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Albania
The complete guide

Albania

The Mediterranean's last genuinely affordable coastline, plus Ottoman old towns and mountains most travelers haven't caught onto yet — everything you need to plan a great trip.

Flight time No direct flights from the US or Australia — ~3h10m direct from London, 1.5–2.5h from most European hubsFrom $120–300 round-trip from Europe; $650+ from the USVisa Visa-free up to 90 days for 90+ nationalities*Time zone GMT+1 (CET)

Albania pairs well with a 7-14 day trip: combine Tirana (1-2 days), Berat's UNESCO old town (1-2 days), and 5-7 days on the Albanian Riviera coast (Sarandë, Ksamil, Himarë). Best months are June, September, and late May — warm enough to swim, far fewer crowds than July-August. Most Western nationalities get 90 visa-free days; Albania is an EU candidate but not yet an EU or Schengen member. Budget from $30/day backpacking, $55-100/day mid-range.

Albania spent the second half of the 20th century as one of the most closed-off countries in Europe, and it spent the years since quietly becoming one of the continent's best value trips — the same turquoise Ionian water as Corfu or Croatia, at roughly a third of the price, plus a capital finally hitting its stride, an Ottoman old town most people have never heard of, and mountains that make for some of the best cheap hiking in Europe.

This guide covers everything: where to go, how many days, when to fly, what it actually costs in USD, and the visa rule for your specific passport — not a generic one-size-fits-all answer. Written to be genuinely useful, and updated through the season.

Questions people actually ask

How many days do I need in Albania?
7 days covers a solid highlights trip (Tirana or Berat plus a few days on the Riviera). 10-14 days is the strong balance most travelers land on — Tirana (1-2 days), Berat (1-2 days), and 5-7 days between Sarandë, Ksamil, and Himarë on the coast. Add 2-3 more days if the Albanian Alps (Theth/Valbona) are on your list.
When is the best time to visit Albania?
Late May through June and September are the sweet spot — warm enough to swim, noticeably fewer crowds and lower prices than peak summer. July-August is hot and busy on the coast, especially Ksamil and Sarandë. The Albanian Alps hiking season runs roughly June through early October.
How much does a trip to Albania cost?
Backpacker budget: from $30/day (hostels, street food, local buses). Mid-range comfort: $55-100/day (a 3-star hotel, restaurant meals, some day tours). A two-week trip for two people, flights included, typically runs $2,200-3,800 mid-range from Europe — noticeably less than an equivalent Greek-islands or Croatian-coast trip.
Do I need a visa for Albania?
Most likely not — see our full visa & entry guide. Most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, EU/Schengen, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea) get 90 visa-free days per 180-day period. Albania is an EU candidate but not yet an EU or Schengen member, so it's a separate stamp with its own rules.
Is Albania safe to visit?
Yes, generally — it's rated Level 2 by the US State Department, the same as France or Italy, with low rates of violent crime against tourists. The main real risk is road safety (chaotic traffic, poorly lit rural roads at night), not crime.
Albania or Greece — which is better value?
Albania, clearly, on price — expect to pay roughly a third to half of equivalent Greek-island costs for comparable turquoise-water beaches, especially around Sarandë and Ksamil. Greece still edges ahead on tourist infrastructure and polish. See our full Sarandë-vs-Corfu comparison for specifics.
Which region should I choose if I only have one week?
Most first-time visitors with a week split it between 2-3 days inland (Tirana and/or Berat) and 4-5 days on the Albanian Riviera coast. If beach time is the priority, skip Berat and spend the extra days in Sarandë, Ksamil, or Himarë instead.
Does eSIM work well in Albania?
Yes — Airalo and Holafly both offer Albania or Balkans-regional data plans from about $5-15 for a week or two, activated before you land. A physical local SIM (Vodafone Albania, One, or Albtelecom) is just as easy to buy on arrival.