Itineraries
Belfast Game of Thrones itineraries: 2 to 7 nights
Belfast is the most practical base for a Game of Thrones trip in Northern Ireland because it sits roughly equidistant from the three filming geographies: the Studio Tour 30 minutes south in Banbridge, the Antrim Coast filming locations to the north, and the Winterfell / County Down locations south and east. Below: four sample itineraries by trip length, with the actual stops, drive times, and the tour or experience that fits each day.
2 Nights / 1 Full Day
The minimum-viable Belfast Game of Thrones trip
Two nights gives you exactly one full day on the ground. Either do the Studio Tour and one short day trip, or the Studio Tour and a half-day in Belfast city itself. Both options are doable but feel compressed.
Day 1 morning — Studio Tour
Take the 9:30 or 11:00 Belfast coach package to Linen Mill Studios in Banbridge. Plan on roughly 3 to 4 hours door-to-door. Return to Belfast by early afternoon.
Day 1 afternoon — Belfast city
Walk the 1.5-mile Glass of Thrones trail from the AC Hotel by Marriott to HMS Caroline (about 30 minutes). Visit the Door of Thrones at the Dark Horse pub on Hill Street (closed Sundays). Add Titanic Belfast next door if time allows. More on Belfast city for fans →
Day 2 — pick one
Either the Causeway Coast day tour (Dark Hedges, Ballintoy, Cushendun, Giant's Causeway, Dunluce) or the Winterfell / County Down day tour (Castle Ward, Inch Abbey, Tollymore Forest). Both run about 9.5 hours.
What you sacrifice: you only see one of the two outdoor filming geographies. Most short-trip visitors choose the Causeway Coast for the wider scenic payoff.
3 Nights / 2 Full Days
The long-weekend Belfast Game of Thrones trip
Day 1 — Studio Tour + Belfast city
Studio Tour in the morning via the Belfast coach package. Back by 14:00. Glass of Thrones trail and Cathedral Quarter (including Door of Thrones #10 at the Dark Horse) in the afternoon. Dinner in the Cathedral Quarter.
Day 2 — Causeway Coast day tour
9.5-hour coach tour: Cushendun Caves, Ballintoy Harbour (Iron Islands), Carrick-a-Rede / Larrybane, Giant's Causeway (UNESCO site, ~90 minutes on site), Dunluce Castle, the Dark Hedges (Kingsroad), back to Belfast around 18:30. Lunch is usually a pub stop at the Fullerton Arms in Ballintoy.
Day 3 — departure morning
Option to add Titanic Belfast or the Ulster Museum (Tapestry status permitting — see the caveat note) before flights or onward travel.
What you sacrifice: Castle Ward and the Winterfell / County Down filming geography. Worth knowing if Winterfell scenes were the part of the show you cared about most.
4 to 5 Nights
The recommended Belfast Game of Thrones trip
Day 1 — Belfast city
Arrive, settle in. Glass of Thrones trail (1.5 miles, ~30 minutes), Titanic Belfast (~2.5 hours), Ulster Museum (free; check Tapestry display status). Dinner in the Cathedral Quarter; collect Door of Thrones #10 at the Dark Horse pub.
Day 2 — Studio Tour + Castle Ward
Morning Studio Tour via the Belfast coach package, back by early afternoon. Afternoon transfer to Castle Ward for the on-site Winterfell archery experience or costumed cycling tour (book directly with Clearsky Adventure / Winterfell Tours, ~$37–$48 per person).
Day 3 — Causeway Coast day tour
Full 9.5-hour coach tour as above. Add a stop at the Fullerton Arms (Door #6) for lunch and the iron throne photo.
Day 4 — County Down day
Either the Winterfell, Dunk & Egg coach tour (~9.5 hours covering Castle Ward, Audley's Field, Inch Abbey, Tollymore) or self-drive the same route at your own pace. Add the Mourne Mountains if the weather is good.
Day 5 (optional) — slow morning
Cathedral Quarter coffee, Steensons Jewellers (official replica Hand of the King badge and other show pieces), final lunch and onward travel. Or extend with a self-drive day to Mussenden Temple and Downhill Strand on the Causeway Coast.
7+ Nights
The completionist Belfast Game of Thrones trip
The 4-to-5-night plan above plus:
- A Fermanagh day: drive 2 hours west to Pollnagollum Cave (Brotherhood Without Banners hideout) via a 4.3-mile walk in Belmore Forest. Pair with Door of Thrones #4 at Blakes of the Hollow in Enniskillen.
- A Causeway Coast slow day: overnight in Bushmills or Ballycastle, do Murlough Bay and Fair Head at sunrise, the Old Bushmills Distillery in the afternoon, and finish at Mussenden Temple at sunset.
- Doors of Thrones completion: three to five doors are realistic on a single Antrim coastal day. The full ten takes 2 to 3 dedicated days of driving across all six counties.
- A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms locations: add Glenarm Castle (Co. Antrim, ~50 min from Belfast) and the Galboly hidden village in the Glens of Antrim. Both feature in the prequel and on updated 2026 tour itineraries.
Realistic Budget
What a Belfast Game of Thrones trip actually costs
Mid-range, per person, USD, excluding flights. Hotels are the biggest variable.
| Item | 2 nights | 3 nights | 4–5 nights |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation (mid-range central Belfast) | ~$300 | ~$450 | ~$625–$750 |
| Studio Tour + Belfast coach | ~$57 | ~$57 | ~$57 |
| Full-day Game of Thrones coach tour | — | ~$50 | ~$100 (two days) |
| Castle Ward archery / on-site experience | — | — | ~$37–$48 |
| Meals (~$13 lunch, ~$32–$50 dinner) | ~$60 | ~$90 | ~$125–$160 |
| Entry fees and incidentals (Carrick-a-Rede $20, Dunluce $8, Mussenden $9) | ~$30 | ~$40 | ~$65 |
| Approximate total (excl. flights) | ~$450 | ~$700 | ~$900–$1,300 |
Hotels swing this budget more than anything else. Mid-range central Belfast hotels run roughly $100–$190/night; boutique and luxury options (the Merchant Hotel, Culloden Estate, Galgorm Resort, Slieve Donard) push past $250/night. Off-season and shoulder months (April–May, September–October) cut accommodation costs by 20–30%.
When To Visit
Best time of year for a Belfast Game of Thrones trip
May to September is the headline season — mildest weather, longest daylight (sunrise around 4:30 am, sunset around 10:30 pm in mid-summer), every attraction at full capacity. Expect coastal queues at the Dark Hedges and Giant's Causeway by mid-morning.
April to May and September to October are the best balance of decent weather and fewer crowds. Photographers especially favour these months for autumn colours, morning mist, and a less crowded Dark Hedges.
June to August is busiest, especially the July school holidays. Book Causeway Coast accommodation well in advance. Avoid the 12th of July fortnight if you want to skip Loyalist marching season disruption (closed streets, edgy atmosphere; many locals leave the cities).
November to February is dramatic and quiet but daylight is short (sunrise around 8:30, sunset around 16:00) and many smaller attractions reduce hours. The Studio Tour is open year-round and indoor — the best winter or wet-weather option. The Dark Hedges in snow looks genuinely Westeros-like.
Northern Ireland's climate is wet, cool, and changeable year-round. Temperatures rarely exceed 20°C / 68°F even in mid-summer, and four-seasons-in-a-day is normal. Pack layers, a waterproof shell, and shoes you do not mind getting muddy. Many filming locations (Ballintoy, Murlough Bay, Cushendun, Mussenden, Binevenagh) are coastal and exposed to Atlantic wind.
Plan and Book
Lock in the tour days first — everything else slots around them
Coach tours and the Studio Tour are the two parts of the trip most likely to sell out. Book those, then book accommodation around the dates.
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