Most relocation guides for Dublin are written to attract people, not inform them. They mention the "vibrant tech scene," reference a few pub names, and move on. This section is not that. If you're seriously want become a frontend developer in Dublin - or you've already accepted an offer and you're trying to figure out what you're walking into - you deserve a realistic picture, including the parts that are genuinely difficult.
Dublin is a city with real strengths and one serious structural problem. The strengths are well-documented. The problem is housing, and it affects quality of life at every salary level, including salaries that sound comfortable on paper.
The Housing Reality
This is the conversation Dublin will have with you whether you're ready for it or not, so it's better to have it now.
The average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Dublin city centre in 2026 is €2,100–€2,600 per month. That figure has risen approximately 15% over the past two years and shows no structural sign of reversing. On a €70K gross salary - roughly €3,816 take-home per month after tax — a city centre one-bedroom apartment consumes between 55% and 68% of your net income before you've bought groceries or paid a phone bill.
The realistic options look like this. Outside the M50 motorway - Dublin's orbital ring road - rents drop to €1,400-€1,900 per month for a one-bedroom. The tradeoff is commute time: 30-45 minutes by DART, bus, or Luas depending on where you land. The DART in particular is a reasonable commute corridor - the coastal rail line runs from Greystones in the south to Malahide in the north and is used heavily by tech workers at Dublin's southside and northside campuses. Shared accommodation in a house-share runs €900-€1,300 per month for a room, and is common among people arriving alone regardless of salary level. The social dimension of house-shares in Dublin is more normalised than in many European cities - you're not going to be the only 30-year-old in a shared house.
The practical advice on housing is specific: start looking four to six weeks before your intended move date, not two. Daft.ie and Myhome.ie are the two primary platforms, and between them they cover the overwhelming majority of the rental market. When you find something suitable, be ready to move within 24 hours - good properties at fair prices receive multiple applications on the day they're listed, and hesitating to "think about it" is how you lose them.
Have your documents ready in advance: passport, employment contract or offer letter, last three months' bank statements, and a reference from a previous landlord if you have one. Landlords in the Dublin market receive enough applications that a complete, immediately submittable application package is a genuine competitive advantage.
One more thing on housing that nobody says plainly: if your employer offers any kind of relocation assistance or temporary accommodation, use all of it. Arriving in Dublin with time to find housing properly, rather than under deadline pressure, meaningfully changes the quality of what you end up with.
The Cost of Living Beyond Rent
Rent is the dominant variable but not the only one. Dublin is an expensive city across most categories, though less uniformly than the housing situation might suggest.
Groceries are comparable to Western European averages - Lidl and Aldi have strong Dublin presences and are used without embarrassment at every income level. Eating out is expensive by most European standards: a sit-down dinner for two at a mid-range Dublin restaurant runs €70-€100 including drinks, and a decent lunch near a city centre office is €12-€18. Developers who cook most of their meals and treat restaurants as occasional rather than routine spend €300-€400 per month on food. Those who eat out frequently spend considerably more.
Transport is manageable if you use public transit or cycle. Dublin has a Leap Card system covering buses, the DART, and the Luas tram lines - a monthly commuter ticket runs €100–€140 depending on zones. Cycling infrastructure has improved significantly in the past few years, and a significant proportion of the tech workforce cycles to work.
Owning a car in Dublin city centre is expensive and largely unnecessary: parking is scarce, traffic is bad, and the public transit network covers the main tech campuses adequately. Most developers who own cars do so because they live in commuter belt areas outside the main DART and Luas corridors.
Healthcare sits in an awkward middle position. Ireland has a public health system - the HSE - but waiting times for non-emergency public care are long. Most tech employers include private health insurance as a standard benefit, and with Laya Healthcare or Irish Life Health coverage, access to private GP and consultant appointments is fast. If your employer offers health insurance as part of the package, it's worth significantly more than its stated cost as a benefit.
What's Genuinely Good About Living in Dublin as a Developer
The housing situation is real and it would be dishonest to minimise it. It's also not the whole picture.
The tech community is unusually active for a city this size. Dublin has a density of senior engineers, product leaders, and founders per capita that rivals cities several times larger. Meetups run regularly - React Dublin, NgDublin, Dublin JavaScript, and a rotating calendar of company-hosted technical talks. Conferences including Learnconf and Devoxx Ireland bring international speakers to the city.
The informal knowledge-sharing culture in Dublin tech is strong partly because so many companies' engineering teams are concentrated in a small geographic area - it's genuinely common to end up at a meetup beside an engineer from Google and another from a Series A startup and have a real conversation about production architecture problems.
The career acceleration is real and documented. One to two years of Dublin Big Tech experience opens doors globally in a way that equivalent experience in smaller markets does not. Many developers use Dublin deliberately as a career stepping stone - spend two or three years at Google EMEA or Stripe, build the CV line, then either move to a US office, return home with a significant salary bump, or use the network to land a senior role elsewhere in Europe. This is not a secret strategy; it's a recognised pattern that Dublin's tech community talks about openly.
English is the working language without exception. This is not a trivial point for developers relocating from countries where working in a second language carries a daily cognitive overhead. All major Dublin tech companies operate entirely in English. Client meetings, code reviews, architecture discussions, performance reviews - all English. The Irish language is constitutionally the first official language of Ireland but has no presence in the tech industry and is not spoken in any professional tech context.
Your EU status stays intact. Working in Ireland does not affect your rights as a citizen of another EU member state. You remain entitled to return to France, Germany, Poland, Spain, or wherever you're from, at any time, with full rights. You're not trading one home for another - you're adding Dublin as a temporary or permanent base while your underlying EU mobility remains untouched.
Dublin is the density of connection in a small tech community accelerates careers and friendships in ways that getting lost in a larger city doesn't.
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