Paris Dublin
Charles de Gaulle sends a flight to Dublin every hour, split between Air France and Aer Lingus. Both fly narrowbodies. Under two hours, the cabins are close enough that your schedule is the only tiebreaker.
Book from Charles de Gaulle. If you carry SkyTeam status, go with Air France. If you are connecting onward to the US on Aer Lingus, book Aer Lingus for the through-fare.
If you live south of the Seine or near Orly, Transavia and Vueling fly Orly to Dublin daily. Fares run lower, and skipping the RER B trek to Charles de Gaulle saves time on the ground.
Ryanair flies from Beauvais-Tillé, which search engines label "Paris." It is 55 miles north of the city. The bus alone takes over an hour and costs enough to close most of the fare gap. Unless you happen to be in Picardy, skip it.
Air France's flights codeshare with Delta and JetBlue. If you are building a trip from the US, this Paris-Dublin leg can fold into a transatlantic ticket at no added cost. Check the multi-city fare before buying it standalone.
Have a specific need? Use the decision guide below to filter by your airline, where you live, lounges, or where you're staying in Dublin.
Pick What Matters to You
Best pair by where you're coming from
Best pair by where you're staying in Dublin
Which pair your airline flies nonstop
| Airline | CDG–DUB | ORY–DUB | BVA–DUB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air France | ✓ | — | — |
| Ryanair | — | — | ✓ |
| Vueling | — | ✓ | — |
| Aer Lingus | ✓ | — | — |
| Transavia France | — | ✓ | — |
Ranked by on-time performance
Lounge access by airport and terminal
Ranked by flights per week
Getting to the airport
Red-eye vs daytime departures
Premium cabin options
Connecting through Paris from a domestic flight
Fifteen daily nonstops from Charles de Gaulle and a handful more from Orly make connecting pointless on this route. A stop through London, Amsterdam, or anywhere else adds hours to what is already a two-hour flight. Book direct.
If you are continuing beyond Dublin to North America, Aer Lingus routes through its Dublin hub, and Dublin Airport has US Customs pre-clearance. You clear immigration before departure, which means you arrive in the US as a domestic passenger.
Paris & Dublin Airport Profiles
Each airport has a personality. Terminal quality, transit access, lounge scene, and crowd levels vary dramatically — sometimes more than the flight itself.
Paris Metro
Charles de Gaulle is three airports wearing one name. Terminal 1 is the original 1974 brutalist circle with satellite gates reached through underground tunnels. It handles Star Alliance carriers and has a retro-futurist quality that either fascinates or confuses on first visit. Terminal 2 sprawls across sub-terminals labeled 2A through 2G, the largest section by far, with 2E handling most transatlantic arrivals. Terminal 3 is the budget terminal: basic, separate, and a different experience entirely.
The CDGVAL automated shuttle connects the three terminals in about 8 minutes, but the walk from your gate to the shuttle platform can add another 10. Walking between Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 is not realistic without the shuttle. Within Terminal 2, some sub-terminal connections are walkable and others require a bus. Security wait times spike during the morning transatlantic departure push from 2E.
The defining fact about CDG is its distance: 25 kilometers northeast of central Paris. The airport itself is well-equipped, modern in the newer sections, and stocked with restaurants and shops. But everything about your trip includes that commute into the city, which takes longer than many short-haul European flights.
Beauvais-Tillé is a single-terminal airport 55 miles north of Paris. The distance from the city makes it a budget carrier outpost rather than a true Paris airport. Facilities are minimal: a few cafés, limited seating, and no transit rail link. Expect long queues at peak hours in a building not designed for the volume it sometimes handles.
No jet bridges at most gates. You walk across the tarmac to your aircraft. Check-in counters and security share the same compact space. If your flight is delayed, there is not much to do inside.
Orly is compact, close to the city, and often overlooked by transatlantic passengers who default to CDG. Four terminals numbered 1 through 4 handle a mix of domestic, European, and a handful of long-haul flights. The terminals connect to each other on foot, no shuttle trains or underground tunnels required, which is a genuine relief if you have ever navigated CDG.
The international arrival areas are smaller and immigration moves faster than at CDG. The terminal buildings are functional rather than architecturally ambitious, though recent renovation has added polish to the arrivals hall and retail areas. It lacks the scale and lounge options of CDG, but what it trades in size it gains in speed.
Orly sits 13 kilometers south of central Paris. For anyone staying on the Left Bank or in the southern arrondissements, the ground transfer advantage over CDG is significant: half the distance, half the cost, and less time stuck on the motorway. The airport operates under an overnight curfew, so late-night departures and early-morning arrivals are not an option.
No high-frequency connections found. Check XCR routes for all options.
Dublin Metro
Dublin Airport has two terminals connected by a covered walkway. Terminal 2 is the newer building, purpose-built for Aer Lingus and their long-haul operation. Terminal 1 handles most other carriers. The airport sits six miles north of the city center, close enough that even in traffic the taxi ride stays around 30 minutes.
The US Preclearance facility is the defining feature for passengers headed to the United States. You walk through a CBP checkpoint after security and before your gate. It adds time on the Dublin end but eliminates immigration when you land. Few airports outside the United States offer this.
Both terminals are compact. Gate-to-gate walks stay under ten minutes. Duty-free is extensive by European airport standards, and food options are stronger in Terminal 2. Security can back up during the morning rush when the departures hall fills, so build extra time into early flights.
Which Airlines Fly Which Pairs
Not all planes are the same size. The aircraft type below each checkmark tells you whether you are getting a widebody (777, 787, A350) with wider seats and a quieter ride, or a narrowbody (737, A321) with a single aisle. On flights over five hours, the difference is significant.
A220-300
A320, A321neo
737 MAX 8
A320
737-800