Northern Ireland gives you four kinds of light in an afternoon. That's the headline. The skies move quickly, the sun comes in low for most of the year, and the country's small enough that you can chase weather across two counties without using a tank of fuel. This is a working list of where to point a camera and when.
The big ten
1 · The Dark Hedges
Bregagh Road, near Armoy, Co Antrim
When: 6.30–8am or the last 90 minutes before sunset. Avoid weekends in summer.
Settings: f/8–f/11, ISO 100–400, tripod for the slow ones. Wide on a full-frame body (24–35mm), 16–18mm on crop. Shoot in RAW.
Composition: Centred down the middle of the avenue is the cliché, but it's the cliché for a reason. Portrait works as well as landscape. The shot is in the canopy, not the road — keep the verticals straight.
Notes: The road's closed to traffic now, which makes it safer but the shots more crowded. Storms have thinned the trees in the last decade — roughly 90 of the original 150 are still standing.
2 · The Giant's Causeway
Bushmills, Co Antrim
When: Sunrise on the east-facing side, sunset on the cliff top above. Low tide opens the lower stones for foreground compositions.
Settings: f/11–f/16 for full depth of field. A 6- or 10-stop ND filter for the water at slow exposures. Bracket three frames for the cliff/sky contrast.
Composition: Get low. The hexagonal columns work as foreground leading the eye out to sea. The cliff-top view back over the stones is the harder shot and the more rewarding one.
Season: Autumn for low light and atmosphere, June for the longest summer dawns. Stars visible most clear winter nights — Bortle 4 sky out over the sea.
3 · Dunluce Castle
Between Portrush and Bushmills, Co Antrim
When: Sunset (faces west). Blue hour is the trick most photographers miss.
Settings: 70–200mm to compress the cliff and castle, or 16–35mm with the coastline as foreground. f/8 at golden hour, tripod into blue hour.
Composition: The pull-in on the Causeway Coastal Route west of the castle gives you the classic side-profile. Walk down to the Mermaid's Cave below for the rarer underneath angle.
4 · The Mournes
Newcastle and around, Co Down
When: Early morning when the mist sits in the glens. Late afternoon for the side-light off Donard.
Settings: Polariser for the sky. f/11–f/16 for sharpness. Focus stack the close foreground if you've got the foreground rocks.
Where: Bloody Bridge gives you the river and the slopes together. Spelga Dam reflects the surrounding hills on still mornings. Silent Valley from the dam wall for the reservoir below the wall. The top of Slieve Binnian if you can climb it — Ben Crom reservoir sits in its amphitheatre below.
5 · Mussenden Temple & Downhill Strand
Castlerock, Co Londonderry
When: Sunset is the iconic shot. Beach reflections at low tide. Stormy days for the temple against grey sea.
Settings: Wide-angle for temple-plus-cliff-plus-beach, medium telephoto from the beach below looking back up. Tripod for the blue-hour exposures.
Composition: The view from the Bishop's Gate path includes the temple, the cliff, and the beach in one frame. Walk down to Downhill Strand at low tide for the reflection in the wet sand.
6 · Ballintoy Harbour
Co Antrim, between the Causeway and Carrick-a-Rede
When: Low tide and sunset together. Mid-tide for the rock pools.
Settings: Wide-angle for the harbour wall and the sea stacks. Long exposure (30 seconds, ND filter) for milky water around the stacks.
Composition: The white-painted harbour wall is the foreground, the sea stacks of Elephant Rock and Sheep Island are the middle ground. Drive down slowly — the road is narrow.
7 · Murlough Bay (Antrim — not Down)
Off the Torr Road, near Ballycastle
When: Morning light hits the headland, afternoon backlights it. Both work.
Settings: 16–35mm for the sweep down to the bay. Polariser to take the haze off the Scottish view.
Composition: The lay-by halfway down the lane gives you the standard shot — the bay below with Rathlin and the Mull of Kintyre on the horizon. Walk down to the shore for the cliff-foot version.
8 · Glenariff Forest Park
Glenariff, Co Antrim
When: Overcast days. Bright sun is the enemy of waterfall photography.
Settings: ND filter to bring the shutter down to half a second to two seconds. Tripod essential.
Composition: Ess-Na-Larach and Ess-Na-Crub are the two big falls. Both have viewing platforms. Step left or right of the platform for a less-photographed angle.
9 · Belfast murals
Falls Road, Shankill Road, International Wall
When: Overcast light is best — even illumination across the wall. Avoid harsh sun.
Settings: Walk back far enough that you don't need a wide-angle. Shoot square-on to keep verticals true. Crop in post rather than tilting the lens.
Respect: These walls are part of a living political history. Don't pose, don't get in shot, don't take portraits of people in the area without asking. A black-cab tour is the most respectful way to see them and the driver will tell you which murals welcome cameras.
10 · Titanic Belfast at blue hour
Queen's Road, Titanic Quarter
When: The thirty minutes after sunset when the sky goes cobalt and the building lights come on.
Settings: Tripod. f/8, ISO 100, three to five second exposures.
Composition: The reflecting pool in front of the building doubles the prow. The footbridge over to the SS Nomadic gives you the side profile.
Quieter places worth the drive
White Park Bay
Two miles of National Trust sand with the basalt cliffs of Whitepark to the north and the chalk of Ballintoy to the south. The hostel above the beach is one of the best places to wake up in the country. Sunrise.
Slieve League cliffs (not in NI, but worth flagging)
An hour's drive across the border in Donegal, with cliffs three times the height of the Causeway. If you're already on the North Coast, push west for a day. Bring a passport and the same camera kit.
Inch Abbey at dawn
The mist comes off the Quoile river most autumn mornings. The twelfth-century arches stand against it. Five minutes from Downpatrick, almost always empty.
Cushendun Caves at low tide
Game of Thrones got there first, but the red sandstone and the angle of light coming in past the harbour wall is the photograph either way.
The Skerries, Portrush
The chain of small islands off Portrush at sunset. Long lens from the West Strand. Boats run from the harbour in summer if you want the closer version.
Slemish Mountain
Cone of Antrim basalt with the legend of Patrick attached. Drive the lanes around it at sunset and the mountain throws its own shadow east across the plain. The clearest profile is from the Buckna Road south.
Weather, light and the year
The weather
- The country gets two-and-a-half days of rain a week on average. That's the bad news. The good news is that the same fronts produce the dramatic skies that make the landscape photograph well in the first place.
- Coastal cloud can clear in twenty minutes. Don't pack up at the first squall.
- Wet basalt and wet sand have more colour than dry ones. Embrace it.
Light through the year
- December — January: Sunrise around 8.30am, sunset by 4.10pm. Hard light at the solstices but only for a few hours, the rest is low-angle and atmospheric.
- March — April: Equinox. Useable light eleven hours of the day. Skies are still volatile, the rainbow season.
- June: Sunset at 10.05pm, blue hour past 11pm. Civil twilight never quite ends in the north of the country in late June, the night sky stays grey. Bad for stars, good for late shooting.
- October: The best month. Long shadow angles, autumn colour in Tollymore and Glenariff, dramatic skies, fewer tourists.
Kit
- A camera you trust in the rain. A weather-sealed body and a rain cover.
- 16–35mm and a 70–200mm cover 90% of the locations on this list.
- A circular polariser. A 6-stop ND. A 10-stop for the longer water shots.
- A sturdy tripod. The wind on the cliffs will move a light one.
- Spare batteries. Cold drains them.
- A lens cloth in every pocket.
Apps worth having
- PhotoPills — sun and moon paths, milky-way alignment, long-exposure calculator.
- Met Office — the most reliable forecast for the UK.
- Tide Times UK — for Cushendun, the Causeway, Mussenden, Murlough.
- OS Maps — Ordnance Survey paths and contours.
If you've come with a phone
Modern phone cameras do a competent job of most of these locations in good light. The shots that still need a "real" camera are the long-exposure water at the Causeway, the blue-hour Titanic Belfast, and the astrophotography. Otherwise:
- Clean the lens. Twice a day.
- Turn the gridlines on.
- Lock exposure on a bright element to keep skies from blowing out.
- Edit in Snapseed or Lightroom Mobile — both free, both better than the built-in app.
- Brace the phone against a rock if it's windy, even a one-second hand-held will blur.
Etiquette and the rules
- Drones — the UK CAA's permission scheme applies. You need a Flyer ID (free), Operator ID (£10) if your drone is over 250g, and any flight near people requires sign-off. Many National Trust properties, the Causeway in particular, prohibit drone flight without permission.
- Beaches — keep clear of nesting birds in spring at Whitepark, Murlough and the Mournes coast.
- Private land — the Dark Hedges is owned by the Dundarave Estate. The Mournes are partly owned by NI Water. Stay on marked paths.
- People — particularly in the murals areas of Belfast, don't shoot residents without asking. They live there.
- Geotagging — a few of the quieter spots on this list have suffered from social-media traffic. Be circumspect about where you tag.
See also the Causeway Coastal Route guide for routing, the three-day itinerary, and the coastal walks for the locations on foot.
Our travel guides are written and updated in-house from our editorial base in Northern Ireland. Every site mentioned has been visited, every restaurant has been eaten in, every walk has been walked. The opinions are ours, the work is ongoing. More about us →