Short answer: a guided deer stalking trip in Ireland in 2026 typically runs from €1,750 for a 3-day Sika package up to €7,400 for the higher-end trophy or multi-species trips, with the most common visiting hunter spend landing around €2,600–€3,500 for a 4-day package. Prices vary based on species, accommodation and whether trophy fees are included.
Longer answer below — with a breakdown of what actually sits inside a quote, what doesn't, and where the cheap packages hide their real cost.
Typical 2026 Prices Across Irish Outfitters
Based on current pricing from operating Irish outfitters:
| Package type | Typical price | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 3-day Sika cull / management | €1,750 – €2,200 | Midlands Deer Stalking |
| 4-day mixed (Sika + fox + fishing) | €2,400 – €2,800 | IrishSafaris (~€2,600 ex VAT) |
| 4-day Sika trophy stag | €3,000 – €4,500 | Various Wicklow outfitters |
| 5-day trophy + multi-species | €4,500 – €7,400 | High-end BookYourHunt listings |
| Day stalk (locals, no accommodation) | €250 – €450 | Most outfitters on request |
What's Usually Included
- Guided stalking with a qualified Irish stalker (ratio usually 1:1)
- Access to the outfitter's permissions / leases
- Field preparation of carcasses (gralloch) and handover to licensed game dealer or taxidermist
- Ground transport from lodge to hunting ground
- Accommodation (for packaged trips — often at the outfitter's lodge)
- Meals, typically B&B or full board depending on lodge
What's Usually NOT Included
- Flights, ferries or transfers to Ireland. Dublin Airport is the closest for Wicklow-based operators; Cork, Shannon and Knock work better for Munster / west coast trips.
- Trophy fees on higher-grade stags. Some packages include one animal "up to X CIC points"; anything above is charged extra — often €500–€1,500 for a gold medal head.
- Firearm rental if you're not bringing your own (typically €100–€200 for the trip, plus ammunition).
- Temporary Irish firearms certificate paperwork — the outfitter usually handles it for a small admin fee.
- Meat export if you want to take carcass or venison home. Usually not included and often not practical.
- VAT — some outfitters quote ex-VAT (23% standard rate).
- Gratuity for your stalker (€80–€150 per day is reasonable; more for a trophy hunt).
Why Ireland Isn't the Cheapest — and That's OK
Eastern European destinations like Poland, Hungary and Romania often advertise cheaper packages on paper. Ireland's edge is different: free-range, genuinely wild deer on large estates or forestry permissions, English-speaking guides, easy travel from the UK and USA, and a short trip (no high-fence surprises). Visiting hunters routinely describe the Wicklow Sika rut as one of the most atmospheric hunts in Europe.
If you're choosing primarily on cost, a Polish red stag trip might work out cheaper. If you want wild free-range deer in a hunting-first culture with short logistics, Ireland is priced correctly.
Solo vs Group Pricing
Most Irish outfitters quote per hunter but discount groups of 2–4. Solo trips are usually priced around 10–15% higher per head because one guide has to be dedicated to the single hunter. If you can bring a friend, the per-head drop is usually €200–€500.
Day Stalks for Irish Residents
If you hold your own Irish Firearms Certificate and just want a single-day guided stalk with outfitter access to ground you don't have permission on, expect €250–€450 per day, not including trophy fees. This is the cheapest way to hunt managed ground in Ireland.
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