The 1974 Irish presidential election resulted from the sudden death in office of President Erskine H. Childers. Cearbhall àDálaigh was elected unopposed as the fifth president of Ireland.
Childers died on 17 November 1974. On 21 November, the Minister for Local Government issued a ministerial order setting 3 December as the date for close of nominations and 18 December as the date of the election.
Under Article 12 of the Constitution of Ireland, a candidate for president could be nominated by:
Initially all parties privately agreed to nominate the late president's widow, Rita Childers. Before she was informed of the plan, however, a mix-up led to the collapse of the arrangement. A partially deaf Fine Gael Teachta Dála, identified in some reports as Tom O'Donnell, confirmed the secret arrangement upon mishearing a journalist's question asking about the decision of a local council's nomination of Childers as president, having assumed that the cross-party decision was made public. Fianna Fáil leader Jack Lynch, thinking the party was set up, subsequently withdrew from the agreement and nominated Cearbhall àDálaigh instead. The parties agreed to the new arrangement due to a number of external factors, including a sluggish economy and The Troubles.
àDálaigh had served as Attorney General from 1951 to 1953, as a judge of the Supreme Court from 1953 to 1973, as Chief Justice from 1961 to 1973, and had been serving as a judge of the European Court of Justice from 1973 at the time of his nomination. All parties agreed to àDálaigh's nomination. As no other candidate was nominated, it was not necessary to proceed to a ballot for his election.
àDálaigh was inaugurated as president on Thursday, 19 December 1974.