WHERE TO STUDY — MUSIC

Study Music in Ireland

Study music in Ireland and you face a real choice of paths — performance, composition, production, trad, musicology or teaching. This guide compares every kind of music degree and how each one selects (points, audition or portfolio), the routes in, UK and European options, and where a music degree actually leads.

6+
Specialisations
30+
Level 8 music degrees
Audition
Many entry routes
"Music" Means Many Different Degrees — and Many Need an Audition

There is no single music degree. The field spans classical performance and composition, popular and commercial music, jazz, traditional Irish and world music, music technology and production, musicology (the academic study of music), and music education (the route to qualifying as a post-primary music teacher). Two practical things to know up front: many performance-based courses select on a combination of CAO points and an audition or portfolio — so the "points" alone do not tell the whole story — and music is largely an unregulated profession. Apart from music teaching (which requires Teaching Council registration), there is no licensing body; your degree opens doors through your skill, portfolio and network rather than a single mandatory qualification.

Irish Music Degrees at a Glance

A representative selection showing the breadth of music degrees and how entry works. Where you see "Audition", the place is decided by an audition or portfolio (sometimes combined with points), not points alone.

INSTITUTION CAO CODE PROGRAMME FOCUS YEARS 2025 R1
TCDTR002 MusicAcademic+Perf4476
TCDTR009 Music Education (concurrent teaching)Teaching4Audition
TCDTR629 / TR635Music with Philosophy / Drama (joint)Joint Hons4613
UCCCK104 Arts with MusicAcademic3–4Check CAO
GalwayGY130 Arts (Music)Academic3401
MaynoothMH103 MusicAcademic+Perf3–4Check CAO
ULLM114 Music, Media & Performance TechnologyTech4350
ULLM131 Irish Music & DanceTrad4Audition
DCUDC014 Jazz & Contemporary Music PerformancePerformance4402
BIMM / TU DublinTU961 Commercial Modern Music (BIMM Dublin)Performance4Audition
MTUMT936 Music (Cork School of Music)Performance4Audition
TUSUS808 Music Technology & ProductionTech4297
IADTDL838 Creative Music ProductionTech4Portfolio

Points are 2025 CAO Round 1 cut-offs where they apply; "Audition"/"Portfolio" means selection is wholly or partly by audition or portfolio. Verify everything at cao.ie/points and on each course page, as audition weightings and dates vary. Most programmes are Level 8 and covered by the Free Fees Scheme for eligible EU students.

Institution-by-Institution Breakdown

TR002 / TR009 / TR320 / TR629 / TR635

Trinity College Dublin

Academic music, joint honours & the only Music Education degree
Programmes
Single-honours Music (TR002, 476), Music Education (TR009, audition), and joint honours pairing Music with Drama, Philosophy, Maths, Film and more (the TR629/635 family, 613).
Music Education
TCD is the only Irish university offering the B.Mus.Ed. — a concurrent degree accredited by the Teaching Council that qualifies you to teach music at post-primary level.
Delivery
Delivered with the Royal Irish Academy of Music (RIAM) and TU Dublin Conservatoire for performance tuition; strong academic musicology core.
Leads To
Performance, composition, musicology, teaching, postgraduate study; excellent graduate employment record.
CK104

University College Cork

Music within Arts — broad academic & practical base
Programme
Music studied as a subject within the BA Arts (CK104), with strong options in composition, performance, musicology and electronic music.
Duration
3–4 years (BA, with honours options)
Strengths
Long-established department with a notable electroacoustic and contemporary-composition tradition, plus traditional Irish music research.
Leads To
Flexible — combine music with other Arts subjects, then specialise at postgraduate level or move into the PME for teaching.
GY130

University of Galway

Music within the BA Arts — west-of-Ireland trad strength
Programme
Music as an Arts subject (GY130, 401), with strong Irish traditional music and performance opportunities.
Duration
3 years (BA)
Strengths
Galway's vibrant traditional-music scene and the university's links to it make it a strong base for trad and community music.
Leads To
Performance, community music, arts administration, teaching (via PME), and postgraduate specialisation.
LM114 / LM131 / LM135

University of Limerick

Technology, Irish & world music — the Irish World Academy
Programmes
Music, Media & Performance Technology (LM114, 350); BA Irish Music & Dance (LM131, audition); BA World Music (LM135, audition).
Duration
4 years, with UL's Co-Op placement option in the technology degree
Strengths
Home of the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance — internationally known for ethnomusicology, traditional and world music, and music technology.
Leads To
Music production, audio for media, performance, teaching, arts and festival work, and research.
MH103

Maynooth University

Single-honours Music & flexible joint options
Programme
BMus / Music (MH103), studied single-honours or alongside another subject through the Maynooth Arts structure.
Duration
3–4 years
Strengths
Well regarded for composition and musicology, with performance opportunities and a supportive department; flexible subject pairings.
Leads To
Composition, musicology, performance, teaching (via PME), and postgraduate research.
DC014 / DC012

Dublin City University

Jazz & contemporary performance, and music with teaching
Programmes
Jazz & Contemporary Music Performance (DC014, 402); Religious Education & Music concurrent teaching degree (DC012, 440).
Duration
4 years
Teaching Route
DC012 is a concurrent Teaching-Council-accredited degree combining Music with Religious Education for post-primary teaching.
Leads To
Professional jazz/contemporary performance, teaching, production and the wider music industry.

Conservatoires, TUs & Specialist Colleges

Some of Ireland's strongest music training sits outside the traditional university music departments — in the conservatoires and technological universities, and in specialist production colleges. For performance and commercial music especially, these are often the first choice.

What Actually Matters in Music — Skill, Portfolio & Network

Music is largely unregulated: outside teaching, there is no licensing body and no single qualification you must hold to work. What gets you hired — as a performer, producer, composer or session player — is your ability, your portfolio or showreel, and the people who know your work. That means the "best" course is the one whose teaching, facilities, genre focus and connections match the kind of musician you want to be. A conservatoire performance degree, a music-production degree at a TU, and an academic BMus all lead somewhere — just to different places. Choose for fit, not for points. One naming tip: well-known specialist colleges are sometimes listed in the CAO under their awarding university — for example, BIMM Music Institute Dublin's degree appears as TU961 Commercial Modern Music (awarded by TU Dublin). If you are searching for a college by name and cannot find it, check which university validates its degree.

InstitutionCAO CodeProgrammeFocusYears2025 R1Location
MTU
CIT Cork School of Music
MT936MusicPerformance/Academic4AuditionCork
MT931–935Popular Music (by instrument/voice)Performance4AuditionCork
MT938Musical TheatrePerformance4AuditionCork
BIMM Dublin
awarded by TU Dublin
TU961Commercial Modern Music (guitar/bass/drums/vocals/songwriting)Performance4AuditionDublin
TU Dublin
Conservatoire
TU963Music (classical, audition)Performance4AuditionDublin
TUSUS808Music Technology & ProductionTech4297Limerick
US809Music & Sound EngineeringTech4Check CAOLimerick
IADTDL838Creative Music ProductionTech4PortfolioDún Laoghaire
SETUSE206MusicPerformance/Academic4AuditionWaterford
DkITDK865Audio & Music ProductionTech4236Dundalk
DK892Music & Performance TechnologiesTech4244Dundalk
DBSDB510Audio Production & Music Project MgmtTech/Business3273Dublin (fees)

A representative sample. Points are 2025 CAO Round 1 where they apply; "Audition"/"Portfolio" means selection is wholly or partly by audition/portfolio. DBS is a private college (tuition fees apply). Also note the Royal Irish Academy of Music (RIAM) and the Conservatoire at TU Dublin deliver degrees in partnership with universities — check each for entry routes. Verify at cao.ie/points.

TU961 · AWARDED BY TU DUBLIN

BIMM Music Institute Dublin

Commercial & popular music — industry-focused
Programme
BA (Hons) Commercial Modern Music, specialising in guitar, bass, drums, vocals or songwriting. Apply via the CAO using code TU961; the degree is validated and awarded by TU Dublin.
Entry
Minimum 2 H5s and 4 O6s/H7s, then an audition — you can gain up to 600 points at the audition to combine with your Leaving Cert points. Five QQI Level 5 distinctions are also accepted.
Reputation
A specialist contemporary-music college with a strong industry network and notable alumni (e.g. Fontaines D.C.). Free Fees scheme applies for eligible students.
Leads To
Performing and recording artists, session musicians, songwriters, artist management and the wider music business. New electives also support progression toward music teaching (PME).
MT931–936 / MT938

MTU — CIT Cork School of Music

One of Ireland's major conservatoires
Programmes
Popular Music by principal instrument (guitar, bass, keys, drums, voice), single-honours Music, and Musical Theatre.
Entry
By audition — your playing/singing is the main selection criterion, alongside meeting the minimum academic requirements.
Facilities
A purpose-built conservatoire with performance venues, studios and one-to-one instrumental tuition at its core.
Leads To
Professional performance, session work, musical theatre, teaching and the wider industry.
US808 / US809 / DL838 / DK865

Music Technology & Production Hubs

TUS, IADT & DkIT — studio-focused, accessible points
Programmes
Music Technology & Production (TUS, 297), Creative Music Production (IADT, portfolio), Audio & Music Production (DkIT, 236).
Focus
Recording, mixing, mastering, electronic production, sound design and audio for film/games — the technical and creative side of modern music.
Access
Among the most accessible music routes on points (or by portfolio), and very strong for students who make music with technology rather than on a traditional instrument.
Leads To
Producer, audio engineer, sound designer for media/games, live sound, and self-released artist careers.
A 240-Point Production Degree Is Not a Lesser Music Degree

Some of the most employable music graduates come from the lower-points technology and production courses — because the work (producing, engineering, sound for media and games) is in genuine demand and rewards portfolio and skill over CAO points. Equally, an audition-entry conservatoire place that asks for no specific points total can be the hardest of all to win, because it is decided on your playing. Points are close to meaningless as a ranking of music courses; match the course to the musician you want to become.

Alternative Pathways into Music

Music has more side doors than most fields — because ability matters more than points. Whether you missed the points, are largely self-taught, or are coming to it later, there are real routes in.

PLC / QQI Level 5 → HELS

No points required · 1 year · SUSI eligible

QQI Level 5 awards in Music, Music Production, Sound Engineering or Performance let you apply through the Higher Education Links Scheme for a degree via the CAO — no Leaving Cert points needed beyond a completed Leaving Cert. They also build a portfolio and references that strengthen audition-based applications.

Where to look

Music and sound PLC courses run in ETB colleges (e.g. Ballyfermot College of Further Education, Bray Institute, Coláiste Stiofáin Naofa in Cork) and many feed directly into degree programmes. Confirm the specific QQI award is accepted for HELS by your target course.

The Audition / Portfolio Route

When your playing matters more than points

For many conservatoire and performance degrees, the audition (or production portfolio) is the main selection tool. A strong audition can secure a place even with modest points, provided you meet the minimum entry requirements. This rewards years of instrumental or vocal practice and grade exams (RIAM, ABRSM) more than Leaving Cert results.

PREP
Prepare repertoire early

Audition pieces and portfolios take months. Check each course's specific requirements in 5th year, not the week before.

GRADE
Grade exams help

RIAM/ABRSM Grade 8 or equivalent is often expected for classical performance entry — check, as some courses specify a minimum grade.

Mature Student Entry (23+)

Life as a working musician counts

If you are 23+ by 1 January of entry year, you apply as a mature student through the CAO — points are set aside in favour of experience, motivation, and (for performance courses) an audition. Years of gigging, teaching, or producing are genuine assets in a mature music application.

Deadline

Apply via the CAO by 1 February and tick the mature category. Performance courses will still expect an audition; check each department's mature-entry page for any portfolio or interview stage.

Music → Teaching

The one regulated route in music

If you want to teach music in a post-primary school, you need Teaching Council registration. There are two routes: a concurrent degree like TCD's B.Mus.Ed. (music + teaching together over four years), or any approved music degree followed by the two-year Professional Master of Education (PME).

A
Concurrent (B.Mus.Ed.)

Qualify to teach in four years — TCD is currently the only university offering this in music.

B
Degree + PME

Do any approved music degree, then a two-year PME. Check the Teaching Council's Music subject requirements before choosing your degree modules.

In Music, the Door Is Often Your Demo

More than almost any other field, music admits people on what they can do. A strong audition, a polished production portfolio, or a body of released work can open doors that points never would. If you are serious about music, start building that evidence now — it matters at entry, and it matters even more afterwards.

Studying Music in the UK & Europe

The UK has some of the world's most famous conservatoires and a huge range of music and music-production degrees, and Europe offers strong (often low-cost) options. Because music is largely unregulated, recognition is rarely the issue — reputation, facilities and cost are what to weigh.

Read This First — Recognition & the Teaching Exception

For most music careers — performance, composition, production — a degree from a reputable UK or EU institution is fully employable in Ireland; there is no licensing body to satisfy. The one exception is teaching: if you intend to teach music in an Irish post-primary school, your degree and teacher-education qualification must meet Teaching Council requirements, so check those before choosing a course abroad. For everything else, judge a course on its reputation, genre fit, facilities and cost rather than on formal recognition.

The Common Travel Area Advantage (England)

Under the Common Travel Area, Irish students who meet the residency criteria can study in England paying the same tuition fees as English (home) students — not the higher international rate — and can access the UK Tuition Fee Loan. Scotland routes Irish students through SAAS for fee assessment. This makes UK music and conservatoire degrees far more affordable for Irish students than for other international applicants. Always confirm your fee status with the specific institution, as conservatoires sometimes have separate fee rules.

Apply via UCAS / CUKAS

UK universities apply through UCAS; the big conservatoires often have their own application and audition systems. Auditions are central — budget for travel to them.

World-class conservatoires

The Royal Academy, Royal College, Trinity Laban, RNCM, Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and BIMM/ICMP (popular/commercial) are globally recognised names.

Europe, often low-cost

Conservatoires in the Netherlands, Germany and the Nordics offer respected, often English-taught or low-fee music degrees for EU citizens — strong for jazz, classical and composition.

UK · CONSERVATOIRES & UNIVERSITIES

United Kingdom

From the Royal Academy to BIMM — huge range
Duration
3 years (BMus/BA) typical; conservatoire performance degrees may run 3–4 years.
Options
Classical conservatoires (Royal Academy, Royal College, RNCM, RCS), jazz and popular-music schools (BIMM, ICMP, Leeds Conservatoire), and strong university music departments.
Fees
England: home-fee status under the CTA plus the Tuition Fee Loan for eligible Irish students. Confirm with each institution — conservatoires sometimes differ.
Irish Note
Fine for performance/production careers in Ireland. For teaching, confirm Teaching Council recognition of the degree + teacher-ed before committing.
EUROPE · CONSERVATOIRES

Mainland Europe

Netherlands, Germany & the Nordics
Duration
3–4 year bachelor programmes, many taught in English (especially jazz, pop and composition).
Strengths
Dutch conservatoires (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague) are world-renowned for jazz; German Musikhochschulen and Nordic academies are strong across classical and contemporary.
Fees
EU-citizen tuition is often low (Dutch statutory fee) or minimal (parts of Germany/Nordics). SUSI maintenance may apply for EU study.
Irish Note
Check language of instruction, audition logistics, and — for teaching only — Teaching Council recognition. Otherwise reputation and fit are what matter.
Should You Study Music Abroad?

For a specific specialism — a particular jazz tradition, a named conservatoire teacher, a production scene — abroad can be transformative, and the CTA makes England surprisingly affordable. For a broad, flexible base, Irish degrees are excellent and keep you in your own gigging and contacts network. If teaching in Ireland is the goal, the simplest path is an Irish Teaching-Council-accredited route. Weigh reputation, the specific teachers, facilities, cost and your own network — not formal recognition, which is rarely the obstacle in music.

Music Specialisations & Where the Degree Leads

Music is not a single career with one entry exam — it is a spread of specialisations and a wide fan of destinations. Here is the map of what you can focus on and where it can take you.

The Main Specialisations
Performance

Classical, jazz, popular, trad or musical theatre. Conservatoire-style, audition-entry, one-to-one instrumental/vocal tuition at its heart.

Composition

Writing music for concert, screen, games or media. Strong at the academic universities and conservatoires.

Music Technology & Production

Recording, mixing, mastering, electronic production and sound design. The most job-rich and most points-accessible branch.

Musicology

The academic study of music — history, theory, analysis, ethnomusicology. The research and university-teaching track.

Traditional & World Music

Irish traditional and global musics — UL's Irish World Academy is the standout, with Galway and UCC also strong.

Music Education

The one regulated route: qualify to teach in post-primary schools via a concurrent B.Mus.Ed. or a music degree + PME, with Teaching Council registration.

Where a Music Degree Leads

A wide fan of careers — most without any licence
Making Music

Performer, session musician, composer, songwriter, producer, recording/live engineer, MD, arranger. Often freelance — portfolio and reputation are everything.

Teaching & Academia

Post-primary music teacher (Teaching Council), private/instrumental tutor, community music, university lecturer/researcher, music therapist (via further study).

Music-Adjacent

Sound for film, TV & games, radio/podcast production, arts administration, festival/event management, A&R, music journalism, publishing and rights, instrument tech.

Be honest with yourself about the economics. Many music careers are freelance and portfolio-built, with income that can be irregular — especially early on. That is not a reason to avoid music, but it is a reason to develop a broad, transferable skill set (production, teaching, tech, business) alongside your art, and to build your network and body of work from first year. The graduates who thrive treat the degree as a launchpad and a set of professional connections, not a guaranteed salary.

Earnings & the Realistic Picture

Highly variable
Performer / Freelance Musician

Income is project-based and irregular — gig fees, session work, teaching and royalties combined. Many musicians earn through a portfolio of activities rather than one salary.

~€30k–€45k+
Audio / Production Roles

Salaried audio, production and sound-for-media roles offer steadier income, rising with experience and reputation. Among the more reliable music-related career paths.

~€44k–€78k
Post-Primary Music Teacher

A registered teacher follows the published Department of Education incremental pay scale — the most predictable, secure income in music, which is why teaching is such a popular destination.

Where Music Graduates Actually End Up
Performance & Creation

Performers, composers, songwriters and producers — usually freelance, often combining several income streams.

Education

Post-primary teaching, instrumental tuition, community music — the steadiest and most common salaried destination.

Media & Tech

Audio for film/TV/games, broadcast, podcasting, arts administration and the music business — where many production graduates land.

Figures are indicative only. Music income varies enormously by specialism, location, reputation and self-employment status; performance careers in particular are project-based rather than salaried. Teacher pay follows the public Department of Education incremental scale. Verify current figures before making decisions.

Application Timeline (Mind the Auditions)

The CAO timeline is standard — but music adds audition and portfolio deadlines that often fall before or around the main CAO dates. Missing an audition deadline can rule you out regardless of points.

TY / 5TH YEARYear before CAO

Decide your specialism and build your evidence. Performance, production, academic or teaching? Keep up instrumental/vocal practice and grade exams; if you make music with technology, start building a production portfolio. Visit open days and ask each course exactly how it selects (points, audition, portfolio, or a mix).

NOVEMBER6th Year

CAO opens (5 Nov). Early-bird fee €35 by 20 January. List your music courses — and start checking each one's audition/portfolio requirements now, because some are due as early as January or February.

1 FEBRUARY — 5PMCRITICAL + AUDITIONS

Normal CAO application closes — and many audition/portfolio courses are restricted-application with this same 1 February deadline. Music Education (TCD), conservatoire and performance courses often require you to apply by 1 February and register separately for an audition. Also the deadline for HEAR/DARE and mature applicants. Miss this and the audition route usually closes.

FEB – APRILAuditions & Portfolios

Sit your auditions / submit portfolios. These typically run in spring. Prepare your required repertoire or production work thoroughly, and budget for travel. Your performance here can matter more than your eventual points.

MAY – JULYChange of Mind & Leaving Cert

Change of Mind opens 5 May, closes 1 July. A free chance to reorder — useful once you know how auditions went. Sit the Leaving Cert in June. Note that for audition courses you usually must have completed the audition to be eligible, regardless of Change of Mind.

AUGUSTRESULTS + OFFERS

Leaving Cert results and CAO offers. For audition courses, offers combine your audition result with your points (or are audition-led). Accept promptly. If you missed out, watch later rounds and Available Places.

YEARS 1–4DEGREE + BUILD A CAREER

Study and build your professional life in parallel. Perform, release work, take production gigs, network, and develop a second string (teaching, tech, business). In music more than most fields, what you do outside the lecture hall — the body of work and contacts you build — shapes your career as much as the degree itself.

How to Choose Your Music Programme

Start From the Musician You Want to Be

Performer, producer, composer, academic or teacher? The right course depends entirely on the answer. A conservatoire performance degree, a TU production degree and an academic BMus are genuinely different educations. Be honest about where your talent and interest actually lie before you rank courses.

Check How Each Course Selects — Early

Points, audition, portfolio, or a combination? Audition and portfolio deadlines often fall in January–February, well before results. Build your repertoire or showreel in good time, and never assume a music course works on points alone.

If You Might Want to Teach

Teaching is the one regulated music career. If it is even a possibility, either choose a concurrent route (TCD B.Mus.Ed.) or check that your degree meets the Teaching Council's Music subject requirements so you can do the PME later. Decide this before you choose modules, not after.

Build a Second String

Music income is often freelance and uneven. The happiest graduates pair their art with a marketable skill — production, teaching, audio tech, or the music business. Look for a course that lets you develop both, and start building your portfolio and contacts from day one.

Remember

There is no single "best" place to study music — only the place that fits the musician you want to become. Points tell you very little here: a 240-point production degree, an audition-only conservatoire place and a 600-point joint-honours BMus are simply different doors to different rooms. Music rewards what you can do and who knows your work, so choose the course whose teaching, facilities, genre and connections match your ambition — and then spend four years building the body of work that will actually launch your career.