Tipping a taxi driver in Ireland is optional, not expected. The typical custom is to round the fare up to the nearest €5 or €10 on short journeys, and to add roughly 10 per cent on longer trips, on airport transfers, or any time the driver has helped with luggage. Cash is fine. Card tips are now standard since every taxi licensed in Ireland has been required to accept cashless payments from 01 September 2022.
That is the short answer. If you want to know when a tip is genuinely expected, what changed when card readers became mandatory, and how tipping a pre-booked private hire car differs from tipping a metered street taxi, the rest of this guide explains it from inside the Irish taxi trade.
How much do you tip a taxi driver in Ireland?
There is no standard percentage in Ireland the way there is in the United States. Most Irish passengers either pay the exact fare or round up.
| Journey type | Typical tip |
|---|---|
| Short metered hop in Dublin city | Round up to next €5 |
| Cross-town metered run | Round up to next €5 or €10 |
| Pre-booked Dublin Airport transfer to the city | Round up the flat fare, or add €2 – €5 if the driver helped with bags |
| Long pre-booked transfer to a regional city (Galway, Cork, Belfast) | 5 – 10 per cent if the driver loaded luggage and drove the route well |
| Private day tour from Dublin (e.g. Ring of Kerry from €320 per vehicle) | 10 per cent at the end is the established norm on guided tours |
Two reasons the percentage stays low compared with North America: fares already include the operating overhead of a licensed Small Public Service Vehicle (SPSV) in a regulated market, and Irish drivers earn the meter rate — there is no sub-minimum wage that tips are expected to top up.
When is a tip genuinely expected?
Has the driver helped with luggage?
Lifting suitcases out of the boot at Dublin Airport, manoeuvring around kerb-side restrictions, or carrying bags to a hotel reception desk is work that goes beyond the fare. Most Irish passengers add a couple of euros for this, even on short hops. If the driver has done the heavy lifting on multiple bags for a family transfer, a flat €5 or €10 is normal.
Is the journey unusually long or off-route?
A 25-minute run across Dublin is the meter doing its job. A 2 hour 30 minute private transfer to Galway, a cross-border run to Belfast, or a detour to a country house wedding venue is a different category. A 10 per cent tip on these longer fixed-rate transfers is appreciated and reasonably expected by experienced drivers.
Is it a private day tour?
When the driver has spent eight to twelve hours acting as both chauffeur and local guide — narrating the Cliffs of Moher, timing the Ring of Kerry against the light, waiting at every stop without complaint — a 10 per cent tip at drop-off is the established norm. This is the one scenario in Ireland where leaving nothing is genuinely unusual.
Is the driver hailed off the kerb, or pre-booked?
A hailed metered taxi in Dublin city is closer to the casual “round up the fare” custom. A pre-booked private hire transfer is closer to the day-tour model: bigger fare, longer interaction, more reason to leave something on top of the fixed price.
What changed when cashless payments became mandatory in 2022?
From 01 September 2022, the National Transport Authority (NTA) required every taxi, hackney and limousine driver in Ireland to accept cashless payments. The full guideline document is published on the NTA website. The practical change for passengers: every licensed taxi now carries a card terminal that takes contactless, chip and PIN, and major mobile-wallet payments.
What that means for tipping:
- A tip prompt appears on the screen. Most card terminals — SumUp, Square, Halo and similar — let the driver enable a tip option. The screen shows the fare and offers preset percentages (often 5, 10, 15) plus a “no tip” option.
- You are free to skip it. Drivers do not see whether you tipped on the terminal before you tap, and there is no social pressure built into the device. Choosing “no tip” or entering a custom €0 is normal and not rude.
- Cash tips still land in full with the driver. Card tips are processed through the driver’s merchant account and may settle in a day or two — most drivers prefer card tips to be a round amount.
- PayPal and FREE NOW added cashless tipping options inside their apps. If you booked the ride through an app, the tipping option usually appears on the receipt screen at the end of the journey.
Tipping etiquette quick reference
| Situation | Reasonable tip |
|---|---|
| Polite metered run, no luggage | Nothing or round up |
| Same run, driver loaded bags | Round up to nearest €5 |
| Airport transfer to/from Dublin city | Round up, or €2 – €5 for luggage help |
| Airport transfer to a regional city (long fixed-rate) | 5 – 10 per cent |
| Wedding or special-event transport | 10 per cent if service was attentive |
| Full-day private tour | 10 per cent at the end of the day |
| Driver waits 20 minutes at no extra charge | Round up generously, that is goodwill on their part |
| You change the destination mid-trip and the driver re-routes without complaint | Tip a couple of euros |
There is no expectation to tip if the driver was rude, drove erratically, or refused to assist with luggage on a fare where it was reasonably expected. The NTA accepts complaints about licensed SPSV operators through the Transport for Ireland complaints process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Irish taxi drivers expect tips like American drivers?
No. Irish drivers earn the metered fare and operate in a regulated market. Tipping is a token of appreciation, not a wage top-up.
Can I tip in dollars or pounds?
In Euros only. The local currency is EUR (€). Drivers are not banks and will not exchange foreign notes at a favourable rate.
Is a tip included in the fare?
No. The meter rate or pre-booked flat fare is the fare. Anything you add is your own decision.
Should I tip more on Christmas Eve or New Year’s Eve?
Many Dublin drivers work surcharge rates on public holidays, so the meter already reflects the date. A small extra tip is a nice gesture but not expected.
What if the driver refuses card payment?
Every SPSV-licensed driver has been required to accept cashless payments since 01 September 2022. If a driver refuses a card without a working terminal failure, you can record the licence details (visible inside the vehicle) and report it through Transport for Ireland.
Do I tip the driver of a pre-booked private hire car the same way?
For airport transfers and city-to-city transfers, the round-up custom applies — usually a few euros if the driver loaded luggage, or 5 – 10 per cent on longer fares. For full-day tours, 10 per cent at the end is standard.
Can I tip on the FREE NOW app or other ride apps?
Yes. FREE NOW added a cashless tipping option in Ireland through PayPal. Other apps display a tip prompt on the receipt screen at the end of the ride.