The 2026 RTÉ Short Story Competition is now open for entries
TELL US YOUR (SHORT) STORIES
The 2026 RTÉ Short Story Competition is now open for entries
Recognising and rewarding the best new Irish fiction writing for radio for 40 years
Short story deadline Friday 15th May 2026
RTÉ is inviting entries to one of Ireland’s longest established and most significant literary prizes, the RTÉ Short Story Competition in honour of writer and broadcaster, Francis MacManus.
Free to enter, the popular competition, which marks its 40th birthday this year, recognises and rewards the best new Irish fiction writing for radio and presents the winning author with a cheque for €5,000, while the second and third placed writers will receive cheques for €4,000 and €3,000 respectively. A further seven runners-up will receive €300 each.
Writers over the age of 18 living in Ireland, and Irish writers around the world have until Friday 15th May 2026 to submit their short story, in English or Irish at www.rte.ie/writing. Story wordcounts must fall between 1800 and 2000 words, excluding the title.
This year’s entries will be judged by Aingeala Flannery, Tristan Rosenstock and Jan Carson (see bios in Notes to Editors below), who launched this year’s competition on last night’s Arena on RTÉ Radio 1, during which they discussed the longevity of the competition and what they are looking for from this year’s entries with presenter, Rick O’Shea.
New judge, Aingeala Flannery said: “Radio and short stories have been the twin passions of my working and creative life, so it was an absolute pleasure and honour to be asked to join Jan and Tristan to judge this year’s RTÉ Short Story Competition. I would encourage anyone with a story, especially the secret writers out there, to seize this opportunity and give it a shot. It’s free to enter, so you literally have nothing to lose. I will never forget where I was when I got the call to say that one of my stories had made the Francis MacManus shortlist. It gave me the confidence to call myself a writer and keep going.”
Returning judge Tristan Rosenstock said: “I’m absolutely thrilled to be returning as a judge this year and am looking already looking forward to my summer reading. Last summer was very happily spent reading and discussing the submissions with my fellow-judges and we were struck by the highly original voices we encountered along the way. The RTÉ Short Story Competition offers a uniquely valuable platform for writers in English and Irish at various stages of their writing careers, and connects new writing with readers and radio audiences in a truly singular way.”
Also returning to the judging panel this year, Jan Carson explains what she is looking for in a short story: “Believability is a deal maker or breaker for me as a reader. I don’t mind if your plot’s outlandish and your characters are a little unhinged, but if I can see – and it’s usually painfully obvious – that you don’t believe in the essential realness of the story you’re bringing to life, then it doesn’t matter how eloquent your writing is, or how many hooks you’ve woven into your narrative, I’m afraid you’ve probably left me cold.
Which brings me to voice. The key to unlocking a brilliant short story is capturing an authentic, and ideally intriguing, voice. In a radio context, I particularly love it when a story’s voice feels as if it’s conspiring with me, telling me something candid and confessional, only intended for my ears. I spend a lot of time reading my own stories in progress out loud to myself, just to ensure the voice is spot on.”

Producer of the competition, Sarah Binchy, said: “This competition has been at the heart of new Irish writing for 40 years now; we’ll be dipping into our fine archive on air and on podcast later in the year, featuring many writers who have gone on to notable publishing success. Some come back to judge the competition, such as Aingeala, whom we’re delighted to welcome to the judging panel this year. It’s free to enter, with the chance to hear your story voiced by the best of acting talent, with significant top prizes. If you’re serious about your writing, this should be very much on your radar. We can’t wait to read your stories!”
The winning stories will be revealed at a special RTÉ Arena live programme in the autumn and all 10 shortlisted stories will be published on rte.ie/culture and broadcast in a season of new writing on RTÉ Radio 1. To mark 40 years of the RTÉ Short Story Competition in honour of writer and broadcaster, Francis MacManus and in a year when RTÉ is marking 100 years of public service broadcasting in Ireland, we will be celebrating the 2026 shortlisted writers and their stories along with those previously shortlisted in the competition podcast.
The RTÉ Short Story Competition has been championing new talent for decades; past winners and shortlisted writers include Claire Keegan, Danielle McLaughlin, Brian Leyden, Chris Binchy, Nuala O’Connor, Liz Nugent, Shane Tivenan, Austin Duffy, Colin Walsh, Stephen Walsh and Sarah Gilmartin.
All shortlisted stories are produced for radio, voiced by some of Ireland’s most talented actors. In recent years, these have included Marty Rea, Aaron Monaghan, Jane Brennan, Cathy Belton, Derbhle Crotty, Eamon Morrissey, Ali White, Ingrid Craigie, Janet Moran, Kathy Rose O’Brien, Peter Coonan, Emmet Kirwan and Andrew Bennett.
For rules and all information about the competition, see www.rte.ie/writing. You’ll also find winning and shortlisted stories from previous years there.
ENDS
For information:
Neil O’Gorman | Corporate Communications Manager, RTÉ | E neil.ogorman@rte.ie
NOTES TO EDITORS: ABOUT THIS YEAR’S JUDGES
AINGEALA FLANNERY
Aingeala Flannery is the author of The Amusements (Penguin), which won the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year 2023 and the John McGahern Prize. Her short stories and essays have appeared in The Irish Times, Harper’s Bazaar, Paper Visual Art, and Winter Papers, and have been broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1. She is deputy publisher at The Dublin Review and is the current Kildare Library and Arts Service Writer-in-Residence at Maynooth University.
TRISTAN ROSENSTOCK
Tristan Rosenstock is a broadcaster with RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta, where he presents the arts series An Cúinne Dána. His debut book for young readers Inis Mara (LeabhairCOMHAR) was selected for World Book Day 2024, and he has since added two more to the Inis Mara series. He is co-editor of Inside Innti – A new wave in Irish Poetry (Cork University Press) and is literary editor of the magazine Comhar. He performs with traditional group Téada, who are celebrating 25 years on the road. He sits on the board of Poetry Ireland.
JAN CARSON
Jan Carson is a Belfast based writer who has published four novels, three short story collections and two micro-fiction collections. Her novel The Fire Starters won the EU Prize for Literature for Ireland, 2019. The Raptures was shortlisted for the An Post Irish Novel of the Year and Kerry Group Novel of the Year. Her writing has aired on BBC Radio 3 and 4 and RTE and has been translated into twenty languages worldwide.
Jan was the Seamus Heaney Centre Fellow at Queen’s University Belfast in 2025 and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Her latest novel, Few and Far Between was published in April 2026.