16
75%
Sixteen physiotherapists operate in Temple Bar, a neighbourhood better known for its pubs and cafés than its clinical services. The area supports 233 restaurants, 143 cafés, 92 fast food outlets, 50 bars, and 88 pubs — meaning the foot traffic is there, but so is the noise. Competing for attention in a district built around nightlife and tourism takes a specific strategy.
The good news: competition among physiotherapy practices is moderate, not cutthroat. Sixteen providers in a city-centre neighbourhood suggests steady demand, likely driven by office workers in the surrounding business district, local residents, and the sheer volume of people passing through daily. The area is also home to several established medical practices — Jervis Medical Centre, Temple Bar Medical Centre, Mercer's Medical Centre, The Well Woman Centre, and Parliament Street Medical Practice among them — which creates referral potential for physiotherapists willing to build relationships.
A notable gap exists in digital presence. Twelve of the sixteen physiotherapists (75%) have websites, but four have none. In a neighbourhood where a significant share of potential clients are visitors, tourists, or workers passing through — people who will search on their phones before walking through a door — that missing 25% is leaving business on the table. For operators who do have a website, the bar is now higher: simply having one is not enough when twelve competitors do too. Differentiation will come from visibility, reviews, and how well a practice connects with the medical referral network already embedded in Temple Bar.
Proximity to my office
Temple Bar draws a large weekday workforce from surrounding business streets — clients want a physio they can reach on a lunch break without crossing the Liffey or losing half their afternoon.
Trust through referrals
With practices like Temple Bar Medical Centre, Mercer's Medical Centre, and The Well Woman Centre nearby, many clients arrive through GP recommendation and want to see that connection acknowledged.
Same-week availability
Sixteen physiotherapists in one neighbourhood means clients have options — if your next open slot is two weeks away, they will book elsewhere before lunchtime.
Clear pricing upfront
Without a public price list or at least a website that outlines costs, a practice loses walk-in and search-driven clients who are comparing options across the area.
Recovery from desk-based injuries
The concentration of office workers in and around Temple Bar means the most common complaints are neck, back, and wrist issues tied to prolonged sitting and screen use — specialists in this area have an advantage.
A sample of real physiotherapists in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| Jervis Medical Centre | Doctors |
| Dublin Well Woman Centre | Clinic |
| Parliament Street Medical Practice | Doctors |
| Suffolk Street Surgery | Doctors |
| Travel Health Clinic | Doctors |
| Temple Bar Medical Centre | Doctors |
| Mercer's Medical Centre | Doctors |
| The Well Woman Centre | Doctors |
| Dr. Ganstegurnh | Doctors |
| MySkincare | Doctors |
| Fitzgerald Private Clinic | Clinic |
| The Wicklow Street Clinic | Clinic |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Build referral links with local GP practices
The neighbourhood has at least eight established medical practices with websites. Reach out directly to Jervis Medical Centre, Parliament Street Medical Practice, and Suffolk Street Surgery to introduce your services. Physiotherapists who are top-of-mind with local GPs get a steady stream of warm referrals.
Fix your online presence before spending on ads
Four of your sixteen competitors have no website at all. If you already have one, make sure it loads quickly, lists your services clearly, and works on mobile. Nearly every potential client in Temple Bar will search on their phone first — a clunky or missing site is the fastest way to lose them.
Target desk-worker complaints specifically
Temple Bar's daytime population is heavily office-based. Advertising treatments for repetitive strain, postural problems, and desk-related neck and back pain will resonate far more than a generic list of services. Mention the specific neighbourhoods and workplaces you serve.
Temple Bar's physiotherapy market sits at a moderate density — sixteen practices in a high-footfall, high-visibility neighbourhood. It is not oversaturated in the way food and drink is here (over 600 outlets in the same area), but it is competitive enough that relying on walk-ins alone will not sustain a practice. The real split is between the twelve operators with an online presence and the four without one. Standing out requires strong local search visibility, relationships with the surrounding GP and medical practices, and a clear specialisation — generic physiotherapy in this area will blend into the background.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.