Your Gap Year Guide

Gap Year Opportunities for Students

A gap year is not a year off — it is a year on. Whether you volunteer abroad, explore a creative passion, or gain real-world work experience, a well-planned gap year can transform your confidence, clarity, and direction before college.

15+
Programmes Listed
40+
Countries Available
2–52
Weeks Duration
€0+
Funded Options Exist
Explore Your Options

Gap Year Programmes for 2026 / 2027

From fully-funded EU volunteering to adventure programmes in Donegal and conservation work in the tropics, there is a gap year to suit every interest, budget, and ambition. We have grouped them by type to help you find the right fit.

Fully Funded & EU-Supported

Fully Funded by EU

European Solidarity Corps — Volunteering

Ages 18–30
2 weeks – 12 months
EU & partner countries
Free — accommodation, food, insurance & allowance covered

The EU's flagship youth volunteering programme. Volunteer with community organisations across Europe in fields ranging from education and youth work to environmental conservation and cultural heritage. Léargas is Ireland's national agency and your first port of call. All costs are covered — travel, accommodation, food, insurance, language support, and a monthly pocket allowance.

Register on the ESC Portal
Fully Funded by EU

European Solidarity Corps — Solidarity Projects

Ages 18–30 (groups of 5+)
2 – 12 months
Based in Ireland
Free — EU grant funded

Design and run your own community project right here in Ireland. Gather a group of at least five young people, identify a local issue you care about, and apply for EU funding to make it happen. Past projects have tackled everything from mental health awareness campaigns to environmental clean-ups and cultural festivals. It is entirely youth-led — you create, develop, and deliver the project.

Learn More via Léargas
Fully Funded by EU

VSI — Voluntary Service International

Ages 18–30
2 weeks – 12 months
Europe & worldwide
Free — ESC funded through VSI

VSI is Ireland's accredited sending, hosting, and coordinating organisation for the European Solidarity Corps. They provide thorough pre-departure training, match you with a suitable project, and support you throughout with regular check-ins. No qualifications or experience required — just motivation and genuine interest. VSI also runs shorter international volunteer camps during the summer.

Get Started with VSI

Ireland-Based Programmes

Based in Ireland

Irish Gap Year — Adventure & Leadership

Ages 17–24
10 weeks (semester cohorts)
Southwest Donegal
Paid programme — see website

Europe's first Gap Year Association-accredited provider. The programme is built around four cornerstones — outdoor adventure, leadership skills, cultural immersion, and community volunteering. You will surf the Donegal coast, hike wild mountains, complete up to 80 hours of volunteering, and travel across Ireland in small groups capped at 16 participants. Fall and spring semester cohorts available.

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Arts & Culture

Irish Gap Year — Arts & Culture

Ages 17–24
10 weeks
Southwest Donegal
Paid programme — see website

Explore and cultivate your creative side while becoming part of the Irish arts community. This programme blends creative workshops in music, writing, visual arts, and traditional crafts with cultural immersion in one of Ireland's most inspiring landscapes. Build independence, develop your artistic practice, and connect with local artists and makers throughout Donegal.

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Arts & Culture

Cow House Studios — FieldWorks Art Programme

Ages 18+
1 semester (approx. 14 weeks)
Rathnure, Co. Wexford
Paid programme — see website

A semester-long gap year art programme set on a working farm in rural Wexford. FieldWorks combines studio practice, mentorship from practising artists, art history, and community living. Participants work across painting, sculpture, photography, and printmaking with access to expansive studio resources. Highly praised by alumni for its nurturing environment and transformative creative impact.

Visit Cow House Studios
Based in Ireland

Gaisce — The President's Award

Ages 14–25
26–78 weeks (Bronze to Gold)
Nationwide, Ireland
Small registration fee

Ireland's national youth award — a direct challenge from the President to dream big. You set personal goals across four areas: community involvement, personal skill, physical recreation, and an adventure journey. The Gold Award adds a residential project and is presented by the President at Áras an Uachtaráin. Recognised in over 130 countries through the Duke of Edinburgh's Award partnership. A powerful addition to any CV or college application.

Start Your Gaisce Journey
Adventure & Sport

Europe Gap Year — Portrush Programmes

Ages 18+
8 weeks
Portrush, Northern Ireland
Paid programme — see website

A range of 8-week programmes on the stunning North Antrim coast including the Causeway Giants American Football coaching programme, outdoor education placements, and youth development roles. Gain hands-on leadership skills, live like a local, and explore Scotland and Europe during your time off. Programmes can be customised and combine community work with adventure travel.

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Work & Internship

Irish Gap Year — Dublin Gateway Internship

Ages 18–24
8–12 weeks
Dublin
Paid programme — see website

Gain professional work experience through a curated internship placement in Dublin. Irish Gap Year arranges your placement, accommodation with a host family, and cultural excursions. Placements span fields including media, business, technology, hospitality, and the arts. Ideal for students who want to test a career direction before committing to a college course.

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International Volunteering & Conservation

International Volunteering

International Volunteer HQ (IVHQ)

Ages 18+ (16+ for some)
1 – 24 weeks
40+ countries across 6 continents
From approx. US$20/day

The world's largest and most trusted volunteer abroad organisation, used by over 157,000 participants since 2007. Choose from 300+ projects in teaching, childcare, healthcare, wildlife conservation, marine protection, and construction. Includes pre-departure training, airport pick-up, accommodation, meals, and 24/7 in-country support. Flexible start dates year-round. You can also earn college credit through partner institutions.

Plan Your Gap Year
International Volunteering

Projects Abroad — Gap Programmes

Ages 16+
2 – 12 weeks
25+ countries worldwide
Paid — varies by destination

Structured gap year programmes combining volunteering, adventure, and cultural immersion across Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the South Pacific. Projects Abroad is known for its high safety standards, dedicated in-country staff, and curated multi-week itineraries. Areas include conservation, marine biology, medicine, teaching, journalism, and human rights. Particularly popular with students aged 16–19 travelling independently for the first time.

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Adventure & Conservation

Camps International — Expeditions

Ages 16+
4 – 12 weeks
Borneo, Tanzania, Costa Rica, Ecuador & more
Paid — varies by expedition

Epic open expeditions blending cultural exchange, meaningful volunteer work, and adventure travel in biodiverse regions. Every programme supports long-term community and conservation projects led by local people. Emphasis on sustainability, ethical travel, and genuine impact. Activities range from rainforest treks and wildlife monitoring to building community infrastructure and teaching in rural schools.

Explore Expeditions
International Volunteering

GVI — Global Vision International

Ages 18+
2 – 24 weeks
Thailand, South Africa, Fiji, Costa Rica & more
Paid — varies by project

High-impact volunteering and internship programmes focused on marine conservation, wildlife protection, teaching, and community development. Work with elephants in Thailand, protect coral reefs in Fiji, or support sea turtle conservation in Costa Rica. GVI partners with local organisations and aligns all projects with the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Hands-on, impact-driven, and suitable for both first-time travellers and experienced adventurers.

Browse Projects
International Volunteering

Volunteering Solutions

Ages 17+
1 – 24 weeks
25+ countries in Asia, Africa, Europe & South America
Budget-friendly — varies by project

Affordable gap year programmes including teaching English, childcare, wildlife conservation, women's empowerment, medical volunteering, and community development. Accommodation in homestays and volunteer houses where you live alongside other international volunteers. Popular with students who want to chain multiple short placements across different countries to create a customised multi-destination gap year.

Plan Your Trip
Adventure & Conservation

GoEco — Ethical Volunteering

Ages 18+ (15+ for some)
1 – 12 weeks
50+ countries worldwide
Paid — varies by project

Award-winning ethical volunteer programmes selected by sustainable travel experts. Focus areas include wildlife and marine conservation, education, and medical initiatives. GoEco curates teen-specific programmes with chaperone supervision for 15–17-year-olds, making it one of the few providers suitable for students under 18. All programmes are vetted for sustainability and genuine community benefit.

Find a Project

Language, Work & Multi-Country

Language & Internship

EF Gap Year

Ages 18+
6 months (26 weeks)
50+ destinations across every continent
Paid — premium programme

The biggest name in international education. A 26-week programme combining language study, an internship or volunteer stint, and multi-country travel. Sample itineraries include language immersion in Japan, volunteering in Nepal, and an internship in Seoul. EF also offers the Globetrotter Semester — 12 weeks across Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Includes accommodation, college application guidance, and a certificate of completion.

Learn More
Study & Travel

Semester at Sea

Ages 18+
1 semester (approx. 14 weeks)
Multi-continent voyage
Paid — scholarships available

A transformative study-abroad programme on a ship, visiting multiple countries across Europe, Africa, South America, and Asia. The Fall 2026 voyage sails from the Netherlands in September, visiting Portugal, Morocco, Brazil, and more, finishing in Bangkok. Earn college credits while experiencing deep cultural immersion at every port. Scholarships and financial aid are available.

Explore Voyages
Work & Internship

Intern Abroad HQ

Ages 18+
2 weeks – 6 months
20 destinations, 24 career fields
Paid — varies by placement

Career-enhancing internships tailored to your academic and professional goals. Choose from in-country or virtual placements across fields including healthcare, technology, business, journalism, law, and education. Part-time and full-time options available. Brought to you by the team behind IVHQ, with B Corp certification and over 120,000 participants supported. An ideal option if you want to test a career direction before committing to a college course.

Find an Internship

Pro Tip from Your Guidance Counsellor

The European Solidarity Corps is one of the best-kept secrets in Irish education. It is completely free, covers all your expenses including a monthly pocket allowance, and you return with a Youthpass certificate documenting the skills you developed. Start by registering on the European Youth Portal, then contact Léargas or VSI in Ireland to get matched with a project.

Step-by-Step Guide

How to Plan Your Gap Year

A gap year without a plan can drift into a wasted year. Follow these six steps to turn your time between school and college into one of the most productive and memorable experiences of your life.

1

Know Your "Why"

Before you look at a single programme, get clear on what you want from a gap year. Are you looking to build confidence and independence? Explore a career direction? Learn a language? Give back through volunteering? Travel and broaden your horizons? Your "why" will filter the options and stop you from being overwhelmed by choice.

2

Set a Budget Early

Gap years range from completely free (European Solidarity Corps) to several thousand euros (structured international programmes). Be honest about what your family can afford, factor in savings from part-time work, and remember that you will need spending money beyond programme fees. Some organisations offer scholarships or fundraising support — always ask.

3

Research Thoroughly

Read reviews from past participants on sites like Go Overseas and GoAbroad. Check whether the provider is accredited (look for Gap Year Association or B Corp certification). Contact the organisation directly and ask hard questions about safety, support structures, accommodation quality, and what happens if something goes wrong. If a programme does not answer your questions openly, walk away.

4

Secure Your College Place

If you have already applied through the CAO and received an offer, most colleges will allow you to defer your place for one year. Contact the admissions office directly — deferral policies vary by institution and by course. Some high-demand programmes (such as Medicine) may not permit deferral, so check before you commit. You can also choose to reapply through the CAO the following year with fresh perspectives.

5

Handle the Logistics

Apply for your passport well in advance — processing times can be long. Check visa requirements for your destination. Arrange comprehensive travel and health insurance (your provider may include this). Visit your GP for any required vaccinations. Set up a bank account that works internationally and notify your bank you will be abroad. These practical steps are easy to overlook in the excitement of planning, but they make or break the experience.

6

Build a Flexible Timeline

You do not need to fill every week of a gap year with structured programmes. A common pattern is to work and save for the first few months, then travel or volunteer for a concentrated period, and finish with time at home to decompress and prepare for college. Build in breathing room — some of the most valuable growth happens in unstructured time between planned activities.

Before You Decide

Key Things to Consider

A gap year is a big decision. These are the areas that matter most when weighing up your options — think through each one carefully before committing your time and money.

Safety & Support

Check what safety infrastructure is in place — does the organisation have 24/7 emergency support? Are accommodations vetted? Is there a local team on the ground? Ask how they have handled emergencies in the past. Reputable providers will answer these questions without hesitation.

Ethical Volunteering

Not all volunteer programmes are created equal. Look for projects led by local communities, not imposed from outside. Avoid "voluntourism" that prioritises the volunteer's experience over the community's needs. Programmes aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and those holding B Corp certification tend to be more ethical and impactful.

True Cost of a Gap Year

Programme fees are just the starting point. Factor in flights, travel insurance, vaccinations, visa costs, personal spending money, and the "opportunity cost" of a year without income or college progression. On the other hand, consider the value of the skills, confidence, and clarity you will bring to college. Many students say a gap year made them significantly more focused and motivated in their studies.

College Deferral Rules

Most Irish universities allow you to defer an accepted CAO offer for one academic year, but policies vary. Some high-demand courses may not permit deferral. Always contact the admissions office of the specific college and course before accepting an offer you plan to defer. Get the deferral confirmed in writing.

Mental Health & Homesickness

Being far from home for an extended period can be emotionally challenging, especially if it is your first time living independently. Choose a programme with good pastoral support. Talk openly with your family about how you will stay in touch. It is completely normal to feel homesick — the strongest gap year students are the ones who acknowledge it and ask for support early.

Making It Count on Your CV

A gap year is only valuable if you can articulate what you learned from it. Keep a journal. Take photos. Collect certificates and references. When you return, be able to clearly explain how the experience developed your resilience, communication, cultural awareness, and independence. Employers and college admissions teams love a well-explained gap year — they are wary of one you cannot describe.

Don't Forget

Your Gap Year Checklist

Work through this checklist in the months before you leave. Ticking off each item early reduces stress and ensures you can focus on the experience itself once your gap year begins.

Passport & Visa

Check your passport has at least six months' validity beyond your return date. Research visa requirements for your destination well in advance — some applications take weeks to process and may require supporting documents, interviews, or biometrics.

Travel & Health Insurance

Arrange comprehensive travel insurance that covers medical emergencies, trip cancellation, lost luggage, and repatriation. If your programme provides insurance, read the policy carefully and check whether it covers adventure activities, mental health support, and pre-existing conditions.

Vaccinations & Health

Visit your GP at least eight weeks before departure. Some vaccinations need to be given in stages over several weeks. Ask about malaria prophylaxis if travelling to tropical regions. Pack a basic first-aid kit and any prescription medications you need, along with a letter from your doctor explaining what they are.

Finances & Banking

Open a bank account with low or no foreign transaction fees. Notify your bank that you will be abroad so your card is not blocked. Set a weekly budget and stick to it. Have a backup payment method — a second card stored separately from your main wallet. Save emergency funds that you do not touch unless absolutely necessary.

College Deferral (if applicable)

If you have accepted a CAO offer, contact the college admissions office to request a deferral. Do this as early as possible — deadlines vary. Get written confirmation of your deferred place. If you plan to reapply through the CAO next year instead, make sure you understand the timeline and the 1 February application deadline.

Emergency Contacts & Documents

Share your full itinerary, programme contact details, and accommodation addresses with your family. Store digital copies of your passport, insurance policy, and programme confirmation in a secure cloud folder you can access from anywhere. Register with the Department of Foreign Affairs' citizens registration service if travelling outside the EU.

Advice for Parents & Guardians

Supporting Your Child's Gap Year

It is natural to feel anxious when your child wants to take a gap year. Here is how to be supportive while making sure they are well prepared and safe.

Help Them Plan, Don't Plan for Them

The whole point of a gap year is to build independence. Encourage your child to research programmes, make phone calls, fill out applications, and manage their own budget. Your role is to ask good questions, flag risks they might not see, and provide a safety net — not to take over the process. The planning itself is part of the growth.

Vet the Programme Together

Research the organisation's safety record, accreditation, and reviews from past participants. Attend any parent information sessions offered by the provider. Ask to speak to families of previous participants. A reputable organisation will welcome this scrutiny — if they discourage it, consider it a red flag.

Agree on Communication Expectations

Before your child leaves, agree on how often you will be in touch and through what channels. Daily texts can be reassuring, but be careful not to create a dynamic where they cannot fully immerse in the experience. Trust the process — the occasional silence usually means they are busy having the time of their life, not that something has gone wrong.

Common Questions

Gap Year FAQs

Not negatively. If you have already received and accepted a CAO offer, most colleges will allow you to defer for one year — contact the admissions office to confirm. If you choose to reapply next year, your Leaving Cert results remain valid and you simply submit a new CAO application by 1 February. A well-spent gap year can actually strengthen your application if you later apply for courses with interviews or personal statements.
Yes, but options are more limited. Some providers like Projects Abroad and GoEco accept participants from age 15 or 16 with parental consent, and IVHQ runs chaperoned teen summer camps for 16–17-year-olds. Gaisce is available from age 14 and can be worked on during a gap year. Once you turn 18, the full range of programmes — including the European Solidarity Corps — opens up to you.
Yes. The European Solidarity Corps is completely free for participants aged 18–30. The EU covers travel, accommodation, food, insurance, language support, and a monthly pocket allowance. You can volunteer in another European country or within Ireland. Solidarity Projects — where you design your own community initiative — are also fully funded. Contact Léargas or VSI in Ireland to get started.
A gap year does not have to last a full calendar year. Many students combine a few months of work and saving with a shorter structured programme of 8–14 weeks abroad. Others split their year between two or three different experiences — for example, working from September to January, volunteering abroad from February to April, and preparing for college from May onwards. The key is having a plan, not filling every week.
Absolutely — provided you can clearly articulate what you gained from it. Employers value resilience, adaptability, cross-cultural communication, and initiative, all of which a gap year develops in abundance. Colleges report that students returning from gap years tend to be more focused, more motivated, and more engaged in their studies. Keep a journal, collect references, and be ready to tell the story of your year with confidence.
A gap year does not have to involve international travel. You can volunteer with community organisations in Ireland through the European Solidarity Corps "in-country" option, pursue a Gaisce Gold Award, work to save money and gain professional experience, or combine part-time work with a creative or sporting project. The Citizens Information website has a helpful overview of options for staying in Ireland during a year out at citizensinformation.ie.
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