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Things to do in Belfast

Giant’s Causeway Day Trip from Belfast

Titanic Belfast Entrance Ticket: Titanic Visitor Experience Including SS Nomadic

Shore Excursion: Giants Causeway Tour From Belfast Port

Game of Thrones and Giant's Causeway Full-Day Tour from Belfast

Giants Causeway & Castles Tour from Belfast: Guided tour

Cab Tours Belfast Famous Black Taxi Tours

Giants Causeway, Rope Bridge, Carrickfergus Castle and Dark Hedges Tour

Private Giants Causeway & Coastal Tour from Belfast in Luxury Mercedes

Official World Famous Belfast Taxi Tour ™

Guided Day Tour of Giant's Causeway from Belfast by Comfortable Coach
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Best Things to do in Belfast
Planning a trip and wondering about the top things to do in Belfast? From historic landmarks to modern experiences, the city offers something for every traveller, making it a perfect getaway in 2026.
With over 498 activities in Belfast, there is plenty to explore. Visit some of the most popular tourist attractions in
With experiences starting at INR 533, it’s never been easier to plan your perfect trip. Make the most of your visit to Belfast in January and create memories that will last a lifetime.
Things to do in Belfast: Stories on the Edge of the Sea
About Belfast
Belfast carries its history close to the surface. Walk its streets and you feel the weight of shipyards, the tension of murals, and the laughter spilling out of pubs where music runs late into the night. The River Lagan threads through it all, steady and grey, flowing toward the sea that shaped the city’s fortunes.
It is a place of contrasts. Titanic Belfast, with its sharp glass walls, tells the story of a ship built here and remembered everywhere. Around the corner, old markets fill with the smell of coffee, fish, and fresh bread. Murals still mark walls with reminders of political struggle, yet the same streets also host galleries, start-ups, and cafés crowded with students.
Belfast does not try to hide its past. It lets you walk through it, then shows you what has grown on top of it. For travellers it is not a city of monuments alone but of stories. You hear them from taxi drivers who know every corner, from guides who pause by murals, and from locals who fill markets on Saturday mornings. The mix of hardship, pride, and humour is what gives Belfast its character.
Unique Experiences
Belfast Political Taxi Tour
The cab door closes and you are moving. West Belfast comes into view, street after street marked with murals. Some fresh with colour, others cracked, their paint fading into brick. The driver talks as the streets slide by. A calm voice. Not a script. He drops names without ceremony, recalls a march, a night at a checkpoint, then lets a pause sit before noting how neighbours learned to share space again. The car slows near the Peace Wall. Stepping out, you see layer upon layer of messages. New ink beside writing almost washed away by rain. The wall stands silent, but it holds weight.
- Where: Rides usually begin in central Belfast and head into West Belfast
- Pricing: Expect around INR 4,000 to INR 6,000 per person
- Timing: Departures run throughout the day, with slots usually from 9:00 AM until 5:00 PM, shown when you pick a date.
- When to Visit: Any season, with spring and autumn easier for time spent outside the cab
Game of Thrones Filming Locations Tour from Belfast
The road north follows the Antrim coast, fields giving way to cliffs, the sea flashing in and out of view. The Dark Hedges appear suddenly, a tunnel of trees, twisted branches folding together overhead. Light seeps through in narrow strips. Later the Cushendun Caves wait, damp and echoing, the smell of salt sharp in the air. Fans speak of episodes, remembering lines or battles. Others walk slowly, less concerned with the show, more taken by the coast itself. The guide fills the gaps with stories of film crews waiting out rain in small cafés, long days when the weather held. These places feel older than the series, but tied to it now all the same.
- Where: Tours set out from Belfast city centre
- Pricing: INR 6,500 to INR 9,000 per person
- Timing: A full day trip. Buses leave around 9:00 AM, returning to Belfast by early evening, roughly 6:00 PM or 7:00 PM.
- When to Visit: April to October, when daylight lasts and the views are clearer
Giant’s Causeway Premium Tour including Rope Bridge and Carrickfergus Castle
The land north of Belfast grows rougher with each mile. At the Causeway the stones spill into the sea, hexagonal columns stacked like a puzzle, waves striking hard against them. Walking out you feel the wind pull at your clothes, the spray catching your face. Further along, the rope bridge at Carrick-a-Rede sways above the water. Crossing is short, only a few steps, but the drop makes every movement deliberate. Later the towers of Carrickfergus Castle rise grey and solid, walls that have watched centuries of change. Each stop has its own weight — legend on the stones, thrill on the bridge, history in the castle — tied together in one long day.
- Where: Northern Coast, departing from Belfast
- Pricing: INR 7,000 to INR 10,000 per person
- Timing: Tours begin in the morning at 9:00 AM, running until early evening, usually back by 6:00 PM to 7:00 PM.
- When to Visit: May to September for calmer skies along the coast
Top Attractions
Titanic Belfast Entrance Ticket
The building itself feels like a ship caught in glass and steel, sharp lines rising from the docks where the Titanic was built. Inside, the story unfolds room by room. You hear the clang of hammers, see photographs of men who worked in the yards, step into galleries where the design and tragedy are laid out carefully. Visitors pause longest at the personal stories — letters, belongings, fragments of a journey that never finished. The museum is polished, yet the weight of the ship lingers in every hall.
- Where: Titanic Quarter, Belfast
- Pricing: INR 2,500 to INR 3,500 per person
- Timing: Open daily from 10:00 AM until 5:00 PM, with last entry usually one hour before closing.
- When to Visit: Year round, mornings are quieter before groups arrive
Crumlin Road Gaol Guided Tour
Behind the gates the air feels cooler, the stone walls closing in quickly. Crumlin Road Gaol held prisoners for more than a century, and the stories are heavy. A guide leads you through echoing corridors, into cells where names are scratched into the doors. The execution chamber is small, silent, unsettling. Some visitors move quickly, others stand still. The tour does not soften the past, and that honesty is part of its force.
- Where: Crumlin Road, Belfast
- Pricing: INR 1,800 to INR 2,500 per person
- Timing: Guided tours are scheduled through the day, with slots typically from 10:00 AM until 4:30 PM.
- When to Visit: Any season, with winter giving the stone halls an even colder edge
St George’s Market Visit
On weekends the old market hall fills with noise. Fishmongers call out, bakers stack loaves still warm, and stalls line up with cheeses, flowers, and crafts. The air is thick with the smell of coffee and frying food. Musicians play at one end, and the sound carries through the aisles. Locals shop here as much as visitors, which makes the market feel lived in, not staged. It is one of the few Belfast tourist attractions where you feel the city speaking in the present, not only the past.
- Where: East Bridge Street, Belfast
- Pricing: Free to enter, food and goods priced at stalls
- Timing: Market hours are fixed — Friday 8:00 AM to 2:00 PM, Saturday 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM, and Sunday 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM.
- When to Visit: Best on Saturdays for the busiest atmosphere, though Fridays are quieter
Sightseeing Tours
City Sightseeing Belfast Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour
The red bus loops through the city, a moving balcony that lets you see Belfast from above the traffic. From the open deck you catch the dome of City Hall, the cranes of the shipyards, and murals that roll past in colour. The guide’s voice mixes history with humour, pointing out landmarks and stories in the same breath. Some passengers hop off often, chasing one sight after another. Others stay seated, letting the full circle give them a slow picture of the city. Either way, it is a simple way to connect the pieces of Belfast without rushing.
- Where: Departs from central Belfast stops, flexible boarding
- Pricing: Around INR 2,000 to INR 3,000 per person
- Timing: Buses begin from 10:00 AM, with loops running every 30–60 minutes. The last circuit usually departs around 4:30 PM.
- When to Visit: Year round, though summer gives the best chance to sit on the open deck
Belfast Mural Political History Walking Tour
On foot the murals feel closer. Walls tell stories of division, of struggle, of peace still being written. A guide leads you through neighbourhoods marked by paint and memory, pausing to explain symbols that might otherwise blur into colour. The sound of traffic is never far, but in these streets it feels muted, the murals commanding more attention. The walk is steady, not hurried, giving time to stand in front of each wall, to listen, and sometimes to ask questions that linger longer than the answers.
- Where: West Belfast, starting from a central meeting point
- Pricing: INR 2,500 to INR 3,500 per person
- Timing: Walking tours are offered in several daily slots, most often at 10:00 AM, 1:00 PM, and 3:00 PM.
- When to Visit: Any time of year, with spring and autumn most comfortable for walking
Day Trips
Giant’s Causeway Day Trip from Belfast
The road north winds past small villages and open fields before the land gives way to sea. At the Giant’s Causeway, stone columns push into the water, neat and geometric, as if carved by hand. Waves crash against them, spray rising in bursts of salt. You walk out across the rocks, uneven underfoot, and it feels at once mythical and real. Guides speak of Finn McCool, the giant said to have built it, but most visitors fall into silence, busy watching the tide climb and retreat.
- Where: Northern Coast, departing from Belfast
- Pricing: INR 6,000 to INR 8,000 per person
- Timing: Coaches usually leave Belfast around 9:00 AM, with return in the evening by 6:00 PM or 7:00 PM.
- When to Visit: May to September for longer days and calmer skies
Causeway Coast Tour including Dunluce Castle
Further along the coast, Dunluce Castle stands in ruins above the cliffs. The wind pushes hard at its walls, yet parts of the medieval stone still hold firm. From the castle the view runs wide across the sea, sharp and blue on clear days. The tour continues along winding roads that reveal beaches, headlands, and villages tucked against hills. It is less about one stop and more about the rhythm of the coast itself, shifting between rugged cliffs and quiet harbours.
- Where: Antrim Coast, departing from Belfast
- Pricing: INR 7,000 to INR 9,000 per person
- Timing: Morning departures at 9:00 AM, running as a full day trip with return to Belfast in the early evening.
- When to Visit: Summer and early autumn, when the coast is clearest and easier to walk
Boat or Cruise Tours
Belfast Harbour Sightseeing Cruise
The harbour feels different from the water. As the boat pulls away, you see the yellow cranes standing over the docks, immense against the sky. The air smells faintly of salt and oil. A guide shows the slipways where ships were formerly built, and then to the contemporary offices that now line the waterfront. The surface ripples gently, interrupted by gulls skimming low. The surface ripples gently, broken by gulls skimming low. Some passengers lean over the rail; others sit quietly, letting the city pass by in slow frames.
- Where: Belfast Harbour, near the Titanic Quarter
- Pricing: Around INR 2,000 to INR 3,000 per person
- Timing: Cruises usually run in the afternoon, with set departures at 12:30 PM and 2:30 PM most days.
- When to Visit: Best from spring to early autumn, when skies are clear and water calmer
River Lagan Boat Tour
The Lagan runs through the centre of the city, steady and brown, carrying its own reflections. On the boat, you move beneath bridges that feel close overhead. Warehouses stand on one side, glass buildings on the other, the past and present folded together. The sound of the engine is low, mixing with the slap of water against the hull. People on the bank wave as you pass. A cyclist flashes by, then the quiet returns. The ride is unhurried, a small reminder that Belfast has always faced its river.
- Where: River Lagan, central Belfast
- Pricing: INR 1,800 to INR 2,500 per person
- Timing: Several departures daily, generally in slots between 12:00 PM and 4:00 PM.
- When to Visit: All year, though summer evenings feel calmest on the river
Getting Around
Belfast is not a city that demands rush. The centre is compact, and much of it is best discovered slowly.
On Foot
Walking lets you feel the texture of the streets. Around City Hall the pavements are wide and busy, while in the Cathedral Quarter the lanes narrow, with pubs spilling light and sound into the evening.
By Bus
Local buses stretch out to districts beyond the centre. They are practical for longer journeys, and along the way you see neighbourhoods most visitors miss.
By Taxi
Taxis remain part of Belfast’s character, not just transport. Drivers often talk freely, sharing views of politics, history, and daily life as they take you across town.
By Bike
Cycling works best along the river paths or through the university quarter. In summer the ride is gentle, in winter the wind makes it harder but still rewarding.
Moving through Belfast is more than reaching the next stop. Each way of travel changes the view — whether on foot past murals, on a bus through suburbs, or leaning from a taxi window as stories unfold.
Traveller Tips
- Start at the Market If you arrive on a weekend, St George’s Market should be first. The hall fills with voices, food smells rise from every corner, and live music drifts above the stalls.
- Carry Cash for Small Stops Cards work almost everywhere, but the smallest cafés and market vendors still prefer coins and notes. It saves time to keep some in your pocket.
- Layers for the Weather Rain can appear suddenly, even in summer. A light jacket or umbrella makes wandering easier. Winter is colder and harsher, but it's still a terrific time to explore provided you dress appropriately.
- Evenings in the Cathedral Quarter The lanes here come alive after dark. Murals glow under street lamps, and pubs hum with music that spills out onto cobbles. For travellers searching fun things to do in Belfast, this district rarely disappoints.
- Plan Day Trips Early Tours to the Causeway or the Antrim Coast leave in the morning. Booking in advance secures a seat and leaves the day open to enjoy without worry.
- Take Time in Conversation Locals are quick to share stories, from taxi drivers to market sellers. A pause to listen often gives more than any guidebook.
- Look Up Details sit above street level — sculptures, carvings, even murals that stretch higher than you expect. Slowing your step makes them easier to notice.
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