
Money, Safety & eSIM in Albania
Albania's currency is the Albanian lek (ALL) — roughly 82–83 lek per US dollar and 94 lek per euro as of mid-2026 (rates move, check before you go). Euros are widely accepted in Tirana and coastal tourist towns but aren't official currency, so don't rely on it everywhere. Albania is rated Level 2 by the US State Department (same as France or Italy) — the main real risk is traffic and rural night driving, not crime.
The practical questions that actually matter once you land: what the lek is and how far it stretches, what's genuinely risky here (spoiler: it's mostly the roads), how to navigate driving in a country that's rebuilding its highway network in real time, and how to get connected the moment you touch down.
Money and the Albanian lek
The Albanian lek (ALL) is the official currency — Albania is not in the EU and doesn't use the euro, despite euros being widely accepted (at a so-so exchange rate) in Tirana, Sarandë, Vlorë, and most coastal tourist spots. As of mid-2026, roughly $1 = 82–83 lek and €1 = 94 lek; check a live rate before your trip since it moves. ATMs are common in cities and tourist towns, less so in small mountain villages — plan cash accordingly if you're heading to Theth, Valbona, or rural stops.
| Payment method | Where it works best |
|---|---|
| Cash (lek) | Small guesthouses, local restaurants, markets, rural areas, the Blue Eye spring (cash only) |
| Euros | Widely accepted in Tirana and coastal tourist towns, at a less favorable rate than lek |
| Credit/debit card | Hotels, larger restaurants, and shops in Tirana and the main coastal towns |
Is Albania safe?
Yes, by most measures — Albania carries a Level 2 rating from the US State Department, the same as France or Italy, reflecting genuinely low rates of violent crime against tourists. The statistically real risk is road safety: chaotic urban traffic and poorly lit rural roads, particularly at night. Petty scams and pickpocketing in busy tourist areas exist but are no more common here than in most of Europe.
Driving in Albania

Albania has invested heavily in its road network over the past several years, and it shows: the A2 motorway now connects Tirana to Vlorë as a proper divided highway, the coastal SH8 road from Vlorë to Sarandë has been widened and resurfaced with better signage and guardrails, and the notorious Llogara Pass mountain crossing was replaced in 2025 by a 6-kilometer tunnel, cutting a white-knuckle 40-minute switchback drive down to about 7 minutes. That said, many rural roads away from these main routes still lack street lighting and can have unmarked hazards — the standing advice is to avoid intercity driving after dark where you can, and drive defensively everywhere.
eSIM and staying connected
eSIM works well if your phone supports it — Airalo and Holafly both sell Albania-specific or Balkans-regional data plans from around $5–15 for a week or two, activated before landing. A physical local SIM (Vodafone Albania, One Telecommunications, or Albtelecom) is also easy to buy at the airport or in any city, similarly priced, and worth it if you want a local number too.
Water and general safety basics
- Tap water is generally treated in cities but many travelers stick to bottled water anyway, particularly in smaller towns and rural areas — it's cheap and available everywhere.
- Keep your passport in the hotel safe and carry a photo of it on your phone, same as anywhere.
- Download offline maps before heading into rural or mountain areas (Theth, Valbona, inland routes) where signal can drop.












































