Planning a UK–Ireland circuit in 10 days is absolutely doable if you keep travel handoffs clean and your mobile connectivity sorted. This route prioritises fast intercity links and two bucket-list rural days so you’re not stuck in transit. You’ll start in London, ride the rails to Edinburgh, hop to Dublin by air (or ferry if you prefer), then road-trip the Ring of Kerry from a Killarney base. With a single regional eSIM, you can cross borders without swapping plastic SIMs, keep your home number live for iMessage/WhatsApp, and stay online even when the Highlands or the Dingle Peninsula thin out to a few bars of 4G.
Below is a practical, step-by-step plan with timings, booking tips, and connectivity guidance. If you’re extending to mainland Europe or coming from North America, we’ve flagged the simplest eSIM and transport options to avoid roaming bill-shock and wasted hours.
At a glance: your 10-day UK–Ireland itinerary
- Day 1: Arrive London (stay 3 nights)
- Day 2: London highlights
- Day 3: London neighbourhoods or day trip
- Day 4: Train to Edinburgh (stay 2 nights)
- Day 5: Edinburgh Old Town + Arthur’s Seat/Leith
- Day 6: Fly (or ferry combo) to Dublin (stay 2 nights)
- Day 7: Dublin city essentials
- Day 8: Train to Killarney (stay 2 nights)
- Day 9: Ring of Kerry loop
- Day 10: Return to Dublin or depart from Shannon
Pro tip: Book an open-jaw flight (into London, out of Dublin/Shannon). It saves a backtrack day.
Transport handoffs you won’t regret
London → Edinburgh (rail, ~4h 20m)
- Best option: LNER fast trains from London King’s Cross to Edinburgh Waverley.
- Book early for low fares; pick a direct service and a table seat with power sockets.
- Travel light—UK intercity trains have overhead racks and small luggage stacks.
Pro tip: Bring snacks. Onboard trolleys run out on busy trains.
Edinburgh → Dublin (1h flight or ferry+train combo)
- Easiest: Direct flight (about 1 hour). Edinburgh Airport is close; the Tram or Airlink bus is simple.
- Alternative (scenic, longer): Train/bus to Cairnryan, ferry to Belfast, then the Enterprise train to Dublin (expect 7–9 hours end-to-end). This works best if you want a Belfast stopover.
When to pick the ferry: If you dislike flying or want to avoid bag fees. Otherwise, fly.
Dublin → Killarney (train ~3–3.5h)
- Heuston Station to Killarney on Irish Rail (often 1 change at Mallow).
- Book seats; bring a packed lunch. Killarney station is walkable to many hotels.
Ring of Kerry (self-drive or small-group tour)
- Drive counter-clockwise from Killarney to sync with coach flow (reduces passing on narrow stretches).
- No car? Choose a small-group tour (better photo stops and less time at souvenir traps).
Killarney → Dublin or Shannon
- To Dublin: Train back to Heuston (~3–3.5h).
- From the west: Shannon Airport is 2 hours by car; allow extra time for car return.
Connectivity: eSIM vs physical SIM across borders
A single regional eSIM is the cleanest solution for this itinerary—no queues, no swaps, no roaming roulette.
- Use a regional plan: See Esim Western Europe for UK and Ireland coverage in one profile. It avoids SIM swaps when you cross the Irish Sea.
- Why eSIM over physical SIM: Instant delivery via QR code, keep your home SIM active for calls/SMS 2FA, and switch data lines per country if needed.
- Network expectations:
- UK cities (London, Edinburgh): Strong 4G/5G on major networks; underground Wi‑Fi in London; patchier coverage inside some stone buildings.
- Ireland cities (Dublin, Killarney): Good 4G/5G in towns; some 3G/4G drops on rural stretches of the Ring of Kerry.
- Highlands/Kerry backroads: Expect occasional dead zones; download offline maps in advance.
If you’re continuing to Europe, add-on or switch to regional plans for nearby countries: Esim France, Esim Italy, or Esim Spain. Coming from North America? Set up before you fly with Esim United States or Esim North America for the journey to/from the UK and Ireland.
Quick setup checklist (5 minutes)
- Buy and install: Purchase your plan (e.g., Esim Western Europe) and scan the QR code over Wi‑Fi.
- Set data line: On your phone, set the eSIM as the default for mobile data. Keep your physical SIM for calls/SMS if needed.
- iMessage/FaceTime:
- iPhone: Settings > Messages > Send & Receive. Tick your Apple ID and your preferred number. If your home SIM receives SMS OTPs, keep it active for voice/SMS but set the eSIM for data.
- Turn off “Send as SMS” to avoid your home carrier charging when data blips occur.
- WhatsApp:
- If you want your home number intact, do nothing—WhatsApp will keep using it even with a different data eSIM.
- If you need a new number, use Change Number in WhatsApp settings; notify contacts automatically.
- Offline maps: Download Google Maps areas for London, Edinburgh, Dublin, and County Kerry; save key addresses (hotels, stations, car hire).
- Hotspot needs: Check plan hotspot allowance if you’ll tether a laptop on trains.
Pro tip: Add local transport apps over Wi‑Fi before you go. London: Citymapper, TfL Go. Dublin: TFI Live. Irish Rail and LNER apps for tickets and live platform info.
Day-by-day highlights and time savers
Days 1–3: London
- Essentials: Westminster/Big Ben, South Bank walk, Tower of London, St Paul’s, Borough Market, British Museum, Covent Garden.
- Time-savers:
- Use contactless bank cards/phone for Tube and bus—no need for an Oyster card.
- Group nearby sights: Tower Bridge, Tower of London, Borough Market in one loop.
- Book one ticketed highlight in advance (e.g., Sky Garden, Westminster Abbey) and keep the rest flexible.
- Connectivity note: Great 5G outdoors; Tube has patchy signal between stations. Download tickets/wallet passes before you descend.
Day 4–6: Edinburgh
- Day 4: Scenic LNER ride; check in near the Royal Mile or New Town for walkability.
- Day 5: Edinburgh Castle, Royal Mile closes, National Museum (free), sunset from Calton Hill or Arthur’s Seat if weather cooperates.
- Day 6 morning: Dean Village and Stockbridge; lunch in Leith if you have time.
- Connectivity note: Good coverage in town. If you take a half-day Highlands tour, expect occasional dropouts—download playlists and maps.
Day 6–8: Dublin
- Fly Edinburgh → Dublin. Airport bus to city (return tickets are good value); taxis and rideshares are regulated and straightforward.
- Day 7: Trinity College/Book of Kells, Grafton Street, St Stephen’s Green, Kilmainham Gaol (book), Guinness Storehouse (sunset slot at Gravity Bar).
- Evening: Live music in a pub off the main Temple Bar strip for a less touristy feel (try Camden Street or Rathmines).
- Connectivity note: Airport and city have strong 4G/5G. Museum interiors may dampen signal—keep tickets offline.
Day 8–10: Killarney and the Ring of Kerry
- Day 8: Train to Killarney; rent a car in town or confirm your small-group tour pickup.
- Day 9: Ring of Kerry loop:
- Killarney → Killorglin → Cahersiveen → Waterville → Sneem → Kenmare → Molls Gap → Killarney.
- Add Skellig Ring (weather/season permitting) for standout views; be mindful of narrow roads.
- Day 10: Morning in Killarney National Park (Muckross House, Torc Waterfall) before your onward train or drive.
- Connectivity note: 4G pockets with rural gaps. Save offline maps and key stops; cache music for the drive.
Pro tip: If you’re nervous about left-side driving, book an automatic car and verify excess cover. Small-group tours remove the parking stress and let you focus on scenery.
Money, time and stress savers
- Rail bookings: Reserve seats on LNER and Irish Rail; pick window seats with power. Off-peak can be significantly cheaper.
- Airports vs ferries: For this route, the Edinburgh–Dublin flight wins for time. Ferries suit those who dislike flying or plan a Belfast stop.
- Contactless everywhere: Cards/phones tap for almost all transport and small purchases in both countries.
- Sundays and bank holidays: Reduced train frequencies; book earlier/later departures to avoid crush loads.
- Driving the Ring: Start early to beat coaches; fuel up the evening before.
Coverage realities in rural UK & Ireland
- Expect signal fades on:
- A82/A87 (if detouring into the Highlands)
- Skellig Ring spurs and parts of Iveragh Peninsula
- Mitigations:
- Download offline areas and route pins.
- Enable Wi‑Fi Calling at your hotel for crisp calls.
- Keep “Low Data Mode” off if you’re relying on live navigation traffic reroutes.
If you’re planning more destinations, browse coverage notes for each country on Destinations.
Business and group travellers
- Remote work: Trains have mixed Wi‑Fi; use your eSIM hotspot where coverage is strong. Book accommodation with guaranteed desk space and reliable Wi‑Fi.
- Teams: Centralised purchasing and usage oversight are available via For Business.
- Tour operators/agents: Streamline client connectivity or bundle data with your trips through our Partner Hub.
Packing and power
- Plugs: UK and Ireland use Type G, 230V. Bring a quality adapter with built-in USB-C.
- In-car: A 12V charger and a sturdy cable for mapping. Windscreen mounts are useful on Kerry’s bends.
- Weather: Layers and a compact waterproof; shoes with grip for wet cobbles and viewpoints.
FAQ
- Do I need a car for the Ring of Kerry?
- No, but it helps. Small-group tours are an excellent stress-free alternative and avoid parking headaches.
- Flight or ferry between Scotland and Ireland?
- For this itinerary, fly Edinburgh–Dublin (about 1 hour). Ferries work if you want a Belfast stop or dislike flying, but take most of a day end-to-end.
- Will one eSIM work in both the UK and Ireland?
- Yes—choose a regional plan like Esim Western Europe to cover both without swapping SIMs.
- Will iMessage or WhatsApp break when I switch to an eSIM?
- No. Keep your home SIM active for SMS/voice, set the eSIM for data, and confirm iMessage’s Send & Receive settings. WhatsApp continues on your existing number unless you choose Change Number.
- How bad is rural coverage on the Ring of Kerry?
- Mostly fine on main roads with occasional dead zones. Download offline maps and cache playlists; you’ll regain 4G in towns like Kenmare, Sneem, and Cahersiveen.
- I’m extending to mainland Europe—do I need a new plan?
- Possibly not. Check the footprint of your regional plan. You can add or switch to country plans like Esim France, Esim Italy, or Esim Spain if needed.
Next step
Set up your cross-border data before you fly. Pick a regional plan for both countries on Esim Western Europe, and browse country specifics on Destinations.