Ireland: plug type, voltage, and travel adapter guide

Plug types
Type G
Voltage
230V
Frequency
50Hz

Ireland uses Type G outlets at 230V, 50Hz.

Do travellers to Ireland need an adapter?

It depends where you're coming from. Here's what we'd pack from the most common origins. Click any row for the full per-pair breakdown.

From Plug adapter Voltage converter Full guide
United Kingdom
Type G · 230V
Not needed Not needed United Kingdom → Ireland
Australia
Type I · 230V
Needed Not needed Australia → Ireland
Germany
Type C, F · 230V
Needed Not needed Germany → Ireland
France
Type C, E · 230V
Needed Not needed France → Ireland
Italy
Type C, F, L · 230V
Needed Not needed Italy → Ireland
Spain
Type C, F · 230V
Needed Not needed Spain → Ireland
Netherlands
Type C, F · 230V
Needed Not needed Netherlands → Ireland
Switzerland
Type C, J · 230V
Needed Not needed Switzerland → Ireland
Belgium
Type C, E · 230V
Needed Not needed Belgium → Ireland
United States
Type A, B · 120V
Needed Check devices United States → Ireland
Canada
Type A, B · 120V
Needed Check devices Canada → Ireland
Japan
Type A, B · 100V
Needed Check devices Japan → Ireland

Frequently asked

What type of plug does Ireland use?
Ireland uses Type G outlets at 230V, 50Hz.
What's the voltage in Ireland?
Ireland runs on 230V at 50Hz — that's the high-voltage standard. Dual-voltage devices (most phones, laptops, modern chargers labelled "100-240V") work as-is. Single-voltage devices like hair dryers, curling irons, and travel kettles do not without a converter.
Do I need a travel adapter for Ireland?
Only if your home country uses a different plug type. Travellers from any country whose plugs aren't Type G will need an adapter. Use the table above or the calculator to check your specific pair.

Check a specific pair

Not coming from one of the origins above? Drop your actual starting country in and we'll compute the verdict for you.