thumb|200px|[[Air Chief Marshal Percy Bernard, 5th Earl of Bandon.]]
Earl of Bandon was a title in the Peerage of Ireland. It was created in 1800 for Francis Bernard, 1st Viscount Bandon, son of politician James Bernard. Francis Bernard had already been created Baron Bandon, of Bandon Bridge in the County of Cork, in 1793, Viscount Bandon, of Bandon Bridge in the County of Cork, in 1795, and was made Viscount Bernard at the same time as he was granted the earldom. These titles were also in the Peerage of Ireland.
Francis Bernard, great-grandfather of the first Earl, was a lawyer and politician while Francis' younger brother Arthur is the 7th-great-grandfather of Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada.
The family seat of the Earls of Bandon was Castle Bernard, County Cork, in the Republic of Ireland. Castle Bernard itself was destroyed as a result of an IRA attack in 1921, when the 4th earl was abducted for 10 days, and now stands as a ruin. The family later built a new home on the estate, which remained in the ownership of Lady Jennifer Bernard (1935–2010), the elder daughter of the late 5th and last Earl of Bandon by his first wife, until her death. The Castle Bernard estate is owned by Lady Frances Carter (b. 1943), the younger sister of the late Lady Jennifer Bernard.
Earls of Bandon (1800)
- Francis Bernard, 1st Earl of Bandon (1755–1830) (elected an Irish representative peer in 1800)
- James Bernard, 2nd Earl of Bandon (1785–1856) (elected an Irish representative peer in 1835)
- Francis Bernard, 3rd Earl of Bandon (1810–1877) (elected an Irish representative peer in 1858)
- James Francis Bernard, 4th Earl of Bandon (1850–1924) (elected an Irish representative peer in 1881)
- Percy Ronald Gardner Bernard, 5th Earl of Bandon (1904–1979)
