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Initially established by journalist and publisher Henry White in 1821 as The New Observer (to cash in on the success of the - unassociated - Observer newspaper), the paper became The Sunday Times in 1822 to associate itself with another - also unconnected - newspaper, The Times of London. The paper went through a variety of owners through the 19th and 20th century until it was acquired by Canadian press magnate Roy Thomson as part of his 1959 purchase of the Kelmsley group of newspapers. In 1966 Thomson purchased The Times bringing both titles under the ownership of the newly formed Times Newspapers Limited (TNL). Following a sequence of industrial disputes in the late 1970s, Thomson sold TNL to Rupert Murdoch in 1981.


Given his existing ownership of The Sun and The News of the World, TNL added broadsheet prestige to Rupert Murdoch’s stable of UK Newspapers. The takeover also led to a marked shift in the politics of the Sunday Times. Under the stewardship of editor Andrew Neil (1983 to 1994), the paper actively supported the neo-liberal policies of the Conservative Party under Margaret Thatcher.


Neil also actively sought to increase sales in the Republic of Ireland, sponsoring an aggressive circulation drive which saw sales increase 50% from 50,000 in December 1992 to 75,000 in July 1994. In 1993 the paper formally launched an Irish edition employing two journalists - Alan Ruddock (formerly deputy editor of the UK edition) and John Burns to produce an Irish lead story along with Irish arts coverage, reviews and sports. The decision to include RTE programmes in the paper’s television listings proved a particular driver for local sales.


In July 1994, the paper opened a full office in Dublin, marking the beginning of a gradual expansion in journalists employed and a concomitant increase in the proportion of the paper dedicated to Irish content. presence of Irish content. This drove a gradual increase in sales, breaking the 100,000 circulation mark in 2002 and later peaking at 114,000 in 2009.


However, the Sunday Times proved no less vulnerable to the post-2008  industry-wide circulation decline. By 2024, weekly sales had fallen to just under 44,000 according to the Audit Bureau of Circulation.  TGI Kantar figures suggest this equates to a total print readership of 241,000 as of mid 2025.


The circulation decline led to retrenchment of the Irish operation. In  2022,15 of 20 journalists employed on the Irish edition of the Sunday Times (and the online Times Ireland edition) were “invited” to apply for one of 12 new positions with an additional digital dimension. The move, understood to be intended to result in three redundancies, prompted a staff exodus. By July 2022, 11 of the 20 had indicated that they were taking redundancy and/or moving to work elsewhere.


The move has re-established the Sunday Times as the centre of gravity for News Corporation’s broadsheet content in Ireland. It effectively meant the end of the Times Ireland’s digital daily edition and a move to a “digital first” strategy centred around the Sunday edition.


(Last updated in April 2026)

Key Facts

Audience ShareMissing Data
Ownership TypePrivate
Geographic CoverageNational
Content TypePaid
Data Publicly Available
ownership data is easily available from other sources, e. g. public registries etc.

Ownership

Ownership Structure

Although the newspaper publishing activities of News Corporation in Ireland are frequently identified with “News Ireland”, the only company with this specific name is entirely separate from News Corporation. As of the beginning of 2023, the only News Corporation newspaper company listed with the Irish Companies Records Office appears to be News Uk and Ireland Trading Limited. The most record financial statement filed by this company described it as engaged in the “provision of personnel resources and administration services” to other members of the News UK group within the Republic of Ireland. 

Printed copies of the Irish Sun make no reference to the companies above. Instead they identify their publisher as News Group Newspapers Limited, headquartered at London Bridge Street, London. There are four intermediary owners between News Group Newspapers Limited and the ultimate global owner, News Corporation. The Murdoch Family owns the largest single shareholding in News Corporation.

Individual Owner

Operating Company

Facts

Founding Year1821
Founder
  • Henry White
    journalist and publisher who established the newspaper under the name The New Observer.
CEO
  • Lachlan Murdoch
    CEO of News Corporation, the ultimate global owner of the Irish Sun, and since September 2023 sole chair of both News Corporation and Fox Corporation, son of Rupert Murdoch.
Editor-In-Chief
  • Kieran McDaid

    Kieran McDaid was appointed editor of the Sunday Times Irish Edition in December 2024, after eight years as editor of the Irish Sun. Raised in Donegal, he studied Media and Philosophy at the University of Ulster from 1996 to 1999 and completed a Diploma in Newspaper Journalism at the same university in 2001. He started his journalism career in 2001 as a reporter at the Irish News in Belfast, before moving to the Press Association news agency (now PA Media).

    He initially joined the Irish Sun as a news editor in 2006. After a brief stint as a deputy news editor at the Irish Independent, he returned to work with News International in 2009, where he worked as Head of Content on the Irish Edition of the News of the World (until it was closed in 2011 as part of the fallout relating to the UK edition’s involvement in phone hacking). He became Head of News at the Irish Sun in 2011, a position he retained until promoted to Deputy Editor in 2014 and subsequently to full editor. 

ContactNews Ireland
2nd Floor, Macken House, 39/40 Mayor Street Upper
D01 C9W8 Dublin 1
RevenueMissing Data
Operating ProfitMissing Data
Advertising (in % of total funding)Missing Data
Market ShareMissing Data
Meta Data

Within the media industry in Ireland reporting on income levels are generally at group level rather than individual title level. On top of this, overall revenue details for the market as a whole are unavailable. Due to these factors it is not possible to report accurately on market share for individual titles or groups.

There is currently no standard audience measurement available for print and online news titles in Ireland. Individual titles publish data on readership or users but measurement parameters and sources vary between organisations, therefore it is not possible to report an accurate audience share for the purposes of this project.

Lachlan Murdoch is listed as CEO, as there is no evident CEO of News Media Ireland. The company has not responded to a request.

Sources