Just returned from a 3 night stay at the Abraham House. We were a group of 22 lads on a stag do, and we had two 10-bed dorms and one 4-bed room. The accomodation is what you expect from a hostel - bunk beds, less than glamorous bathroom facilities, basic breakfast etc - but as long as that is what you expect and that is all you need, you won't go wrong with this place.
The hostel has a nice friendly atmosphere to it - we were there on the Ireland - Wales 6 Nation rugby weekend, so the hostel was taken over by large groups of Welsh rugby fans, as was most of Dublin. That gave the whole place a good party feel to it.
Also it is handily located - about 2 minute walk from the bus station (which is handy is you arrive by ferry as that is where the bus from the Ferryport drops you off), 5 minutes from the Spike, and 10 minutes from Temple Bar.
For breakfast you get a big bread roll, jam, tea, coffee and juice, which if nothing else tides you over until you make it to a cafe for a Full Irish (there's a good one nearby - left out of the hostel, left at the lights, on the opposite side of the road). Breakfast is served between 8am and 10am - watch out for the scary Eastern European women who work in the kitche - at 10am on the dot one of them will appear and shriek at the top of their voice "Breakfast. Finish". Can give you a nasty jump when nursing a stinking hangover!
One negative point about the hostel was that our two 10-bunk rooms were on the top floor, and the plumbing struggled to cope with getting water up there when anyone else was using water in the hostel. Hence on the Saturday morning, between 9 and 10am we had no water for showers, washing or flushing the loo. And we there are 20-odd lads who have been drinking heavily the night before, you really do need a working loo! That said though, the hostel quickly gave us access to a vacant room that did have a water supply!
One word of warning about Dublin generally - it is very very expensive. It is rare that I go to places and find them more expensive that the UK (not helped by the recent weakening of the pound against the Euro) but the cheapest pint we had was €4.50 and the most expensive was €6 in the Gaiety club (good club by the way - with a cinema in it too!?!). A fry up was €8, and a 5 minute taxi ride at midnight was €9. Go armed with plenty of cash...
This review is the subjective opinion of a TripAdvisor member and not of TripAdvisor LLC.
Would I recommend this hotel to my best friend?
most likely
I recommend this hotel for:
Young singles, Tourists
I do not recommend this hotel for:
An amazing honeymoon, A romantic getaway, Girlfriend getaway, People with disabilities, Older travelers, Great pool scene, Pet owners, Families with young children, Families with teenagers
I selected this hotel as a top choice for:
Sporting event