cheap flights from Madrid to Dublin
Route guideMAD → DUBcheap flights from madrid to dublin

Cheap Flights from Madrid to Dublin

Compare cheap flights from Madrid to Dublin. Search MAD to DUB fares, flexible dates, airlines, and nearby airports.

Departing from

MAD - Madrid

Landing in

DUB - Dublin

Best for

City breaks, quick comparisons, and smarter fare timing

flights madrid to dublinbudget flights madrid to dublinairline tickets madrid to dublin

About this route

Plan the trip, not just the ticket.

Cheap flights from Madrid to Dublin are easiest to spot when you compare the route before locking in dates. This city pair draws a mix of weekend travelers, visiting-friends traffic, and short business trips, so fares can move quickly when the best times sell first. Dublin is especially appealing if you want a classic city-break trip without spending hours piecing together separate airline searches. With the route already loaded into the search form above, you can focus on the variables that usually matter most - dates, baggage, and airport choice. That makes it easier to spot whether midweek departures, a different return day, or a nearby airport creates the best-value result before fares climb. It also helps you judge whether paying more for a direct flight is worth it, or if a short connection keeps the overall trip better value.

Madrid airport departure area before a flight to Dublin.

Route decision depth

More than a city-name swap

Use these route-specific checks to compare the real trip: airport fit, baggage rules, fare timing, alternative city pairs, and whether the lowest fare still creates a sensible travel day.

Route quality

How to judge Madrid to Dublin fares

MAD to DUB is about 1,454 km (903 miles), with nonstop flights usually around 2h 25m. Madrid to Dublin is long enough for comfort, baggage, and connection quality to matter. Compare the cheapest fare against the itinerary you would still want after a delay.

For many travelers, the cheapest time to fly from Madrid to Dublin is outside St Patrick's period, summer, and December weekends. January, February, and mid November usually give you a better chance of seeing lower fares, especially if you can depart on Tuesday or Wednesday and avoid the busiest Friday to Sunday patterns. Shoulder season trips are often the sweet spot on this classic city break route: you still get a strong travel experience in Dublin, but airlines are not dealing with the same pressure they see during bank holidays, school breaks, or sold out weekend peaks.

  • Value benchmark: quiet EUR 67-112, typical EUR 167-232,, peak EUR 281-391.
  • Departure check: MAD timing versus airport access.
  • Arrival check: DUB timing versus onward transfer.

Airports and bags

Airport and baggage checks for MAD to DUB

For Madrid to Dublin, airport flexibility should be practical, not theoretical. The useful comparison set is Origin side: Madrid is mostly a single airport market, so better fares usually come from flexible dates, off peak flight times, or comparing alternative departure airports on the origin side., Destination side: Cork (ORK) if you are planning an open jaw trip through southern Ireland, and Destination side: Shannon (SNN) when west coast Ireland is the main goal.

A good shortlist for Madrid to Dublin includes Ryanair, easyJet, Lufthansa, Aer Lingus, British Airways. The cheapest option can change depending on baggage rules, timing, and whether you need a direct flight. Ryanair, easyJet, Lufthansa, and Aer Lingus all deserve a look on this route. Ryanair and easyJet can price very differently once cabin bags and schedule quality are included.

  • First fare-family check: Ryanair.
  • Second fare-family check: easyJet.
  • Origin side: Madrid is mostly a single airport market, so better fares usually come from flexible dates, off peak flight times, or comparing alternative departure airports on the origin side.

Planning alternatives

What to compare if Madrid to Dublin prices jump

Use related routes such as Cheap flights from Madrid to Lisbon, Cheap flights from Madrid to London, and Cheap flights from Lisbon to Dublin as a pressure test. If a nearby city pair is much cheaper, compare the transfer cost before deciding.

After price, use the Dublin destination guide to check whether the destination logistics still fit the fare you found.

  • Route pressure test: Cheap flights from Madrid to Lisbon.
  • Second route pressure test: Cheap flights from Madrid to London.
  • Third route pressure test: Cheap flights from Lisbon to Dublin.

Booking workflow

A better way to search this route

The supporting guides, How to find cheap flights, Flexible dates guide, and Best time to book flights, are most useful when your dates are fixed and you need a buy-or-wait decision.

The route file shows quieter fares around EUR 67-112, a more typical band around EUR 167-232,, and peak dates pushing toward EUR 281-391. Use those bands to spot when a result is genuinely good. When the fare, schedule, baggage allowance, and transfer all line up, click through to the booking partner.

  • Keep DUB arrival details visible while comparing partners.
  • Check Ryanair fees on the final partner page.
  • Book when the all-in total is close to the EUR 67-112 or EUR 167-232, range.

Route rhythm

Distance and total journey time

The route from Madrid to Dublin covers about 1,454 km (903 miles). A nonstop flight, when scheduled, usually takes around 2h 25m gate to gate, although total trip time still depends on airport queues, transfer costs, and how early you need to arrive. This is a solid medium-length European route where a cheaper connection can look tempting until you factor in the extra travel time. If you only see one-stop options on your travel dates, connections through Amsterdam or Barcelona can widen the fare mix, but total journey time often stretches to 5 to 7 hours.

Timing

When this route is often cheaper

For many travelers, the cheapest time to fly from Madrid to Dublin is outside St Patrick's period, summer, and December weekends. January, February, and mid-November usually give you a better chance of seeing lower fares, especially if you can depart on Tuesday or Wednesday and avoid the busiest Friday-to-Sunday patterns. Shoulder-season trips are often the sweet spot on this classic city-break route: you still get a strong travel experience in Dublin, but airlines are not dealing with the same pressure they see during bank holidays, school breaks, or sold-out weekend peaks.

Airlines

Which carriers to compare

For this route, compare a mix of budget and full-service carriers rather than assuming one airline always wins on value.

  • Ryanair: often one of the lowest headline fares if you can travel light.
  • easyJet: often competitive on short-haul European routes with solid schedule choice.
  • Lufthansa: a strong choice when schedule flexibility matters more than the lowest base fare.
  • Aer Lingus: useful for Ireland-linked schedules and city-break timing.
  • British Airways: best for higher-frequency business-heavy timings from the UK.

Dublin skyline and city-break atmosphere for this route.

Fare range

Typical pricing patterns

Headline round-trip fares on this route often start around EUR 67 to EUR 112 in quieter periods. A more typical booking window lands closer to EUR 167 to EUR 232, while peak travel dates can push pricing toward EUR 281 to EUR 391 or higher. Fare swings usually come from holiday demand, limited low-cost inventory, and whether you want the most convenient departure bank. On short-haul Europe trips, baggage, seat selection, and airport-transfer costs can change the real total more than many travelers expect, so always compare like-for-like fares.

cheap flights from Madrid to Dublin
Dublin skyline and city-break atmosphere for this route.
cheap flights from Madrid to Dublin
Airplane and route-planning visual for Madrid to Dublin.

Airport choice

Compare the right airport mix

On this route, airport choice can save money only if the ground transfer still makes sense for your trip. Start with Adolfo Suarez Madrid-Barajas Airport on the Madrid side and Dublin Airport on the Dublin side, then widen the search if the fare difference is meaningful.

  • Origin side: Madrid is mostly a single-airport market, so better fares usually come from flexible dates, off-peak flight times, or comparing alternative departure airports on the origin side.
  • Destination side: Cork (ORK) if you are planning an open-jaw trip through southern Ireland
  • Destination side: Shannon (SNN) when west-coast Ireland is the main goal

Destination fit

What to know about Dublin

Dublin is compact, lively, and easy to combine with a broader Ireland trip, whether you are after pub culture, coastal walks, or a quick weekend escape. If you are still planning the rest of the trip, see our Dublin destination guide for more ideas before you book.

Airplane and route-planning visual for Madrid to Dublin.

Keep exploring

More ways to plan this trip

View all destinations

Better-value fares

Compare this route with better context

  • Start with How to find cheap flights before you lock in a fare on Madrid to Dublin.
  • Use the flexible dates guide to compare the week around your preferred departure instead of one exact day.
  • Read Best time to book flights if your travel window is fixed and you need to decide when to buy.
  • Compare nonstop and one-stop options only after checking the total cost, including cabin bags, airport transfers, and arrival times.

Use the search form above to compare airlines, flexible dates, and nearby airports for Madrid to Dublin. Even a one-day shift or a different departure airport can change the best-value result.

Check nearby airports

Start with MAD and DUB, then widen the search only when the ground transfer still makes sense.

Protect the real total

On Madrid to Dublin, baggage, seats, and airport transfers can erase the savings from a low headline fare.

Use midweek flexibility

Even a one or two day shift can move you into a cheaper pricing band on busy city-break routes.

Price time against savings

Nonstop flights often win on convenience, but a short connection is still worth checking before you rule it out.

F.A.Q

  • Lower fares usually appear outside St Patrick's period, summer, and December weekends, with January, February, and mid-November often offering the best value. Midweek departures are usually the first place to look.