Airport Transfers, Golf Outings, Tours of Ireland - Chauffeur Drive Services brings you a wide range of quality services which are second to none.

When arriving in Dublin, you will be met at the arrivals area inside the main terminal. The car will be parked a short distance from the arrival area, you & your luggage will be transported in luxury to your destination.
When Leaving Ireland from Dublin Airport, you will be collected at your door and transported to the departure area.


The K Club

Druids Glen

Ireland has numerous golf courses to choose from (both links and parkland) all within a short distance of Dublin. Some of the more recently opened clubs are well worth a visit. To the North of Dublin, there is Malahide Golf Club, St. Margarets (host of the Seniors Open) and Portmarnock (host of the Irish Open), to the South of Dublin you have Druids Glen, The K Club, Mount Juliet and several others.

We will help you arrange your golf outings and provide the transport to the many clubs at numerous locations across Dublin.

Cead Mile Failte, 'a hundred thousand welcomes' is the slogan proclaimed all over Ireland, and it is one the Irish live up to. Strangers are eager to pass the time of day with you, whether on remote country roads, in busy streets or in the pub over a 'pint'. There is much to draw holidaymakers to the coastline or down to sweet wooded valleys. The first settlers and those that followed, left their marks all over our island, in tombs that predate the pyramids, ring forts, creeper clad crumbling castles and the ruins of innumerable monasteries such as Glendalough and Clonmacnoise. The more recent legacy of the Anglo-Irish gentry is visible in the big houses scattered all around the countryside.
In marked contrast to the scattered villages in the remote west, the last bastions of the Irish language (Gaelic) and a traditional way of life, beliefs in the little people are strongest and Irelands rich body of myths are kept alive. Ireland should be savored slowly, like the golden whiskey we produce, which will leave you with a mellow aftertaste and a warm glow.

As an island off the West Coast of Europe, Ireland provides the visitor with a multitude of cultural riches, from the ancient to the avant-garde, from history, architecture, literature, art and archaeology to the performing arts. Monuments in literature and in stone mark the history, the writers, the poets and the people of Ireland. In Dublin, medieval, Georgian and modern architecture provide a backdrop to friendly communities, which can boast literary giants such as Oscar Wilde, G.B. Shaw, James Joyce, W.B. Yates and Sean O'Casey as native sons.


The steep wooded slopes of Glendalough "the valley of the two lakes" harbour one of Ireland's most atmospheric monastic sites established by St. Kevin in the 6th century. The settlement was ravaged time and again by the Vikings but nevertheless flourished for over 600 years. It functioned as a monastic centre until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539, however pilgrims kept coming particularly on St. Kevin's feast day 3rd June.

Known as Brugh na Boinne the "Palace of the Boyne" this river valley was the cradle of Irish civilization. The fertile soil supported a sophisticated society in Neolithic times, much evidence survives in the form of ring forts and passage graves. The Battle of the Boyne took place on 1st July 1690 between the deposed Catholic King James 11 and William of Orange. The whole region is rich in monuments predating The Pyramids. A new interpretative centre covers the area's Stone Age heritage and includes a reconstruction of the Newgrange passage grave.