Albania Travel Guide (2026)
How to travel Albania — Tirana, the Albanian Riviera, Berat and Gjirokastra, and the coast. Getting around, drive times, airports and private transfers.
Albania is the Balkans' best-value discovery — a vibrant capital in Tirana, the turquoise beaches of the Albanian Riviera around Ksamil and Sarandë, and UNESCO Ottoman towns at Berat and Gjirokastra. There's no useful passenger rail, so you get around by road: a private transfer or a rental car. Fly into Tirana (TIA), or arrive overland from Montenegro (Kotor to Tirana about 4h) or by ferry from Corfu to Sarandë. Albania uses the Lek; euros are widely accepted in tourist areas. Allow 4–5 hours for the drive between Tirana and the southern beaches.
Albania went from overlooked to sought-after in a handful of summers, and it’s easy to see why: an Ionian coast as clear as Greece’s at a fraction of the price, two beautifully preserved Ottoman towns, and a capital reinventing itself in colour. It’s also a country you have to drive — there’s no tourist rail network — so a little planning of the road pays off. Here’s how to travel Albania in 2026.
How to get around Albania
Albania has no useful passenger trains, so getting around means the road. Two options work for visitors:
- Private transfer / driver — the simplest, especially with luggage, a group, or a beach-and-mountains itinerary. Door-to-door, on your schedule, with the winding coastal and mountain roads handled for you.
- Rental car — flexible for island-hopping the Riviera over several days, but the Llogara Pass and some mountain roads are demanding, and summer parking on the coast is tight.
Intercity buses and furgons (shared minibuses) are cheap but infrequent and awkward for the coast, where most trips end in Sarandë and need a final hop to the beaches.
Tirana — the capital
Most trips start in Tirana, a small, walkable capital of Ottoman, communist and colourful-modern layers. A day covers Skanderbeg Square, the Et’hem Bey Mosque, the Pyramid, the Bunk’Art bunker museums and the Dajti cable car. See our Tirana one-day itinerary for a route through the city. Tirana International Airport (TIA) is about 15 km north.
The Albanian Riviera
The country’s headline act is the Albanian Riviera — a 100 km run of Ionian coast from Vlorë down to Ksamil, crossed by the dramatic Llogara Pass. Ksamil is the postcard, with white sand and swimmable islets; Sarandë is the hub and ferry port for Corfu (see the Saranda guide); and Himarë, Dhërmi and Borsh spread the beaches between them.
Getting there from Tirana is a 4–5 hour drive south — the classic scenic route over the Llogara Pass, or the faster inland road via Gjirokastra. Our how to get from Tirana to Ksamil guide compares every option.
Berat & Gjirokastra — the UNESCO towns
Inland, two Ottoman towns share a UNESCO listing. Berat, the “city of a thousand windows,” has tiered white houses and an inhabited hilltop castle, about 2 hours from Tirana. Gjirokastra, the “city of stone,” sits further south with grey slate roofs and a huge fortress. Our Berat & Gjirokastra guide covers visiting both.
Worthwhile stops
Two natural sights pair with a Riviera trip: the Blue Eye (Syri i Kaltër), a vivid karst spring near Sarandë, and Butrint, a UNESCO ancient city just south of Ksamil.
Airports & arriving
Tirana International Airport (TIA) is the country’s main gateway, about 15 km north of the capital. Many beach-bound travellers instead arrive from Corfu by fast ferry to Sarandë (30–60 minutes), or overland from Montenegro.
Cross-border to neighbours
Albania connects easily to the rest of the region by road:
- Montenegro — Kotor to Tirana is about 4 hours along the coast.
- North Macedonia — via Ohrid on the shared lake in the east.
- Kosovo & Greece — good roads north-east and south.
Practical info
- Currency: the Albanian Lek (ALL). Euros are widely accepted in tourist areas, but carry some Lek for buses, small cafés and entry fees.
- Language: Albanian; English is common in tourism.
- Visas: EU, UK, US, Canadian and Australian citizens enter visa-free for up to 90 days — a valid passport is all you need.
- When to go: June and September are the sweet spot for the coast — warm sea, fewer crowds than the July–August peak. Spring and autumn suit the towns and the drive.
Why use a private transfer in Albania
With no tourist rail, distances that look short taking hours on winding roads, and beaches spread along a slow coast, a private driver is what turns Albania from a logistics puzzle into a relaxed trip. One vehicle door-to-door, the Llogara Pass and any border handled, and the freedom to stop at the Blue Eye, Gjirokastra or a Riviera cove whenever it suits you.
When is the best time to visit Albania?
June and September are ideal — warm enough to swim, but quieter and cooler than midsummer. July and August are peak for the beaches (busiest, hottest). Spring and autumn are lovely for Tirana, Berat, Gjirokastra and the drives, though the beach season tapers off by late October.
Related articles
How to Get from Tirana to Ksamil (2026): All Options Compared
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Berat & Gjirokastra: Visiting Albania's UNESCO Towns (2026)
Berat and Gjirokastra are Albania's UNESCO Ottoman towns. What to see, how to get there from Tirana or the coast, and whether to visit as a day trip or overnight.
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A practical one-day Tirana itinerary: Skanderbeg Square, Bunk'Art, the Pyramid and the Dajti cable car — plus how to get from the airport and out to the coast.
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