KD-class double-decker bus in 1994 bodied
Volvo Olympian in May 2003 bodied
Volvo B7TL in August 2006 Dublin Bus operates an extensive network of 110 radial, cross-city and peripheral routes and 18 nighttime routes in the city of
Dublin and the
Greater Dublin Area. The company carries around 325,000 people each day. The main radial routes are focused upon Dublin's sixteen
Quality Bus Corridors which provide buses with prioritised access, daytime on some routes, 24 hours on others, to the city centre. Express buses (branded "Xpresso") operate on similar routes but have a limited number of stops and a higher minimum fare. These services run Monday to Friday at peak times and do not operate on public holidays; no bus services operate at all on
Christmas Day. Dublin Bus also runs a
Ghost Bus Tour passing some of the supposedly haunted places in the city including
St Kevin's Church and
St Audoen's Church. The tour usually runs in the evening time and includes two stops where passengers leave the bus behind and visit locations where ghosts have allegedly been seen. (The term "ghost bus" is also used for the unrelated phenomenon of normal scheduled services that fail to arrive.) In April 2010, Dublin Bus announced it would be simplifying many of its routes around the city in order to create better efficiency. This programme was called Network Direct. However, as part of these measures, the company also announced that 150 jobs would be lost. . During the 2010s, Dublin Bus rolled out an RTPI system (Real Time Passenger Information) at certain stops, which shows the amount of time before a bus arrives directly to the user. In 2016, the company carried 125 million passengers, which was a reduction of 14% compared to 2005 numbers (first full year of the
Luas, which has seen an increase of 33.6% passengers in the same period). Between September 2018 and March 2019, 24 Dublin Bus routes and 125 buses were progressively taken over by
Go-Ahead Ireland after the
National Transport Authority put their operation out to tender, however an equivalent number of new buses were provided to Dublin Bus to retain existing fleet numbers, with increased services and new routes or route variations introduced on the same day as Go-Ahead took over each route batch. In October 2023, route 99 began operating as a shuttle service between Parkgate Street and the
Phoenix Park Visitor Centre. The 99 is the first Dublin Bus route to serve Chesterfield Avenue and important Phoenix Park sites such as
Áras an Uachtaráin. This route was not included in the
BusConnects network, and was not introduced as part of a BusConnects phase. In September 2024, route 65a between
Tallaght and
Blessington was inaugurated as part of service improvements in the Blessington area. This route was also implemented separate to BusConnects.
Nitelink On 6 December 1991 Dublin Bus launched its first 'Nitelink' service aimed at facilitating Christmas revellers returning home from the city centre. The trial service operated from 6 December 1991 to 4 January 1992 (except for certain holidays) on a Mon-Sun basis and cost a flat fare of
£2 per person irrespective of how long or short their journey. Nitelink initially consisted of only four routes serving 12 suburban destinations in total with buses leaving on the hour every hour until 3am, from
College Street,
D'Olier Street and
Westmoreland Street. By 2014 there were 18 Nitelink routes running again. Route 25n was discontinued on 16 October 2022 as part of Phase 4. Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, Nitelink services were paused between March 2020 and January 2022 Nitelink services eventually returned to full operating hours from Friday 28 January 2022. Each of the route numbers is suffixed by the letter 'n' to denote their night status. Special (higher) fares apply on Nitelink buses than regular daytime bus services. On 2 September 2022
TFI announced that Nitelink fares across all 13 routes were being reduced with immediate effect;
Leap fares by 33% and cash fares by 43%. Sorin Costica, Head of Operations at Dublin Bus said the reduction in fares would "...help reduce night-time carbon emissions by encouraging people to take the bus as opposed to travelling by car."
24-hour services In 2014, Dublin Bus began looking to expand their Nitelink network and also introduce a new dedicated
all-night service in the city. By late 2016, Dublin Bus 'Media and Communications Officer' Jennifer O'Brien stated that the company was looking at the possibility of introducing a 24-hour bus service in Dublin from 2017 in conjunction with the National Transport Authority on a phased basis. That same year, Dublin City Councillor
Ciarán Cuffe (who also chaired the council's transport committee) said Dublin needed to look at extending the public-transport service at night noting that the last regular bus left the city at around 11:30pm each weeknight and the last
Luas at around half past twelve, or midnight on Sundays. 39a, 41, C1, C2, C3/5, C4/6, N4, G1, G2, E1, E2, F1, F2, and 80. It has been noted, however, that the service frequency on some of the 24-hour routes at night is insufficient, leading to buses to become filled to capacity. The failure of some scheduled buses showing up at night has also been flagged as an issue.
15 and 41 At midnight on 1 December 2019, routes 15 and 41 began operating on a 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week basis with no difference in fare, marking the first time Dublin had a regular night bus service. These buses depart their terminals at intervals of 30 minutes between the hours of 11.30pm and 05:00am. Announcing the change, the
NTA CEO Anne Graham explained "The patterns of work and socialising have changed. For instance, the success in attracting to the city, major employers who are headquartered many time-zones away, serving markets around the world, means that commercial and economic activity in Dublin continues around the clock". In June 2022, chief executive of Dublin Bus Ray Coyne told 'Breakfast Business' on
Newstalk radio that of the six 24-hour services the company was currently running, route number 15 was "probably the most successful one". He added "We're looking to see if we can increase the frequency on those (six 24-hour services)... the demand is extremely high".
39a Route 39a began 24-hour operation on 13 December 2020.
C Spine (C1, C2, C5, C6) On 28 November 2021 the National Transport Authority implemented Phase 2 of the rollout of its latest Dublin network with the C Spine, that consists of new C1-C4 routes serving the west of the city. The C1 and C2 services operate 24-hours a day, while the C3 and C4 buses turn into the C5 and C6, that operate through
Chapelizod village instead of via the
Chapelizod bypass at night. The night-time routes operate every hour, starting between 11:36pm and 00:35am every night of the week, and ending at 4am when normal services commence. Upon the introduction of the C Spine,
Minister for Transport Eamon Ryan said that it "provides the communities on its route not just increased frequency, but also a night service offering commuters 24-hour bus connections."
N4 As part of BusConnects Phase 3, the N4 (
Blanchardstown Shopping Centre –
Point Village via
Collins Avenue), came into operation on 29 May 2022. Driver shortages would also delay the rollout of the G-Spine routes later in the year. Anne Graham, CEO of the
NTA, stated that "Today's launch is one further step in the delivery of an effective and efficient bus service for the Dublin city region. The network is beginning to take shape and we are confident that this Phase will be just as successful as the previous ones."
G Spine (G1, G2) Phase 4 consisting of the G-Spine of routes G1 and G2 (both 24-hour), and daytime route 60, was launched on 16 October 2022. Route G1 runs from the
Red Cow Luas stop to
Spencer Dock via
Ballyfermot and the city centre, and G2 operates much the same route but instead connects
Liffey Valley Shopping Centre with Spencer Dock, via Ballyfermot and the city centre. Overnight, the G1 and G2 run every hour between 12pm and 5am. One week after the routes launched,
Senator Mary Seery Kearney noted she had already received numerous complaints concerning the new routes, with instances of buses not turning up and buses being full. Seery Kearney explained she had contacted the Oireachtas Transport Committee to urgently seek a meeting to review the situation. The route of the 80, as well as another two daytime routes brought in as part of the phase, were altered in February 2026 following complaints.
Proposed developments hybrid in the new TFI colours In May 2022, Dublin Bus announced it was considering the expansion of a 24-hour service to include a route that serves
Bray. In June 2022, Ray Coyne mentioned that Dublin Bus wanted to increase the frequency of buses operating on their six 24-hour routes. The E and F routes are proposed to serve the
Charlestown Shopping Centre and Northwood areas, the city centre, Bray and
Dún Laoghaire. The O-orbital route are due to serve the
North and
South Circular Road areas. Acting CEO of Dublin Bus, Andrea Keane, emphasised the economic importance of the service in 2022 noting that "The night-time economy in Dublin is growing post-pandemic and the TFI Network is expanding to reflect that. Night-time commuters can now hop on Dublin Bus services to get home affordably". ==BusConnects==