Road The
N11 road leads out from the city, passing through Stillorgan, towards the major commuter town of
Bray. It bypassed Stillorgan's centre since the mid-1970s when the Stillorgan Bypass was opened to the east. The N11 hosts the 'Stillorgan Bus Corridor' (QBC) which runs along the road in both directions from
St. Stephen's Green to
Foxrock. Stillorgan is a major bus interchange and the Stillorgan QBC is the most heavily used in Ireland, featuring two of Dublin's busiest and most frequent bus routes, the E2 to
Dún Laoghaire, the E1 to Bray. Other bus routes serving Stillorgan include the 11, 47 and L25 as well as the peak time-only routes X1, X2, 116 and 118. All of these are operated by
Dublin Bus.
Go-Ahead Ireland also used to operate the 75 through Stillorgan until 26 November 2023 when it was replaced with the L25.
Aircoach provides a direct link to the
Dublin Airport via Dublin city centre.
Rail The
Luas Green line runs on the border of Stillorgan and Sandyford between the reservoir and the Sandyford Industrial Estate over the route of the
old Harcourt Street line from Dublin to Bray. Stillorgan is served by two Luas stops, the eponymous
Stillorgan Luas stop, and
Sandyford; both stops opened with the line in 2004. The Stillorgan stop is approximately south-west of the village with
park and ride facilities, a commuter bus link to the shopping centre and a journey time to Dublin
O'Connell street of about half an hour. Sandyford is situated 450 metres south of Stillorgan with the Luas depot behind it. It was the original terminus of the green line, but the Luas has since been extended away from the course of the old railway line to
Brides Glen, though some services still terminate at Sandyford. The earlier Stillorgan railway station was situated to the south of the current Luas depot, past Sandyford stop. It opened on 10 July 1854 following the opening of the
Dublin and Wicklow Railway, closed for goods traffic in 1937, and finally closed altogether on 1 January 1959 when
CIÉ mothballed the Harcourt Street line. The station building became a private residence and the pumping station near the reservoir is all that survives with it. The nearest railway station today is
Blackrock, which a 10-minute drive and 36 minute walk from the village. A
National Transport Authority consultation paper, published in 2018, proposed that the
MetroLink would stop alongside Stillorgan's Luas station on its way from Estuary to Sandyford. This was dropped the following year, as it was feared it would disrupt the Luas for a few years, and the updated Metrolink proposal projects a stop at
Charlemont instead. ==Representation==