Every major brand at Kildare Village

So, where are the actual shops?

You are not here for a lecture on search engines. You want to know: is there a Nike store? Where is Pandora? Can you grab coffee before hitting the racks?

Below is the most complete list of brands at Kildare Village we can give you—drawn from real visitor searches and cross-checked against what is usually on site. Shop line-ups change (brands move, pop-ups appear), so treat this as your planning shortlist, not a legal document.

  • Nike
  • Adidas
  • Ralph Lauren
  • Tommy Hilfiger
  • Michael Kors
  • Pandora
  • … and many more in the searchable list below (120 names from data)

To find exactly where each store is located today—which zone, which entrance—open the official village map. It takes a few seconds and saves you walking in circles with tired feet.

Open official map →

How to not waste your day zig-zagging

Most first-timers try to walk the whole village in one go. That is tiring: you wear out by lunch and miss the shops you actually wanted. Here is what works:

  • Pick 2–3 priority brands (for example Nike + Adidas + a coffee stop).
  • Cluster them on the map—do not run from one end to the other twice.
  • Do the heavy walking before lunch, then take a proper sit-down break.
  • Save the “just browsing” for the second lap—if your feet still agree.

For the full list of names we track from search, jump to every brand people search for below. Looking for something specific (for example “is there a Crocs store?”)? Use your browser’s find on page (Ctrl+F, or Cmd+F on a Mac).

Where it is

Kildare Village is an open-air outlet beside the M7 near Nurney, County Kildare (sat-nav and ride-hail usually find it under that name). Use Google Maps for directions and the pin; the map below is the same search in an embedded view.

Open in Google Maps Official centre map (units)

We do not list every unit here. For the full live roster and today’s unit numbers, use the official boutiques directory on kildarevillage.com.

Diagram-style map with a path between location markers
This is a planning metaphor, not the real centre layout. For current unit numbers, brand moves, and closures, rely on the official map and directory. This guide focuses on pacing, categories, and how to avoid duplicate walking.

Every brand people search for

Shop line-ups change. For today’s exact unit and position, use Google Maps and the official boutique directory.

Filter shops by letter

  • Tommy Hilfiger
  • Adidas
  • Asics
  • Nike
  • Ralph Lauren
  • Samsonite
  • Crocs
  • Pandora
  • Sprout
  • Levis
  • Lindt
  • Michael Kors
  • Sculpted By Aimee
  • Barbour
  • Charlotte Tilbury
  • Skechers
  • Clothes Shops In
  • Elemis
  • Joules
  • New Balance
  • Restaurants
  • Shops
  • Bedeck
  • Columbia
  • Dune
  • Food
  • Guess
  • Hotel Near
  • Hugo Boss
  • Kate Spade
  • Oakberry
  • Perfume Shop
  • Restaurants In
  • Starbucks
  • Sunglasses
  • Sweaty Betty
  • Under Armour
  • Birkenstock
  • Boss
  • Castore
  • Clarks
  • Directions To
  • Jo Malone
  • Musto
  • Portlaoise To
  • Sandro
  • Sunglass Hut
  • The Perfume Shop
  • The White Company
  • Tory Burch
  • What Shops Are In
  • Armani
  • Ecco
  • Food In
  • Le Creuset
  • Mulberry
  • Places To Eat
  • Reiss
  • Shoe Shops
  • Dkny
  • Dylan Oaks
  • Kilkenny Design
  • Lindt Chocolate Shop
  • North Face
  • Shops At
  • Sunglasses Hut
  • Villeroy And Boch
  • What Exit Is
  • Helly Hansen
  • Kildare Train Station To
  • Kilkenny To
  • L'Occitane
  • Mint Velvet
  • Penhaligon
  • Places To Eat In
  • Regatta
  • Restaurant
  • Vans
  • Zara
  • Galway To
  • Hoka
  • Lacoste
  • Limerick To
  • Maynooth To
  • Moss Bros
  • Mother Of The Bride
  • Restaurants Near
  • Rixo
  • Superdry
  • When Is The Next Private Sale In
  • White Company
  • All Saints
  • Avoca
  • Best Restaurants In
  • Calvin Klein
  • Cork To
  • Hobbs
  • Hotels In
  • Jack And Jones
  • Jewellers
  • Karen Millen
  • Kids Around
  • Kilkenny Shop
  • Lululemon
  • Luxury Hotels Near
  • Moss
  • Shoe Shops In
  • Stores In
  • Tesco
  • The Head Plan
  • Ugg
  • Uggs
  • Victoria Secret
  • Watches
  • Weather
  • What Junction Is
  • Where Is
  • White Stuff
  • Accommodation Near
  • Adidas Shop

Google Maps (directions) · Official boutiques directory · Official village map

Typical brand opening hours (all year round)

Many outlet boutiques at Kildare Village follow a similar weekly rhythm to other retail in the destination:

  • Monday to Saturday: typically 10:00–19:00
  • Sunday: typically 10:00–18:00

Individual brand exceptions may apply (late openings, stock takes, launches). Always verify today’s headline and unit hours on the official plan your visit section before you travel.

Where to find major brands (by zone)

Zones are indicative. Use the official map for exact unit numbers; the centre rebalances brands from time to time.

On many published maps, the village reads as a gentle arc from the main parking approach through a central walk toward guest services and food. The groupings below are a memory aid for planning, not a legal tenancy map.

  • Zone A (parking-side / first retail band): often clusters high-footfall sportswear and trainers (for example Nike, Adidas, and similar athletic brands when they appear on the live directory).
  • Zone B (central walk): where many visitors expect fashion and lifestyle anchors (for example Polo Ralph Lauren, Tommy Hilfiger, Michael Kors-style units on the official line-up).
  • Zone C (toward guest services): commonly mixes jewellery, accessories, and gifting (for example Pandora, Swarovski, and neighbouring boutiques on the map you open on the day).
  • Food court (between B and C): café and restaurant façades often sit between the central walk and services end of the village; treat names and hours as live data on the official eat & drink pages.

Nike, Adidas, Ralph Lauren & more – what to expect

Nike: large sportswear outlet with a wide range of trainers and apparel at outlet-style pricing; expect Saturday queues at popular sizes and a mix of season-led stock. Bring the socks you actually wear for try-ons.

Adidas: football, running, and school-kit interest is common; made-for-outlet ranges can sit next to clearance, so read tickets and compare calmly.

Polo Ralph Lauren: polos, denim, and smart-casual layers; gifting and fit questions are frequent, so know slim versus classic preferences if you are buying for someone else.

Tommy Hilfiger: American casual staples; jeans and outerwear often move quickly on rails at peak times.

Across all of them, the outlet format means mixed stock: past-season, made-for-outlet ranges, and clearance can sit side by side. Read tickets, ask staff about sale rules for that week, and keep receipts sorted if you might return. Explore deeper brand-by-brand tips on our Kildare Village brands page.

How outlet villages are usually structured

Open-air outlet destinations typically mix fashion, footwear, luggage, athletic wear, beauty, and lifestyle brands. Some units are large flagship-style outlets; others are compact. If you are visiting for one brand, check the official centre map anyway, because unit moves happen.

Lists versus maps

“List of shops” intent is common on mobile. The best user experience pairs a sortable list with a map. A static HTML mirror of every unit goes stale quickly and duplicates what the centre already maintains. Use the official directory for names and units, and use this guide for how to plan: how long a full walk can take, which areas feel busiest around midday, how to combine browsing with food breaks, and how parking and drop-off or parking detail changes your route.

Half-day versus full-day browsing

If you only have two to three hours, resist the urge to “walk the whole village once” before buying anything. Pick two priority categories (for example footwear plus childrenswear), use the official map to cluster them, and accept that you will miss corners this trip. If you have a full day, you can afford a slower first lap to orient yourself, a proper lunch, and a second pass for comparisons and returns, but your feet and patience still have limits, especially with children.

One subtle mistake is treating the first lap as “research only” and the second lap as “buying time.” In reality, you often want to buy the obvious wins early (socks, gifts with limited sizes) and keep comparisons for categories where fit matters. That reduces how much you carry, and it reduces the stress of “we have to go back across the whole centre before closing.”

Shopping when your group wants different things

Mixed-age groups often split naturally: teenagers move faster, grandparents need more sitting breaks, and couples sometimes disagree on budget. If you split, agree two concrete reunion points and a time window, not only “message me.” Outlet Wi-Fi and phone batteries are both stressed on busy days, so low-tech plans still win.

If one person is doing serious try-ons while another only wants coffee, sequence the day so the patient person gets a seated break while the try-on person queues. That sounds trivial until you watch a family argue in front of a busy rail.

Outlet stock: what “deal” really means

Outlet ranges are often a mix of past-season lines, made-for-outlet ranges, and clearance depending on the brand. That is normal for the format, not a “trap,” but it does mean you should read labels and compare prices the same way you would on any high street. If you are buying gifts, keep receipts organised. Many return policies are handled at brand level, not by a single centre-wide desk.

If a price feels “too good,” pause for ten seconds: check what collection it belongs to, whether it is final sale, and whether the return window matches what you assume. Staff are used to those questions; asking calmly is faster than debating at the exit.

Returns, exchanges, and proof of purchase

Outlet shopping can involve split bags, partial exchanges, and different rules for sale items. Before you buy something borderline (wrong size “for later,” duplicate colour), ask the staff in that unit how their policy works that week, because promotional periods can temporarily tighten rules. This guide cannot reproduce each brand’s terms; treat staff answers as authoritative for the transaction you are in.

Trying things on, queues, and fitting-room etiquette

Weekend fitting rooms can queue hard. If you are shopping for multiple people, agree a one-in-one-out discipline so bags do not block rails, and decide in advance whether children try on in the same store or you buy sizes to return under that brand’s policy. Staff are juggling theft prevention with service, and small courtesies speed everyone up.

Photos, price tags, and respect for staff

Some brands discourage photography on the shop floor; others tolerate it. If you are comparing prices, do it discreetly and never photograph other customers or staff. If a price looks wrong, ask at the till rather than arguing from a screenshot of unclear origin. Outlet ticketing mistakes happen, but public scenes rarely end with a better discount.

Related planning pages

Opening hours, sales periods and gift cards, and the home hub.