Perched on the edge of Galway Bay, Inis Mór is the largest of the three Aran Islands — a wind-sculpted limestone world of ancient forts, drystone walls, and an Irish language still very much alive. Most cruise ships tender into Kilronan Pier, where ponies, bikes, and minibuses wait to whisk you to one of Europe's most dramatic prehistoric sites.
There is no cruise pier on the Aran Islands. Ships anchor in Kilronan Bay and run their own tenders to the stone quay in Kilronan village.
💡 Pro move: The Aran Islands are a tender-only destination. No cruise ship berths at a fixed dock. Weather can curtail or cancel the call entirely.
All cruise calls anchor in Kilronan Bay; tenders ferry passengers the short distance to the stone quay in the centre of Kilronan village.
| Cruise Line | Typical Berth / Arrival | Dock or Tender |
|---|---|---|
| Expedition & small ship lines (Hapag-Lloyd, Hebridean, etc.) | Kilronan Bay anchorage → Kilronan Pier, Inis Mór📍 | Tendered |
| Occasional larger vessels | Kilronan Bay anchorage → Kilronan Pier, Inis Mór📍 | Tendered |
A half-day is enough to hit the island's headline prehistoric fort; a full day lets you cycle the coast, find the Wormhole, and spot grey seals.
The island's unmissable sight: a massive semicircular stone fort from around 1100 BC, balanced on the rim of a near-100-metre sea cliff with nothing but Atlantic below. A small visitor centre at the base leads to a 15-minute uphill walk to the fort itself.
Find Dún Aonghasa tours →Hire a bike at Kilronan Pier and follow the island's main road westward through a patchwork of drystone walls. The 14 km route to the far end passes Kilmurvey Beach, Dún Aonghasa, and the limestone terraces of the karst interior. E-bikes available.
Book bike hire →A perfectly rectangular tidal pool carved by nature into the black limestone near Gort na gCapall — a geological oddity that gained fame as a Red Bull Cliff Diving venue. Best reached by bike or the off-road jeep tour; the path is rough.
Find island jeep tours →Near Kilmurvey Beach, a signposted viewing point on the road to Dún Aonghasa overlooks a resident colony of Atlantic grey seals. Picnic benches overlook the rocks — arrive at low tide for the best viewing.
Find cycling + seal tours →The most traditional way to see Inis Mór: a local driver narrates the island's history, folklore, and daily life from the seat of a horse-drawn cart, stopping at key landmarks. Tours depart directly from Kilronan Pier.
Book pony and trap tour →The Na Seacht dTeampaill ruins date to the early Christian period, alongside intriguing clocháns — dry-stone beehive huts once used by hermit monks. A quieter alternative to the busier Dún Aonghasa trail.
Find island heritage tours →The island's signposted Lúb Dún Eochla loop covers about 10 km from Kilronan Pier and is manageable within a typical ship call.
Walk the main island road west through Kilmurvey village to the Dún Aonghasa visitor centre, then climb the flagstone path to the cliff-top fort. Return the same way or catch a minibus back. Allow at least 4 hours round-trip.
🗺️ See full route in Maps →A waymarked looped trail starting from Kilronan that climbs to Dún Eochla, a circular early medieval stone fort with 360° views across the island, before looping back to the village. Well signed; no specialist gear needed.
📍 Open in MapsClimate normals for Aran Islands, Connacht, Ireland (2014–2023 averages). Pack for the month you sail — highs, lows, and how many rainy days to expect.
| Month | Avg High | Avg Low | Rainy Days |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 49°F / 9°C | 45°F / 7°C | 21 |
| Feb | 48°F / 9°C | 44°F / 7°C | 19 |
| Mar | 48°F / 9°C | 44°F / 7°C | 16 |
| Apr | 51°F / 11°C | 46°F / 8°C | 12 |
| May | 54°F / 12°C | 50°F / 10°C | 14 |
| Jun | 59°F / 15°C | 55°F / 13°C | 15 |
| Jul | 61°F / 16°C | 58°F / 14°C | 17 |
| Aug | 61°F / 16°C | 58°F / 14°C | 19 |
| Sep | 60°F / 16°C | 57°F / 14°C | 16 |
| Oct | 57°F / 14°C | 53°F / 12°C | 20 |
| Nov | 53°F / 12°C | 49°F / 9°C | 20 |
| Dec | 50°F / 10°C | 46°F / 8°C | 22 |
Source: Open-Meteo ERA5 (10-yr daily averages)
Upcoming cruises that call at Aran Islands, Connacht, Ireland. Dates, prices, and ports of call change — always confirm with the cruise line before booking.
Itineraries and prices change — always confirm with the cruise line before booking. Some links are affiliate links that may earn us a commission at no extra cost to you.