Summary
WWE reportedly views the idea of bringing WrestleMania to Ireland as a long-term project rather than something on the immediate horizon.
According to the report, the event is seen as achievable if the Irish government decides to position the country as a global sporting hub and backs a serious bid. The update follows recent public comments from Kilkenny councilor Maurice Shortall, who said Ireland was well placed to present a credible case for hosting WWE's biggest annual event.
That keeps the conversation alive after an earlier push for WrestleMania in Ireland, but it also makes clear that any move would depend on government-level support rather than WWE simply choosing the destination on its own.
What an Ireland bid would mean for WrestleMania
If Ireland were able to assemble that backing, WrestleMania would become part of a much larger tourism and major-events pitch instead of a standard arena or stadium booking. That matters because WWE has increasingly treated WrestleMania as a week-long destination event, and a government-supported bid would give Ireland a stronger path to compete for it.
It also suggests that any realistic timeline would be measured in years, not months. For WWE, that means Ireland remains an option worth discussing, but not one that appears close to being finalized.
Sources
As reported by Fightful.


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