North Macedonia Travel Guide (2026)
How to travel North Macedonia — Skopje, Matka Canyon and Lake Ohrid. Getting around, drive times, airports and private transfers.
North Macedonia is a small, affordable country with two big draws: the surprising capital Skopje, and UNESCO-listed Lake Ohrid. Base in Skopje for the Old Bazaar and the surreal 'Skopje 2014' statues, day-trip to Matka Canyon (17 km) for kayaking and caves, then head south to Lake Ohrid (about 2.5–3 hours) for Byzantine churches and clear water. North Macedonia uses the Denar (not the Euro). There's no tourist rail worth using, so a car or private transfer links Skopje, Matka and Ohrid.
North Macedonia is one of the region’s quiet surprises — a small, easy-going, inexpensive country where a split-personality capital gives way to a canyon on its doorstep and, a few hours south, one of Europe’s oldest and most beautiful lakes. Distances are short and the welcome is warm; you just need a plan for the road. Here’s how to travel North Macedonia in 2026.
How to get around North Macedonia
There’s no tourist-useful rail network, so getting around means the road. Skopje’s centre is walkable, but everything beyond it — Matka, Ohrid, the monasteries — is reached by car or private transfer. Intercity buses exist but are slow and infrequent for a tight itinerary; a private driver makes the long Ohrid run comfortable and lets you add Saint Naum without watching a timetable.
Skopje — the base
Skopje is a city of contrasts on the Vardar river: one of the largest Ottoman old bazaars in the Balkans on one bank, and the startling neoclassical statues and buildings of the “Skopje 2014” project on the other, joined by the old Stone Bridge. A day covers the bazaar, Macedonia Square, the Kale fortress and the Mother Teresa memorial — see our Skopje travel guide. Skopje’s airport is about 20 km east.
Matka Canyon
Just 17 km south-west of the capital — about 30 minutes — Matka Canyon is Skopje’s outdoor escape: a river gorge dammed into an emerald lake beneath cliffs, with kayaking, a cliffside monastery and a boat to the Vrelo cave. It’s the easiest and most rewarding half-day from the city.
Lake Ohrid
Farther but unmissable, Lake Ohrid lies about 2.5–3 hours south — one of the oldest and deepest lakes in Europe, and, with the town of Ohrid, UNESCO-listed for both nature and culture. Highlights are the Church of St John at Kaneo above the water, Samuel’s Fortress, the old town, and the Monastery of Saint Naum at the southern end near the Albanian border. It’s a long day trip or, better, an overnight.
Airports & arriving
Skopje International Airport is the main gateway, about 20 km east of the city. Ohrid also has a small airport. Many travellers arrive overland from Serbia (Belgrade), Albania (via Ohrid) or Kosovo.
Cross-border to neighbours
North Macedonia sits between several countries and connects easily by road:
- Serbia — Belgrade is north up the motorway.
- Albania — via Ohrid on the shared lake to the west.
- Kosovo & Greece — good roads north and south (Thessaloniki is close).
Practical info
- Currency: the Macedonian Denar (MKD) — not the Euro. Carry some cash; cards work in cities.
- Language: Macedonian (Cyrillic); English is common in tourism.
- Visas: EU, UK, US, Canadian and Australian citizens enter visa-free for up to 90 days.
- When to go: late spring and early autumn are ideal — Skopje bakes in midsummer, while Ohrid’s lake is warm enough to swim from June into September.
Why use a private transfer in North Macedonia
The country’s best is spread out — a canyon just outside the capital, a great lake three hours south — and public transport handles neither the timing nor the side-trips well. A private driver ties Skopje, Matka and Ohrid together, makes the long southern run relaxed, and lets you reach Saint Naum and the lakeside churches on your own schedule.
When is the best time to visit North Macedonia?
Late spring and early autumn (May–June, September) are the sweet spot — comfortable in Skopje and warm enough for Ohrid’s lake. July–August is peak at Ohrid (busiest, hottest in Skopje’s basin). Winter is quiet and cold but the sights stay open.
Ready to explore?
Book your private transfer across the Balkans. Fixed prices, scenic stops, local drivers.
Book a Transfer →