You land at Dublin Airport, phone in hand, and there they are — three taxi apps, all promising a car. FreeNow, Bolt, Uber. Which one do you actually open?
Here is the part nobody tells you before you arrive: in Dublin, all three charge the same fare. They book the same licensed taxis, running the same meter, set by the same regulator. Nobody is cheaper on the ride itself. What genuinely differs is the booking fee, how fast a car turns up, and — new for 2026 — which app the drivers themselves now prefer to work.
So the honest one-liner: install Bolt for the lowest fee and, lately, the shortest wait; keep FreeNow if you already have it; treat Uber as the backup. Everything below shows why.
Skip the app lottery for your airport run
Pre-book an Irish Ride transfer for one fixed price. A licensed driver, no booking fee, no surge, no waiting on an app to find a car.
The thing that surprises every visitor: the fare is identical
Every taxi in Ireland runs a meter calibrated to one national tariff set by the National Transport Authority (NTA). Open any app you like — the meter is the meter. Roughly, a daytime fare starts at €4.40, then ~€1.32/km; nights, Sundays and holidays start at €5.40, then ~€1.81/km. A Dublin Airport → city-centre run lands around €27–€38 whichever app you use.
There is no UberX, no private driver in their own car, no app “dynamic price” that undercuts the meter. Every FreeNow, Bolt and Uber car in Dublin is a licensed Small Public Service Vehicle with an NTA driver. (New to that idea? We break it down in Uber in Dublin: how it actually works.)
So when you ask “which app is cheapest in Dublin?”, the accurate answer is: the one with the lowest booking fee that day — because the fare underneath is fixed.

FreeNow vs Bolt vs Uber — the 2026 comparison
| App | Status in Dublin | Booking fee | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bolt | Growing fastest; drivers increasingly favour it | Usually lowest, plus promo codes | Lowest fees, first-timers, shorter waits | Fewer large / luxury cars |
| Freenow (by Lyft) | Long-established, deepest driver pool | Mid — up to the €3 NTA cap | Peak-hour availability, business receipts | Commission hike thinned some suburbs |
| Uber | Same taxi-only model (UberTaxi) | Mid, €1–€3 | Travellers already on Uber | Smallest Dublin fleet, longest wait |
| Rank / hail | Everywhere in the city & airport | None | Airport arrivals, nightlife streets | No fixed price; scarce when it rains |
| Pre-booked Irish Ride | Private transfer, book ahead | None | Airport certainty, groups, late-night | Book ahead, not on-demand |
The takeaway: the three apps sit closer to each other than any of them is to a fixed-fare transfer. App choice moves your total by a euro or two of fee. Pre-booking a fixed fare is what removes the meter, the surge premium and the toll from the equation.
Why drivers are quietly switching apps (and why that helps you)
For years the answer to “which app finds a car fastest?” was simply “FreeNow, it has the most drivers.” 2026 changed that.
FreeNow raised its driver commission to around 25%. Bolt charges drivers roughly 10%. Drivers noticed — every fare, they keep more on Bolt — and a steady stream of them have made Bolt their main app.
What the driver keeps is your business too: the lower Bolt’s cut, the more drivers favour it — which is why Bolt pickups have got noticeably faster in 2026.
The practical result for you as a passenger:
- Off-peak, suburbs, daytime → Bolt usually finds a car fastest, and cheapest on the fee.
- Peak chaos in the city centre (Friday closing time, a match at Croke Park, a wet rush hour) → FreeNow’s deeper bench is the safer bet.
- Uber → will get you a car, it just tends to be the longest wait, because its Dublin fleet is smallest.
So which is actually cheapest?
Where “cheapest app” stops mattering at all is the late-night meter and the airport run:
The meter is the same on every app. The only real jump is the 00:00–04:00 weekend Special tariff (+€7–€10). A pre-booked fixed fare doesn’t move — toll included.
That is the real cost lever: not FreeNow vs Bolt, but metered app vs fixed-fare prebook for the airport, the late-night run and the long trip — where a locked quote is often cheaper once the fee and the €3.80 M50 toll are counted, and never surges.
What “Freenow by Lyft” means for you
If you last used it as plain FreeNow, note the change: Lyft completed its acquisition of FreeNow in January 2026 (a ~€175m deal, bought from BMW and Mercedes-Benz). Day to day in Dublin, nothing broke — same taxis, same meter, same local team. The app is now branded Freenow by Lyft.
The genuinely useful part is for transatlantic travellers: Lyft and FreeNow have linked their networks, so US visitors who use Lyft at home can carry that into the FreeNow app in Dublin, with introductory offers across the two. Flying in from the States with Lyft already on your phone? FreeNow is the natural app to open on arrival.

Best app by traveller type
- First-time tourist, few days in Dublin — install one app, not three. Make it Bolt for the lowest fees and promo codes. Add FreeNow only if you’re out late at the weekend.
- American visitor already on Lyft — open Freenow (by Lyft); your account and any cross-network offer come with you.
- Business traveller expensing rides — FreeNow has the most mature business-account and receipt tooling, and the deepest availability when you need a car now between meetings.
- Late-night, group, or airport arrival with luggage — this is where an app is the wrong tool (more below). Pre-book a fixed fare and name the vehicle before the driver leaves.
Are they all equally safe?
Yes — and it’s the regulation, not the app, that makes them safe. Every Bolt, FreeNow and Uber driver in Dublin is the same NTA-licensed SPSV driver who has:
- Passed Garda Síochána (police) vetting
- Completed the NTA Industry Skills Development Programme
- A vehicle inspected annually and badged with the NTA roof sign and door sticker
Check any driver’s licence on the NTA Driver Check tool; complaints go to the same regulator whichever app booked the car. In-app safety features — live trip-share, emergency button — work the same across all three. Safety isn’t a reason to pick one app over another here.
When to skip the apps entirely
The apps are fine for hopping across the city. They’re the wrong tool for three trips:
| Situation | Why the app struggles | Better option |
|---|---|---|
| Dublin Airport at peak arrivals | App cars route to a pickup zone 4–6 min walk from arrivals; the rank is 30 seconds away | The marshalled rank, or a meet-in-arrivals prebook |
| A full day out (Cliffs of Moher, Giant’s Causeway) | The meter runs for 12 hours and the driver won’t wait at viewpoints | A private day trip with driver, fuel and tolls included |
| Groups of 5+ or lots of luggage | A saloon seats four with modest bags; apps reject or mis-size the car | A pre-booked 7-seat MPV, specified up front |

Beyond the city
Private Day Trips from Dublin
Group, late-night, or airport arrival?
Tell us how many people and how much luggage. We send the right vehicle for one fixed price — no app roulette at 2am.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best taxi app in Dublin?
For the lowest booking fee and, in 2026, often the shortest wait, Bolt. For the deepest driver pool at genuine peak and the best business tools, Freenow (by Lyft). Uber works but usually has the smallest Dublin fleet. The metered fare is identical on all three, so choose on fees and availability, not price.
Which is cheaper in Dublin — FreeNow, Uber or Bolt?
The ride costs the same on all three, because the NTA meter is regulated. The only difference is the booking fee, where Bolt is usually lowest and most likely to have a promo code. For airport and long trips, a pre-booked fixed fare often beats every app once the fee and M50 toll are added.
Is Bolt or FreeNow better in Dublin?
Does FreeNow still work after the Lyft takeover?
Yes. Lyft completed its acquisition of FreeNow in January 2026 and the app is now Freenow by Lyft. In Dublin it’s the same licensed taxis and the same meter. If you use Lyft in the US, you can now use it through the FreeNow network here.
Is there an Uber in Dublin?
Yes, but only as UberTaxi — it books the same licensed SPSV taxis as the other apps, not private drivers. There’s no UberX in Ireland. Full detail in our Uber in Dublin guide.
Which taxi app do Dublin drivers prefer?
Increasingly Bolt, because its driver commission (~10%) is well below FreeNow’s (~25% in 2026), so drivers keep more of each fare — which is why Bolt availability has improved so much. Many still run FreeNow too, to catch peak demand.
Do I need all three apps?
No. For a short visit, one is enough — install Bolt. Add Freenow (by Lyft) only if you’ll be out late at weekends or need business receipts. For a guaranteed airport pickup or a group, pre-book a fixed-fare transfer instead.
Want the price locked before you land?
Skip the booking fees and the surge. Pre-book a fixed-fare private transfer with a licensed Irish driver — one price, toll included.