Study marketing in Ireland through more routes than almost any other subject. This guide compares every 2025 CAO programme side by side, from 566 points at Trinity down to 227 at NCI, then maps the PLC, ladder and mature routes, English-taught EU business schools, graduate salaries and the specialisations the degree opens up.
There are two ways into marketing at third level. Named degrees (like TU Dublin's BSc Marketing, DCU's Marketing, Innovation and Technology, or NCI's Marketing Practice) put marketing at the centre from day one. The alternative is a Commerce or Business degree (UCD, TCD, UCC, Galway, UL, Maynooth) where you choose marketing as your major in second or third year. Both routes are respected by employers, and unusually for a popular field, some of the strongest named marketing degrees in the country sit well below 500 points.
| INSTITUTION | CAO CODE | PROGRAMME | AWARD | YEARS | 2025 R1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trinity College Dublin | TR081 | BESS (Business exit with marketing specialisation) | BA / BBS | 4 | 566 |
| UCD | DN650 | Commerce (Marketing major) | BComm | 3 | 555 |
| DCU | DC111 | Business Studies (Marketing specialism) | BBS | 4 | 510 |
| DCU | DC240 | Marketing, Innovation and Technology (MINT) | BSc | 4 | 487 |
| DCU | DC241 | Digital Business and Innovation | BA | 4 | 468 |
| UCC | CK213 | Food Marketing and Entrepreneurship | BSc | 4 | 466 |
| UCC | CK201 | Commerce (Marketing pathway) | BComm | 4 | Check CAO |
| University of Galway | GY201 | Commerce (Marketing stream) | BComm | 3 | 454 |
| University of Limerick | LM050 | Business Studies (Marketing option) | BBS | 4 | 444 |
| Maynooth University | MH404 | Business (Marketing stream) | BBS / BBA | 3 | 400 |
| TU Dublin | TU922 | Marketing | BSc | 4 | 380 |
| NCI | NC020 | Marketing Practice | BA (Hons) | 3 | 227 |
Points shown are 2025 CAO Round 1 cut-offs. Verify at cao.ie/points. All programmes above are Level 8 and covered by the Free Fees Scheme for eligible EU students (student contribution applies). Digital-marketing-specific degrees at TU Dublin, IADT and private colleges are compared in the More Options section below.
Marketing is one field where the technological universities and colleges lead rather than follow: TU Dublin runs the largest dedicated marketing school in the country, and IADT, NCI and the regional TUs offer digital-first degrees at points that would not get you near a university business course.
Marketing has no licensing exam and no regulator. What employers screen for is evidence you can do the job: a placement or internship, real campaigns you have worked on, a portfolio of content and results, comfort with analytics tools, and clear writing. A graduate from a 250-point course with a strong placement year and a live portfolio routinely beats a 550-point graduate with neither. Choose the course that gets you doing real marketing earliest.
| Institution | CAO Code | Programme | Level | Duration | 2025 R1 Points | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TU Dublin | TU922 | Marketing | L8 | 4 yrs | 380 | Aungier Street, Dublin 2 |
| TU920 | Digital Marketing (restructured for 2026 entry) | L8 | 4 yrs | Check CAO | Blanchardstown or Tallaght | |
| TU924 | E-Commerce in Retailing | L8 | 4 yrs | 251 | Aungier Street, Dublin 2 | |
| IADT | DL805 | Digital Marketing | L8 | 3 yrs | Check CAO | Dún Laoghaire, Co. Dublin |
| NCI | NC020 | Marketing Practice | L8 | 3 yrs | 227 | IFSC, Dublin 1 |
| Dublin Business School | DB531 | Marketing | L8 | 3 yrs | 293 | Dublin 2 |
| DB517 | Marketing (Event Management) | L8 | 3 yrs | 282 | Dublin 2 | |
| DB518 | Marketing (Digital Marketing) | L8 | 3 yrs | 261 | Dublin 2 | |
| SETU | SE418 | Digital Marketing with Analytics | L7 | 3 yrs | 258 | Carlow |
| TUS | US612 | Business Studies (Marketing and Management) | L7 | 3 yrs | 216 | Limerick |
Points shown are 2025 CAO Round 1 cut-offs. Dublin Business School is a private college: its courses are not covered by the Free Fees Initiative, so check current tuition on dbs.ie. Level 7 degrees ladder into Level 8 add-on years. MTU, ATU and the other regional TUs also offer marketing through their business degrees at Levels 6 to 8; search your region on cao.ie.
Marketing may be the clearest example on this site. NCI Marketing Practice at 227 points and TU922 at 380 send graduates into the same Google, agency and brand-side roles as the 550+ commerce degrees. Marketing directors care about the campaigns on your CV, not the points you entered with, and nobody in an interview has ever asked for a Leaving Cert breakdown.
Marketing has some of the friendliest entry routes in Irish higher education, including a genuine ladder from Level 5 all the way to honours degree and masters.
One-year PLC courses in Marketing (5M2069) and Marketing with Digital Media run at colleges of further education nationwide, including Rathmines College and Blackrock FEI in Dublin. Find one near you on fetchcourses.ie.
Most degree destinations want a full award with five distinctions (NCI asks for three). TU Dublin scores QQI applicants up to 390 points, and check any maths module requirements for your target course.
PLC marketing graduates progress every year into DC240 MINT, TU922, TU920, NC020 and DL805. Some Level 6 business awards even carry automatic advanced entry to second year at TU Dublin and NCI.
Every BComm and BBS in the country (UCD, UCC, Galway, UL, Maynooth, DCU) lets you choose Marketing as your major after a general first year, so you never need to commit at CAO stage.
Level 7 marketing degrees at SETU, TUS and the regional TUs, and Level 6 business courses at TU Dublin, ladder directly into Level 8 add-on years. Over 80% of TU Dublin Level 6 business students progress to a degree.
The parchment at the end of the ladder is the same Level 8 honours award as direct entry, and often comes with more work experience attached.
If you are 23 or over on 1 January of your entry year, apply through the CAO by 1 February as a mature applicant and be assessed on your application and motivation rather than Leaving Cert points.
Marketing departments genuinely value mature students: anyone who has worked in retail, hospitality, sales or running social media for a small business arrives with real consumer insight that classroom-only students lack.
Marketing is one of the easiest fields to convert into. One-year MSc programmes in marketing and digital marketing at UCD Smurfit, TU Dublin, DCU and elsewhere accept graduates from arts, science and engineering backgrounds, with some requiring a business component and others open to any discipline.
Springboard+ also funds part-time digital marketing conversion courses (IADT runs one) for jobseekers and career changers, often free or at 10% of the fee.
Direct CAO entry, PLC progression, the Level 6/7 ladder, mature entry and graduate conversion all end in the same place: a marketing role won on the strength of your portfolio and placement, not your entry route. In a field with no licensing exam, how you got in is forgotten by your first campaign.
In most of Europe, marketing is studied inside an English-taught International Business degree, with specialisation coming later. The Netherlands and Denmark offer world-ranked business schools where EU students pay low or no tuition, and admission does not run on a points race.
Marketing is not a licensed profession, so there is no Irish registration hurdle: degrees from recognised EU universities travel well with Irish and international employers and for masters entry. Three things to verify per programme. First, accreditation: look for university status and business school accreditations such as AACSB or EQUIS. Second, deadlines: Dutch selective (numerus fixus) programmes typically close around mid-January and use their own selection process; applications run through Studielink, months before CAO offers. Third, entry conditions: maths requirements and English-language evidence vary. Always confirm with the university for your exact entry year.
Dutch statutory tuition is roughly €2,600 per year and Danish public universities are tuition-free for EU students (verify current rates). Cost of living, especially housing, is the figure to budget hardest for.
These programmes are delivered fully in English to classes drawn from dozens of countries. No Dutch or Danish needed to study, though locals will love you for trying.
Marketing is a global discipline, and an international cohort plus a European network is a genuine asset when the biggest marketing employers in Ireland are multinationals.
English-taught business and marketing bachelors also run across Belgium, Germany, Spain, Italy and Central Europe, some at public universities with low EU fees and some at private business schools with substantial tuition, so check the fee status of each institution carefully. Use resources like eunicas.ie alongside each university's admissions pages, and confirm the language of instruction, deadlines and entry requirements for the exact programme year you are applying to.
There is no licensing exam in marketing and no regulator to register with. Your degree opens into a set of specialisation paths, and the placements, portfolio and tools you pick up along the way decide which doors open widest.
The classic path: brand manager roles in FMCG, drinks, food and consumer tech, managing how a product looks, feels and sells. Graduate programmes at companies like Diageo, Kerry and Unilever are the traditional training grounds.
Where most graduate hiring now happens: paid social, SEO, email, influencer partnerships and content creation, in-house or in agencies. A live portfolio (even a personal project with real followers) is worth more than any grade.
The fastest-growing and best-paid lane: marketing analysts, insight managers and market researchers who can read data and tell the story behind it. Comfort with analytics platforms and spreadsheets sets you apart early.
Account management, media planning and strategy in Dublin's agency world. Entry is competitive and network-driven: agency placements, IAPI graduate programmes and student ad competitions are the usual doors in.
Corporate communications, public affairs, sponsorship and event marketing. Suits strong writers and organisers, and overlaps heavily with journalism and politics graduates, so your marketing toolkit is a real edge.
Tech sales, growth marketing and e-commerce management, where marketing meets revenue directly. Dublin's tech multinationals hire marketing graduates into these roles in volume, and progression is famously fast for performers.
None of these is a legal requirement to work in marketing, but each strengthens a CV in its lane: Marketing Institute of Ireland programmes and membership for the professional network; Digital Marketing Institute and CIM certifications for structured digital and strategic credentials; and free platform certifications from Google, Meta and HubSpot, which cost nothing but signal initiative to a first employer. A one-year MSc in Marketing or Digital Marketing is the most common formal next step, especially for graduates converting from other disciplines.
Typical starting salaries for marketing executives, digital marketing executives and agency account executives. Tech company graduate programmes tend to sit at or above the top of this range.
Marketing managers, brand managers and senior digital specialists with roughly 5 to 10 years of experience, varying by sector and company size.
Heads of marketing, marketing directors and CMOs in larger organisations, with senior roles in multinationals and tech going well beyond this figure.
Marketing teams inside FMCG, retail, food, financial services and every other sector. The broadest employer base in the country: almost every organisation of any size hires marketers.
Advertising, media, digital, PR and research agencies, mostly Dublin-based. Faster pace, wider variety of brands, and the classic training ground for the first five years of a marketing career.
Google, Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok, Salesforce and hundreds of SaaS companies run large marketing, sales and customer success teams from Ireland, and hire marketing graduates in volume.
Salary figures are indicative ranges based on published Irish graduate and recruitment salary guides and vary by employer, sector, location and experience.
From first researching courses to your first campaign as a marketing graduate, here is the road ahead.
Visit open days and decide between a named marketing degree and a broad business degree with a marketing major. Start a small real-world project now (a social account for a club, team or hobby): it costs nothing and becomes portfolio evidence later. No Leaving Cert subject is required for marketing, though most courses set a minimum maths grade.
CAO applications open in early November. If you are also considering the Netherlands or Denmark, note their applications run separately with deadlines from mid-January, well before any CAO offer arrives.
Apply by 20 January for the discounted CAO application fee. Consider it your first lesson in price promotion.
Main CAO closing date, and the deadline for mature applicants and most supplementary schemes (HEAR and DARE applicants must also complete their sections by the scheme deadlines). Late applications reopen in March at a higher fee, with restrictions.
Reorder your choices free of charge until 1 July. Balance the high-points commerce degrees against the named marketing degrees and the ladder routes, in genuine order of preference. The points will look after themselves.
Leaving Cert results arrive, followed by CAO Round 1 offers. If you miss a course, remember how many routes converge in marketing: the PLC year, the Level 6/7 ladder and the broad business degrees all reach the same destination.
Build the four assets marketing employers screen for: a placement or internship, a live portfolio of real campaigns and content, working knowledge of analytics and advertising platforms, and writing you are proud of. Free Google, Meta and HubSpot certifications can be banked from first year onwards.
Choose between graduate programme applications (tech and FMCG schemes open as early as September of final year), agency graduate intakes, or a one-year MSc in marketing or digital marketing to deepen a specialism.
Whether your first title is marketing executive, account executive or growth analyst, you enter a field where output is visible fast, progression rewards initiative, and the skills transfer to every industry there is.
A named degree (TU922, DC240, NC020, DL805) gives you marketing depth from day one. A commerce or business degree keeps every door open and lets you choose marketing after a general first year, which is the safer bet if you are not yet certain marketing is the one.
Digital-specific degrees (TU920, DL805, SE418) go deep on the channels where hiring happens now. Full-spectrum degrees (TU922, DC240, the commerce routes) add strategy, research, brand and consumer psychology. Both work; ask which module list excites you more, because motivation is the multiplier.
In a field hired on portfolios, the placement is the single most valuable line of the degree. DCU's INTRA, UL's Co-Op, TU922's Year 3 placement and IADT's Year 2 placement all deliver it. When comparing two courses, the one with the stronger, longer placement usually wins.
NC020 at 227, TU924 at 251 and the Level 6/7 routes at SETU, TUS and TU Dublin all ladder to the same honours award, and a PLC Marketing year adds a portfolio before you even start. Enter where you can, then let your work, not your points, set the ceiling.
There is no single best place to study marketing in Ireland, and this is a field that proves the point better than any other: the country's biggest dedicated marketing school sits at 380 points, and a 227-point degree sends graduates to the same employers as the 566-point routes. What separates marketing graduates five years out is the placement they threw themselves into, the portfolio they built while others waited to be taught, the tools they taught themselves, and how clearly they write. Pick the course you can get to, then start making things.