Trump International Golf Links and Hotel Doonbeg
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Review
Character and identity
Set on a remote stretch of west County Clare, this 65-suite resort occupies a stone manor that looks centuries old but was in fact built in 2006, designed in the manner of a nineteenth-century seaside estate. Accommodations run from one to four bedrooms, with high ceilings, gas fireplaces, kitchens and antiques-filled interiors. The links course hugging 1.5 miles of Doughmore Bay coastline is the headline draw. Ocean View Restaurant handles the seasonal tasting menus, White Horses Spa works in seawater-based rituals, and the staff register is warm, anticipatory Irish hospitality: fireplaces lit before arrival, scavenger hunts arranged for kids.
Who's it for
Best for:
Golfers who want a genuinely thrilling, wind-battered links experience, and families who value space (suites with kitchens), a structured kids' programme, and a secluded coastal setting. Also couples after a fireplace-and-Guinness, walk-the-cliffs kind of stay, with the Cliffs of Moher and Aillwee Cave within day-trip range.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers seeking urban culture, restaurant variety or a buzzy scene will find Doonbeg quiet and remote. Design purists hunting authentic period architecture should know the "stately manor" is a 2006 American-designed build, and the weather can derail outdoor plans for days.
Bottom line
The pull here is the combination of a dramatic, genuinely remote Atlantic links and a service culture that ranks among the warmest in Ireland, all wrapped in a manor-style setting that is convincing even if newly built. Book a sea-facing suite, come for the golf or the walking, and travel in late spring or early autumn when the light is best and the course is at its most playable.