Santander – Rosslare
Ferries to Ireland
Santander – Rosslare
Ferries to Ireland
Get the best deals on ferry crossings between Spain and Ireland on the Santander to Rosslare ferry route with Direct Ferries and compare alternatives where available too.
Get up to date Santander Rosslare timetables and ferry fares with all companies and compare before deciding on the ideal option for your crossing.
Getting a quote or booking a ferry to Ireland couldn't be easier. All you need to do is select Santander to Rosslare from the menus to the left, select the number of passengers and hit search!
More routes than anyone else.
Compare fares, times & routes in one place.
Change plans easily with flexi tickets.
Book e-tickets & manage trips in-app.
Live ship tracking & real-time updates.
Top-rated customer support when you need it.
Santander is a Spanish port city situated on the Atlantic North coast. The ferry port is located very close to the centre of Santander, not far by walk from the main square and the railway station. The city is located between Gijon and Bilbao which like Santander feature regular connections to the south coast of England. Close to Santander, don't miss in Comillas 'El Capricho', a building by Antoni Gaudí.
Rosslare (Ros Láir in Irish, meaning "the middle peninsula"), is a village in County Wexford. Rosslare has been a tourist resort for at least 100 years. It prides itself on being the sunniest spot in Ireland, and records bear this out: Rosslare receives 300 hours more sunshine each year than the average place in Ireland. The long sandy strand is a Blue Flag Beach so it attracts swimmers and families, while there are a number of good golf courses in the vicinity. A long sandspit stretching north from Rosslare separates Wexford Harbour from the Irish Sea. Until the early 1920s, this spit stretched for many miles north, almost touching the Raven Point and giving a very narrow mouth to Wexford Harbour. At the end of the spit was a small fort called Rosslare Fort. In the winter of 1924-25 a storm breached the spit and it was gradually washed away. The fort was abandoned and now all that is left is an island at low tide.