Giants Causeway Day Tour
Explore the world famous Antrim Coast and UNESCO listed Giants Causeway free from the crowds and the queues. Building on our success with cruise ship passengers we have now launched a similar Giants Causeway Tour. Unlike any other operators, we deliver this tour the opposite way, firstly travelling inland, straight to the North Coast before most the other tours arrive. This allows us to spend more time at the Causeway site and enjoy the spectacular views with fewer people around.
Our tours are limited to small groups and offer a more personal experience. It also ensures you can maximise your time at each attraction and spend less time waiting on stragglers returning to the coach.
With the smaller groups, we use smaller vehicles and believe it really makes a difference to your experience. Odyssey get you to places that many of the big coaches cannot access and with our expert guides we provide a more relaxed and entertaining tour.
Tour Prices
Adult: £28
Student: £25
Senior Citizen: £25
Child: £19.50
Family (2 Adults and 2 Children): £89
National Trust Members – bring your membership card!



In the small village of Bushmills, settled on the banks of the river you’ll find the oldest working distillery in Ireland. Visit this place where the family and friends have worked for generations with the philosophy that hand crafting small batches is the way to produce beautifully smooth tasting Irish whiskey.
To travel along the Causeway Coastal Route is to experience one of the most dramatic drives in the world. Regarded as one of the World’s Greatest Road Journeys this stunning coastline will transport you past rugged and windswept cliffs, spectacular scenery and fabulous unspoilt beaches.
Duncluce Castle is a now-ruined medieval castle located on the edge of a basalt outcropping in County Antrim. Clinging fast onto a dramatic clifftop and accessible via a bridge from the mainland, Duncluce is thought to be the most romantic and picturesque Castle in Ireland dating back to the 14th C.
View the famous Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge, the bridge that was originally erected by local salmon fisherman over 300 years ago to cross to a small island to land their catch of Salmon.You will also see the small house on the island were the fishermen processed the fish before carrying them back across the bridge in baskets for sale at the local markets.
Nestled at the base of Glencoy, one of the picturesque Glens of Antrim, and situated on the shores of Carnlough Bay, this snug and compact harbor serves as the central hub of Carnlough village.

