2024 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship final

The 2024 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship final, the 137th event of its kind and the culmination of the 2024 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, was played at Croke Park on 21 July 2024.

Clare won the game by 3-29 to 1-34, to claim their fifth title.

The match was televised nationally on RTÉ2 as part of The Sunday Game live programme, presented by Joanne Cantwell from the Croke Park studio. The game was also televised on BBC Two and internationally on GAAGO.

Background

 * made their eighth final appearance, and their first since winning in 2013. They also won in the finals of 1914, 1995 and 1997, and were beaten finalists in 1889, 1932 and 2002.
 * were aiming to win their first title since 2005; they are the second most successful county in the championship's history, with 30 wins; their current streak of 18 consecutive seasons without an All-Ireland was the longest in their history.
 * The two teams had met in the final once before, in 2013, with Clare winning after a replay.
 * The fifth final to involve two Munster teams, after 1997 (Clare beat Tipperary), 2013 (Clare beat Cork), 2020 (Limerick beat Waterford) and 2021 (Limerick beat Cork).
 * This was the fourth final to involve neither the Munster nor the Leinster champions (in 2024, and ). The previous occasions were:
 * 2004 (Cork beat Kilkenny; and  were provincial champions)
 * 2013 (Clare beat Cork; and Limerick were provincial champions)
 * 2019 ( beat Kilkenny; Wexford and Limerick were provincial champions)

Officials
On 11 July, the GAA named Limerick's Johnny Murphy as the referee for the final, his first All-Ireland final. He previously refereed the 2018 All-Ireland minor final, the 2021 All-Ireland Under-20 final, the 2021 Leinster hurling final and the and the All-Ireland senior club final in 2023. Galway's Liam Gordon and Tipperary's Michael Kennedy served as linesmen for the final.

Jubilee teams
The Cork team that won the 1999 All-Ireland final was presented to the crowd before the match, on the silver jubilee.

Build-up
Tickets for the final were sold out with no general sales, over 32,000 tickets had been issued to Cork and Clare for distribution between the clubs. Cork had a total of 219 active GAA clubs, most of any county in Ireland, with 84 clubs in Clare. Stand tickets for the final cost €100 with terrace tickets at €55.

In Cork the match was shown at the Rebels' Fanzone free event at SuperValu Páirc Uí Chaoimh with 15,000 tickets sold out within 45 minutes. Clare County Council also screened the final on a big screen at a free event in Tim Smythe Park in Ennis.

Team news
On 18 July, Cork announced the same team for the final that started the semi-final against Limerick. Three players remained from the side that lost the 2013 replay to Clare, with Séamus Harnedy and Patrick Horgan starting and Conor Lehane on the bench. A day later, Clare also announced the same starting team as against Kilkenny in the semi-final. Four players, John Conlon, David McInerney, Tony Kelly and Shane O'Donnell remained from the side that won the final in 2013.