It happens a decade after the business launched Wetherspoons bars in Ireland. The portfolio has a collective price of €10 million, but Savills and CBRE, the joint selling agents, may provide individual pricing.

The following pubs are up for grabs: The Linen Weaver, Paul Street, Cork; The Tullow Gate, Tullow Street, Carlow; and An Geata Arundel, Arundel Square, Waterford.

Located at 19–21 Eglington Street in Galway, the fourth property is the old Carbon Night Club. Although it is now unoccupied, it has just received planning clearance to allow for the operation of a restaurant and licenced establishments.

Following a £30.4 million loss the previous year, the pub group recorded profit before taxes of £42.6 million (€49.25 million) for the year that concluded on July 30.

Although Wetherspoons pubs may be found in almost every UK city, Dublin will be the only Irish city where they are still operating.

JD Wetherspoon owns the following pubs in the capital: The Forty Foot in Dún Laoghaire, The Great Wood in Blanchardstown, The Old Borough Hotel and bar in Swords, The Silver Penny on Lower Abbey Street, and the Keavan's Port Hotel and pub on Upper Camden Street.

“The Wetherspoon Portfolio offers a unique opportunity to acquire an exceptional collection of landmark licenced properties in some of the most coveted locations in the nation,” stated Savills' Stephen McCarthy. As a result, we believe that a wide range of hospitality firms looking to grow their current business and profit from the substantial investment already made in these facilities would find appeal in the portfolio.

The trade sites in Cork, Waterford, and Carlow are offered in outstanding shape, providing a unique chance to purchase the companies separately or as a portfolio, according to John Hughes of CBRE. The Galway city centre site offers a singular chance to build a historic licenced building or other uses right in the middle of the city.