About Us

The Irish Coast Guard is a division of the Department of Transport. We are one of the state’s four principal emergency services, working alongside An Garda Síochána, the National Fire Brigade and the National Ambulance Service. The Coast Guard provides maritime search and rescue, maritime casualty and pollution response service.

Rigid inflatable boat operating at speed on open water with crew on deck

MARITIME SEARCH AND RESCUE

MARITIME CASUALTY

The Coast Guard is legally responsible for coordinating the response to serious emergencies at sea. These incidents, often called “maritime casualties”, include any major accidents involving ships, maritime infrastructure, or people in danger.

We respond to a wide range of dangerous situations, such as when vessels catch fire, run aground or collide. Our teams also step in when a ship has a mechanical failure or faces other serious hazards that put lives at risk.

A key part of our role is spotting these dangers early. To do this, the Coast Guard:

  • Manages Ireland’s sea communications: We manage the technology used to watch over our waters.
  • Monitors sea traffic: We keep a constant eye on ship movements and listen for distress signals.

Stays ready 24/7: We provide round-the-clock channels to receive reports of accidents or pollution.

Maritime operations officer monitoring vessel activity and live camera feeds on multiple control-room screens
Aerial view of a twin‑engine rescue aircraft flying over open water, with a small vessel below

POLLUTION RESPONSE

OUR RESOURCES

44 Coast Guard Units across Ireland

Coast Guard Units across Ireland

130+ full-time staff

full-time staff

950+ volunteer personnel

volunteer personnel

3 rescue coordination centres

rescue coordination centres