Top Stories

Behind the €40m IDA deal: Mediaworks and the business of promoting Ireland

IDA Ireland sought contracts for media monitoring, creative advertising, graphic design and PR in service of attracting FDI from foreign markets, in particular the USA, Canada, UK, Germany, Japan, China, and South Korea.

Breaking News: The full three-part series on boom and bust in Ireland’s local newspaper industry

Frenzied auctions for regional titles made millionaires out of many and put most of the buyers on the road to bankruptcy. A major three-part series is now republished as an updated long read.

Budget changes, buyouts and a growing war chest: Inside Total Dental’s growth plan

The dental group, backed by London investor Lonsdale Capital, has secured debt funding from DunPort Capital to fund further growth. CEO Steven Lynch outlines the group's plans for 2026 and why the budget brought deals to a halt.

A salmon giant and an expired licence: The Kerry fish farm set for the High Court

A nature NGO wants the court to quash the Aquaculture Licences Appeals Board's decision to reverse a ministerial order that stripped a Mowi-subsidiary farm of its right to operate for overharvesting in 2016.

A €99 million question: Who will deliver Housing First in Dublin for the next decade?

The State’s previously underfunded flagship homeless programme contributed to financial woes at the Peter McVerry Trust. A new procurement approach aims to stabilise its provision.

Planning refused for Eamon Waters’ hostel plans on Camden Street

Dublin City Council found the proposed tourist hostel in a protected building would set an undesirable precedent for similar development in the historic area, as well as devalue property in the vicinity.

“We want to be the Coca Cola of the music industry”

John Corley, CEO and co-founder of Spanish Point Technologies, discusses leveraging organic growth in software services to build the market leader in music-rights tech globally.

Aryzta settles legal wrangle with former chief executive Kevin Toland

Legal disputes arose over performance entitlements due to senior executives who had exited Aryzta in the investor upheaval that engulfed the company behind bake-off business Cuisine de France, and other brands in late 2020.

Top Voices

Ronan Lyons: Housing, health and the long view

Long before antibiotics or mass vaccination, better homes saved lives. New evidence from Ireland’s labourers’ cottages shows how improving light, air, and space quietly reshaped public health – and why housing quality still matters far beyond shelter.

Thomas Hubert

Thomas Hubert: Hiding directors’ addresses will only help bad actors and multiply cases of mistaken identity

There are countless examples where a company officer’s published home address was instrumental in identifying the right person in business or legal dealings. Any restrictions should come with solid alternatives.

John Looby: The big lesson of 2025? In Taco we trust

2025 was one of those years when investors learned very quickly what mattered — and what didn’t. There was a lot of noise from the White House, a lot of market drama, and one surprisingly reliable pattern underneath it all.

Why multinationals keep betting on Ireland: Rewinding the week that was

With all the talk of Trump, trade and tariffs, it is easy to forget just how attractive Ireland is for foreign direct investment.

From Wood Quay to Camden Yard: A chance to fix old mistakes

The possible relocation of Dublin City Council to Camden Yard is controversial, but it could also unlock greener offices, new housing and a long-overdue rethink of Wood Quay.

Siobhán Brett: A primal scream from the White House

We know all too well, now, that Trump loves winning. He doesn’t feel the same way about losing, though, and he’s ending 2025 on a losing streak.

Dan O’Brien: Looking back on the 10 things to watch in 2025

From Irish politics to trends in tax and trend and geopolitical shifts, this year has brought good and bad news to those looking for economic stability.

Colm McCarthy: Delivery, delivery, delivery — and then what?

From the Bertiebowl to deferred motorways, crises have taught the same lesson repeatedly: when budgets tighten, capital is cut first — and when money flows again, oversight is quietly abandoned.