Holiday rentals in Belfast

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Popular amenities for Belfast holiday rentals

Stay near Belfast's top sights

Titanic Belfast324 locals recommend
Ormeau Park64 locals recommend
Belfast Castle83 locals recommend
SSE Arena Belfast72 locals recommend
Grand Opera House66 locals recommend
Crumlin Road Gaol Visitor Attraction and Conference Centre142 locals recommend

Quick stats about holiday rentals in Belfast

  • Total rentals

    2K properties

  • Rentals with dedicated workspaces

    840 properties have a dedicated workspace

  • Rentals with a pool

    10 properties have a pool

  • Pet-friendly rentals

    250 properties allow pets

  • Family-friendly rentals

    1K properties are a good fit for families

  • Total number of reviews

    118K reviews

Your guide to Belfast

Welcome to Belfast

Alive with arts, culture, and urban energy, not to mention an irresistible food-and-drink scene, Belfast is possibly the hippest of the UK capitals. Industrial architecture from its heyday as a shipbuilding port — don’t forget to include a visit to its award-winning Titanic museum — now houses boutique shops, galleries, and music venues. The cobbled streets of the Cathedral Quarter, once home to the city’s newspaper, are the centre of Belfast’s fashionable bar and restaurant scene.

Historic buildings range from the classic Victoriana of the Grand Opera House to the baronial grandeur of Belfast Castle. The city’s transformation from its more recent troubled past can be witnessed in the new street art that flourishes alongside the political murals of once-divided West Belfast, now known as the Gaeltacht Quarter. The leafy college grounds and surrounds of Queen’s University include the 28-acre Botanic Gardens, with the Ulster Museum at its entrance; within 30 minutes you can be out of the city entirely, and on Northern Ireland’s ruggedly beautiful North Coast.


The best time to stay in a holiday rental in Belfast

Belfast keeps a busy calendar. Its cultural life is so vibrant that there are events and festivals every week of the year, celebrating film, comedy, fashion, food, and design. The Cathedral Quarter is particularly fun in May, when it stages its own arts festival, while in June tens of thousands of visitors flock to the world-renowned Photo Festival. There’s traditional music everywhere in July, and August is the month of both Mela and Pride. October brings travelers to the city for the flagship Belfast International Arts Festival. For the warmest and sunniest weather, June to August is your best bet, though spring and autumn are perfectly pleasant (if unpredictably rainy), and there’s much to enjoy through the winter months, too.


Top things to do in Belfast

Sir Thomas and Lady Dixon Park

This former 18th-century estate south of the city was turned into a park in 1959. Its 128 acres combine woodland, walled gardens, rolling meadows, and a sparkling fountain. A world-famous rose garden draws thousands of visitors each summer, when it’s in full bloom.

The Maritime Mile

Belfast’s waterfront is awash with seafaring history. The stretch of the River Lagan from the Big Fish sculpture at Donegall Quay to Thompson Dock — the last place the Titanic rested on dry ground — takes you past some of its major landmarks. The marina is also a lively spot for dining and entertainment.

Cave Hill Country Park

Belfast’s most visible natural landmark, this rocky bluff can be seen from almost anywhere in the city. There’s a relatively steep trail leading to the 368-metre summit, an Iron Age hill fort. But if that sounds exhausting, you’ll find plenty of walking routes around its lower slopes that take in woodland scenery as well as the caves themselves, which are thought to be ancient iron mines.

Destinations to explore