We report the discovery, from WASP and CORALIE, of a transiting exoplanet in a 1.54-d orbit. The host star, WASP-36, is a magnitude V = 12.7, metal-poor G2 dwarf (Teff = 5959 pm 134 K), with [Fe/H] = -0.26 pm 0.10. We determine the planet to have mass and radius respectively 2.30 pm 0.07 and 1.28 pm 0.03 times that of Jupiter. We have eight partial or complete transit light curves, from four different observatories, which allows us to investigate the potential effects on the fitted system parameters of using only a single light curve. We find that the solutions obtained by analysing each of these light curves independently are consistent with our global fit to all the data, despite the apparent presence of correlated noise in at least two of the light curves.