Cork Pubs
Where the locals drink — from the hidden 1787 snug of Mutton Lane Inn to the Franciscan Well's monastery-wall beer garden and Sin É's trad sessions.
Category
Area
Budget
Tags
4 places
Bar / Pub
Moderate
Franciscan Well Brewery
Cork City Centre
Cork's original craft brewery — a 1998 microbrewery on the site of a 13th-century Franciscan monastery, famous for its beer garden and wood-fired pizza.
From €7
Tip: Their beer garden is one of Cork's best summer spots; it's on the site of a 13th-century Franciscan monastery (the wall at the back is the original). Pint + wood-fired pizza combo is a Cork classic.
Bar / Pub
Moderate
Mutton Lane Inn
Cork City Centre
Hidden down a narrow alley, this tiny candlelit pub tucked beside the English Market has been pouring pints of Murphy's and Guinness since 1787.
From €6
Tip: Hidden down a narrow alley off St Patrick's Street — blink and you'll miss the entrance. Candlelit, atmospheric, pleasantly cramped. Good for a quiet pint; no TV, no music, just conversation.
Bar / Pub
Moderate
Sin É
Cork City Centre
Cork's most atmospheric traditional Irish music pub — small, no-frills, and famous for its regular trad sessions on Tuesdays and Sundays.
From €6
Tip: Trad sessions every Tuesday and Sunday evening — arrive by 8:30pm for a seat within earshot. Name means 'That's It' in Irish. Intimate venue; musicians play in the middle of the floor rather than on a stage.
Bar / Pub
Moderate
The Oval Bar
Cork City Centre
Classic Cork locals' boozer on South Main Street — Beamish on tap, Sunday roasts, and a proper working pub away from the tourist pubs.
From €6
Tip: Classic Cork locals' pub — no tourist trails here. Beamish on tap (the other Cork stout, less famous than Murphy's but worth trying). Good Sunday roast if you're hungry.
