Rocky road: Driving Ireland's Wild Atlantic Way

This coastal route takes you on an invigorating trail through some of western Ireland’s most dramatic scenery, says Philip Watson

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Achill Island, just off the Mayo coast, near Westport
(Image credit: Tourism Ireland)

Think of the world’s greatest road trips, and America’s classic Route 66 and sunny Pacific Coast Highway no doubt come to mind, as does the heady romance of the Riviera’s Grande Corniche or Italy’s Amalfi Coast. You don’t automatically think of wet and windswept Ireland. That changed, however, with the launch of the Wild Atlantic Way (WAW) two years ago, a 1,500-mile route along the entire dramatic west coast. Described as the ‘wildest, most captivating coastal driving route in the world’ by Tourism Ireland, which invested more than £8m in the project, the WAW stretches from the magnificent Malin Head in the north to the historic harbour town of Kinsale in the south.

The route boasts countless places to stop and take in the sculpted coastlines, stunning beaches and spectacular ocean views, as well as 159 major tourism ‘discovery points’, all of which can be found on-the-go on the WAW app. Dwarfing other scenic driving routes such as Australia’s Great Ocean Road and the Garden Route in South Africa, the WAW is now the ‘world’s longest defined coastal tourist trail’. However, most of all, it offers a sense of discovery – and often remoteness – that you would usually have to journey 10 times as far to find.

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