been a family bathing destination since the mid-19th century when the West Clare Railway brought day-trippers from Ennis and Limerick. Diamond Rocks — a series of flat limestone platforms used for diving — are a local landmark. The cliffs south of the town have excellent sea-kayaking and cliff walks. Kilkee is quieter and less discovered than Lahinch, making it ideal for sustainable slow travel.

  • 🏖️ Horseshoe bay & Victorian heritage
  • 🧗 Diamond Rocks diving
  • 🚣 Sea kayaking off the cliffs

Lisdoonvarna

Ireland's spa town and home of the famous Lisdoonvarna Matchmaking Festival — the world's largest singles event, held every September for over 150 years, drawing 40,000 visitors. The town's sulphur spa wells were a Victorian health resort; the Burren begins immediately east. For eco travellers, Lisdoonvarna is the ideal gateway to the Burren's limestone karst and wildflower meadows. The surrounding landscape is extraordinary in May when the Burren orchids bloom across the grey-white pavements.

  • 💑 World's largest matchmaking festival (Sept)
  • ♨️ Victorian spa wells
  • 🌿 Burren gateway

Kilrush

A small market town on the Shannon Estuary — the longest river mouth in Ireland and one of Europe's most important estuarine habitats. The Shannon Dolphin Project has monitored the resident bottlenose dolphin population (120+ individuals) for over 30 years; dolphin-watching boat trips run from Kilrush Creek Marina. Scattery Island — accessible by ferry from the marina — contains a 6th-century monastic settlement with a round tower. Kilrush is the quietest and most locally authentic base in Clare.

  • 🐬 Shannon dolphin-watching trips
  • ⛴️ Scattery Island monastic ferry
  • 🌊 Shannon Estuary birdlife

Eco Hotels in Clare — What Makes This County Special

Clare's eco hotel market is defined by four environmental assets found nowhere else in Ireland. Understanding them helps explain why sustainable accommodation here carries particular weight — and why the county's green hotel sector has attracted significant investment in recent years.

🏔️
Cliffs of Moher UNESCO Biosphere

The Cliffs of Moher sit within the Burren and Cliffs of Moher UNESCO Global Geopark — one of only two UNESCO Geoparks on the island of Ireland. The geopark designation recognises the international geological, ecological, and cultural significance of the landscape. Eco hotels within the geopark area operate under enhanced environmental standards.

🪨
Burren Limestone Karst — Unique Flora

The Burren's 360km² of carboniferous limestone pavement supports the only place in the world where Arctic, Mediterranean, and Alpine flora grow side by side. This botanical phenomenon — spring gentians, mountain avens, early purple orchids — exists because of a microclimate created by the bare rock absorbing and re-radiating heat. The limestone also filters water into spectacular cave systems and turloughs (seasonal lakes). Staying in green accommodation near the Burren directly supports its conservation.

🌊
Wild Atlantic Way — Full Western Coast

The entire western coast of County Clare forms part of the Wild Atlantic Way. From Kilkee in the south to Black Head in the north, the 2,500km route passes through some of its most celebrated scenery here. Eco hotels along this section connect directly to the wider responsible travel network of the WAW, with sustainable tourism infrastructure that includes cycling lanes, EV charging, and local food networks.

🐬
Shannon Estuary — Dolphins, Birds & Marine Life

The Shannon Estuary forms Clare's southern border and is home to the largest resident bottlenose dolphin population in Ireland (120+ individuals) — one of only two known inner-estuary dolphin populations in Europe. The estuary is also a critical feeding and roosting habitat for migratory wading birds: bar-tailed godwit, golden plover, and curlew. Kilrush and Foynes are the best bases for dolphin-watching and estuary birdwatching. Green hotels near the estuary are active participants in the Shannon Dolphin Project conservation fund.

Getting to Clare

✈️
Shannon Airport
Shannon Airport (SNN) is located in County Clare itself — just 25km from Ennis and 30 minutes from the Cliffs of Moher. Direct flights from London Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Manchester, and major US cities (New York, Boston, Chicago) with pre-clearance. By far the best gateway for a Clare-focused trip.
🚆
Train to Ennis
Irish Rail connects Ennis to Limerick (40 minutes, connections to Cork and Waterford) and to Dublin Heuston (2.5 hours via Limerick Junction). Ennis station is centrally located and connects to Bus Éireann services to the coast. The Shannon Airport Link bus connects the airport to Ennis hourly.
🚗
By Road
Dublin to Ennis is 225km — approximately 2.5 hours on the M7 motorway. Galway to Ennis is 65km (1 hour). Limerick to Ennis is 35km (40 minutes). A hire car is strongly recommended for exploring the Burren and the coastal Wild Atlantic Way sections. EV charging is available at major hotels and in Ennis town centre.

Sustainable Travel in Clare

Choosing carbon-neutral accommodation in County Clare has never been easier — or more important. The Burren's limestone ecosystem is directly sensitive to nitrogen deposition (from vehicle exhausts and agricultural intensification); the Cliffs of Moher's seabird colonies are affected by changes in sea surface temperature; and the Shannon Estuary's bottlenose dolphins are monitored for signs of ecosystem change. Every eco-conscious choice matters here.

All hotels booked through IMPT remove 1 tonne of verified CO₂ per booking at lowest price guarantee — same as Booking.com or better. The carbon is retired on-chain via the Ethereum blockchain — not a spreadsheet offset but a publicly auditable, permanent retirement against a named UNFCCC project. You receive a transaction code to verify your tonne was retired.

For your stay in Clare: take the bus from Shannon Airport rather than hiring a car if you're staying in Ennis. Walk the Cliffs of Moher coastal path — the 18km route from Doolin to Hag's Head requires no car. Cycle the Burren Cycleway (signed route across the limestone). Take the ferry to the Aran Islands from Doolin. Eat Clare Bay crab, Burren smoked salmon, and the locally grown vegetables from the limestone landscape. Use the EV charge points at major Ennis hotels if you do hire electric.

New members on IMPT receive €5 free credit on their first booking, and 5% cashback in IMPT tokens on all subsequent green accommodation stays. The responsible travel choice in Clare starts at the booking stage — and costs no more than Booking.com.

Book eco-friendly hotels in Clare →

The Burren limestone pavement County Clare Ireland

The Burren, County Clare — 360km² of carboniferous limestone pavement, home to Arctic, Mediterranean and Alpine wildflowers.

Cliffs of Moher County Clare eco hotel walks Shannon Estuary Clare Ireland sustainable travel

Eco Hotels in Clare

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Showing eco-friendly hotels in Clare, Ireland — all bookings remove 1 tonne CO² · lowest price guarantee — same as Booking.com or better

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About eco hotels in Clare

Is the Cliffs of Moher walk dangerous?
The official cliff path is safe. Some sections are unfenced — keep to the marked path and do not approach the cliff edge. In strong winds, the exposed sections require care. Entry to the Visitor Centre costs approximately €9 (cliff path access is free).
When do puffins appear at the Cliffs of Moher?
Puffins nest on the cliff faces from early April to late July. Peak viewing is May and June. Best seen from the path south of the Visitor Centre where the route passes closest to the nesting areas.
What makes the Burren unique?
360km² of carboniferous limestone pavement with a microclimate that allows Arctic, Mediterranean and Alpine wildflowers to grow within metres of each other. Spring gentian, mountain avens, and early purple orchid are all found here.
Is Lahinch good for surfing?
Yes — Lahinch is Clare's surf hub with several surf schools and consistent Atlantic swell. The Liscannor Bay breaks suit beginners; the more exposed Shit Creek break is for experienced surfers only.
Where to stay near the Cliffs of Moher?
Doolin (1.5km north, traditional music nightly) or Liscannor (2km south) are the closest bases. Lahinch (10km south) is larger with more hotel options.

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