Short-Term or Long-Term Rental in Dublin City: What the Numbers Show
Verdict: Long-term letting only. Ireland's national rent control rules ban investor-owned short-term rentals, but Dublin City's long-term yields comfortably exceed state and national averages.
Best For: Cash flow investors seeking strong rental income in Ireland's highest-demand market. Long-term letting only; short-term letting is banned for investors.
Scores out of 10 across yield, regulations, tax, risk, and market fundamentals. How we score
Underlying Assumptions (data as of April 2026):
- Property Price: 3-bedroom houses estimated at around €461,500
- Monthly Long-Term Rent: Approximately €3,400
- Regulations: Short-term letting banned for investor-owned properties under Ireland's nationwide rent control rules. Only owner-occupiers may let their principal private residence short-term (up to 90 nights per year).
See your suburb's full short-term letting vs long-term letting breakdown in the dashboard
Estimates for a typical 3-bedroom house. Short-term letting is not available to investors in this market.
Dublin City commands both higher prices and higher rents than the regional and national medians. The yield premium over the national average reflects the depth of Dublin's rental demand: the city's population continues to grow, housing supply remains constrained, and vacancy rates are among the lowest in Ireland. For investors, this demand translates into lower vacancy risk and more consistent income, even if the initial capital outlay is substantially higher.
Other Irish markets face similar regulatory constraints. Galway City faces the same rent control rules, as does Killarney in Kerry. The advantage Dublin offers over smaller markets is liquidity: properties sell faster, tenants are easier to find, and the rental floor is higher.
Investment Bottom Line: Strong Cash Flow, Heavy Tax Burden
Dublin City is a long-term rental market, full stop. The rent control rules eliminate short-term letting as an option for investors, so the decision is whether the long-term letting numbers justify the entry price. At 8.8% gross and 6.3% net, Dublin City offers above-average returns by Irish standards, driven by rents of €3,400 per month on 3-bedroom houses priced at around €461,500.
The challenges are real. Ireland's tax regime takes approximately half of net rental income at the top marginal rate. The rent cap limits annual increases to 2%, constraining income growth. And the entry price is significantly above the national median of €289,912.
The case for Dublin rests on demand fundamentals: population growth, housing undersupply, and a deep tenant pool that keeps vacancy rates low. Within the city, yields vary substantially. The northside suburbs in the table above offer yields well above the city average thanks to lower purchase prices, while premium southside areas trade yield for perceived capital growth potential.
| Investor Type | Fit |
|---|---|
| Cash Flow Focused | Good (strong gross yield, but tax takes a large share) |
| Appreciation Focused | Good (strong demand fundamentals, but 33% CGT on exit) |
| Short-Term Rental Operator | Not Viable (banned for investor-owned properties) |
| High Leverage (80%+ LTV) | Fair (100% mortgage interest deduction helps, but high entry price increases risk) |
The suburb-level variation is the most actionable insight for investors. A property in Finglas North C at €323,833 delivers a fundamentally different return profile than one in Rathmines West E at the top of the price range. The dashboard lets you model the exact numbers for any electoral division, bedroom count, and property type in Dublin City. For more on how we calculate these figures, see our data sources page.
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026.
See your suburb's full short-term letting vs long-term letting breakdown
€17 for 24-hour access. All suburbs, all property types. Get access
This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.