Dunluce sits on its own basalt crag, jutting out over the Atlantic between Portrush and Bushmills, and the first thing you do is cross a narrow bridge to reach it — the sea on both sides, the wind off the water, and a real ruined castle waiting on the far rock. It's the kind of arrival that makes children go quiet for a second and then run ahead.
Once you're across, you walk right through the thing. Twin medieval drum towers stand at the front, and behind them the 17th-century gatehouse opens into the manor-house ranges, roofless now but big enough to wander room to room. Spread out behind the castle are the cobbled foundations of a lost plantation town, so you're tracing the streets of a whole village that once clung to this headland. And directly under the rock runs a sea cave — you can peer down toward it and hear the Atlantic working away beneath your feet.
It's not a soft, manicured day out — this is genuine clifftop ground, cobbled and sloping and open to the weather. But that's the whole point of it. On a bright day the sea goes silver and the ruin glows in the light; on a wild one the waves crash below and the place feels every bit the sea-battered stronghold it was built to be. Bring a hat when the sun's out and enjoy the view — it's one of the best on the north coast.
Plan your visit
Can I visit? Yes — pay at the gate.
There's no online booking — you just arrive and pay at the ticket office on site, around £6 an adult and £4 a child, with family and concession rates too. Cash or card both work at the gate. It's open daily on seasonal hours — roughly 9:30am to 5pm in summer and 9am to 4pm in winter, with last admission thirty minutes before closing. Worth a quick check before a winter visit, as those hours shift.
Free parkingNo café — bring a snackDogs — check firstRight by the coast road
Two to remember:
It's a clifftop ruin — cobbles, slopes, a bridge and uneven ground throughout, so wear sturdy shoes and keep little ones close. And there's no café on the rock, so bring water and a snack; Bushmills and Portrush are both a few minutes away if you want to eat after.
Before you set off
What to wear & bring
👟Sturdy shoes with gripThe ground is cobbled and sloping — trainers or walking shoes, not sandals.
🧥A windproof coatYou're on an exposed clifftop over open sea — it catches the wind even on mild days.
👒A hatOn a bright day it's stunning up there — pop a hat on and enjoy the sun and the view.
💧Water and a snackThere's no café on site, so bring your own for the little ones.
Good to know
Everything before you go
Cost
Around £6 an adult and £4 a child, with family and concession rates. Pay at the ticket office on site — cash or card both fine at the gate. No online booking.
Opening
Open daily on seasonal hours — roughly 9:30am–5pm in summer and 9am–4pm in winter, last admission thirty minutes before closing. Best to confirm before a winter visit.
What you'll see
The bridge onto the crag, twin medieval drum towers, the 17th-century gatehouse, the roofless manor-house ranges, the cobbled foundations of a lost plantation town, and a sea cave running under the rock.
Food
No café on site. Bushmills and Portrush are both nearby with cafés, pubs and chip shops.
Dogs
Assistance dogs are welcome. The policy on other dogs can vary, so it's worth checking before you go.
Parking
Free car park right beside the castle on the A2 coast road.
Accessibility
It's a clifftop ruin — cobbles, slopes and a bridge, uneven underfoot. Carers are admitted free; call 028 2073 1938 to talk through access before you come.
How long
About 45 minutes to an hour to walk the whole site.
Address
87 Dunluce Road, Bushmills, BT57 8UY — on the coast road between Portrush and Bushmills.
Questions
Before you go
Can you actually go inside the castle?
Yes — this isn't a fenced-off ruin you look at from a distance. You cross the bridge and walk right through it: the towers, the gatehouse, the roofless manor rooms and the old town foundations behind.
Is it uneven or accessible?
It's a genuine clifftop ruin, so expect cobbles, slopes, a bridge and uneven ground throughout — sturdy shoes are a must and little ones need watching. Carers get in free; call 028 2073 1938 to talk through access before your visit.
Is there a café?
Not on site. Bring water and a snack, and if you want a proper bite, Bushmills and Portrush are both only a few minutes down the coast road.
Can I bring the dog?
Assistance dogs are welcome. For other dogs the policy can vary, so it's best to check before you set off.
What does it cost, and is it free?
There's a small fee — around £6 an adult and £4 a child, with family and concession rates. You pay at the ticket office on the day, cash or card, with no online booking. Parking is free.
How long does it take?
Most people spend about 45 minutes to an hour walking the whole site — an easy add-on to a Causeway coast day rather than a full outing on its own.
Getting there
87 Dunluce Road, Bushmills, County Antrim, BT57 8UY — on the A2 coast road between Portrush and Bushmills, with a free car park right beside the castle.
Dunluce was for centuries the seat of the MacDonnells, the powerful clan who held the Antrim coast — a castle deliberately planted on a crag the sea could defend better than any wall. Around it grew a whole plantation town, whose cobbled street-lines you can still trace behind the ruin today, before the site was gradually abandoned and left to the wind and the Atlantic.
The best-loved tale is the kitchen. As the story goes, one stormy night in 1639 part of the castle kitchen, built too close to the cliff edge, simply broke away and dropped into the sea below, carrying servants with it — and it's often said that the family's taste for the place never quite recovered afterwards. Whether it fell exactly as told or not, standing on that headland with the waves working under the rock, it's an easy story to believe.