Albania Wine & Gastronomy Tour
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Albania is one of Europe’s most startling travel discoveries: a country with three UNESCO World Heritage Sites, over 450 kilometres of coastline, ancient Greek and Roman ruins, and Ottoman stone cities — all largely unknown to the mainstream travel world. The Albanian Riviera & Ruins tour with Inside Balkan captures the absolute best of southern Albania in eight days, combining cultural depth with genuine seaside relaxation.
The route moves south from Tirana through the UNESCO city of Berat — the so-called ‘City of a Thousand Windows’ — to the Stone City of Gjirokastër, before descending to the Ionian coast and the ancient ruins of Butrint on the Greek border. From there, the tour follows the Albanian Riviera north through a succession of coves, cliff-villages, and olive groves to the port city of Vlorë.
Albania’s Riviera has been called the Mediterranean’s last unspoiled coastline, and while that claim is increasingly contested as tourism grows, it retains a rawness and beauty that is genuinely remarkable. The water is a vivid turquoise. The beaches are mostly pebbly rather than sandy, which keeps them clean and clear. The food — grilled fish, wild herbs, fresh cheese, octopus — is outstanding. And the prices remain a fraction of neighbouring Greece or Croatia.
Inside Balkan has been running tours in southern Albania since 2015. Our guides were born and raised in this region and know it intimately: which restaurant doesn’t serve tourists, which cove is hidden behind the headland, which castle wall offers the best sunset light. This is not a bus tour. It is a genuine, personal, local experience.
May, June, September and October are the ideal months for this tour. The weather is warm but not scorching, the sea is swimmable, and the towns are not overwhelmed with visitors. July and August are also wonderful but significantly busier, particularly at Ksamil and Sarandë. The UNESCO sites and mountain sections of the route are enjoyable year-round — Berat and Gjirokastër are arguably most atmospheric in winter when mist settles in the valleys.
This tour suits a very wide range of travellers: culture enthusiasts, beach lovers, foodies, couples, and solo travellers who want a comprehensive introduction to Albania. The pace is comfortable — this is not a hiking tour, though there are daily walks of 2–4 hours on uneven historic surfaces. Travellers with moderate mobility can comfortably join; those with significant mobility limitations should contact Inside Balkan before booking to discuss specific access requirements at each site.
8 days · Starts in Tirana · Ends in Tirana
📍 Tirana
Welcome to Albania’s colourful capital. Tirana has transformed dramatically in the past two decades from a grey post-communist city into one of the Balkans’ most dynamic and visually striking capitals. Your Inside Balkan guide meets you at the hotel for an introductory walking tour: Skanderbeg Square (dominated by the equestrian statue of Albania’s national hero), the Et’hem Bey Mosque, the National History Museum with its famous socialist-realist mosaic facade, and the Blloku neighbourhood — once the exclusive compound of communist leader Enver Hoxha, now the city’s trendiest district of cafés, restaurants and boutiques.
The evening ends with dinner at one of Tirana’s excellent traditional restaurants, where the menu features the full range of Albanian cuisine: fergëse (peppers, tomatoes and cheese), tave kosi (lamb baked in yogurt), byrek (flaky pastry with meat or cheese), and the extraordinary Albanian raki.
Overnight: Boutique hotel in Tirana
📍 Tirana → Berat
After breakfast, the group transfers south to Berat — a two-hour drive through the Albanian lowlands. Berat earned its UNESCO World Heritage status in 2008 and it takes approximately five minutes of walking through the lower city to understand why. The town’s signature image — hundreds of Ottoman houses stacked up the hillside, each with a distinctive large window, hence ‘City of a Thousand Windows’ — is one of the most architecturally distinctive sights in the Balkans.
The afternoon is devoted to the Berat Castle Citadel, which contains a remarkable collection of Byzantine churches, including the Church of the Holy Trinity with its 13th-century frescoes, and the Onufri Museum — housing the finest collection of Albanian medieval religious art in the world. Below the castle, the Gorica neighbourhood across the Osum River bridge offers quieter, less-visited streets of equal beauty. The day ends with a wine tasting at a local family winery producing Berat’s famous Shesh i Zi red variety.
Overnight: Boutique hotel in Berat
📍 Berat → Gjirokastër
The drive south from Berat to Gjirokastër passes through the Permet wine region — stop at a roadside distillery for a taste of the local raki molle (apple raki) — before climbing into the mountain landscape of southern Albania. Gjirokastër, which received UNESCO status alongside Berat in 2005, is an Ottoman stone city of extraordinary atmosphere: cobbled streets, grey-slate roofs, multi-storey stone towers, and a huge fortress dominating the skyline.
Arriving in the late afternoon allows time for an unguided evening wander through the old bazaar (pazari i vjetër) before a dinner of the city’s famous tave kosi — slow-roasted lamb with a thick yogurt and egg sauce that has been the signature dish of Gjirokastër for centuries.
Overnight: Stone hotel in Gjirokastër
📍 Gjirokastër
A full day to explore Gjirokastër properly. The morning begins at the castle fortress, which houses a remarkably well-preserved American spy plane shot down over Albanian airspace in 1957 — a bizarre and fascinating artefact of the Cold War. The castle also offers the finest panoramic views over the city’s extraordinary roofscape.
Below the castle, the Zekate House is the best-preserved Ottoman mansion in Albania: two soaring tower floors with elaborately painted wooden ceilings, a guest reception room with a fireplace the size of a small room, and views over the valley from its latticed wooden balconies. The afternoon is spent at the Blue Eye (Syri i Kaltër) — a natural spring 30 kilometres from Gjirokastër where a river erupts from underground with extraordinary force into a pool of startling blue-green clarity. Swimming is possible in the calmer sections near the bank.
Overnight: Stone hotel in Gjirokastër
📍 Gjirokastër → Sarandë
The final Albanian highland morning before descending to the coast. After breakfast, the group drives to Butrint National Park — forty minutes south of Gjirokastër on the Greek border. Butrint is one of the most complete and atmospheric ancient sites in the Mediterranean: a fortified city continuously occupied from the 7th century BC through the Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and Venetian periods. The site sits on a small peninsula in a lagoon, surrounded by forest, and the combination of ancient stonework and natural setting is genuinely magical.
From Butrint, it is a short drive to Sarandë — the main Riviera town, with a sweeping seafront promenade and the Greek island of Corfu visible across the strait. The afternoon is spent at Ksamil, four kilometres south of Sarandë, where four small islands sit in water so clear that the sand beneath is visible from the shore.
Overnight: Seafront hotel in Sarandë
📍 Sarandë → Himara
The Riviera drive from Sarandë north to Himara is one of the great coastal roads in Europe — a corniche that clings to cliffs above the Ionian Sea, dropping into coves and olive groves, rising to panoramic headlands, and passing through a succession of villages that feel entirely removed from modern tourism.
Key stops include: the beach at Borsh beneath some of the oldest olive trees in the world (planted during the Roman period), the hilltop village of Qeparo with its abandoned old town, Livadhi beach — one of the Riviera’s finest — and Himara itself, a town with a Greek-Albanian mixed heritage and some of the best fish restaurants on the coast. Lunch is at a family-run taverna where the fish was in the sea that morning.
Overnight: Hotel in Himara
📍 Himara → Vlorë
A morning swim at Dhërmi — widely considered the most beautiful beach on the Albanian Riviera, with water the colour of a swimming pool and a fine pebble shore. After the swim, the group begins the climb to the Llogara Pass (1,027 metres) — a dramatic mountain road that switchbacks up through pine forest before breaking out onto an open ridge with panoramic views over the entire Riviera below and the Bay of Vlorë ahead.
The descent brings the group to Vlorë — Albania’s second port city and the place where the country’s independence was declared in 1912. The Independence Monument and the Ethnographic Museum provide context for an early-evening city walk. Dinner on the Vlorë waterfront.
Overnight: Hotel in Vlorë
📍 Vlorë → Tirana
A final morning in Vlorë: the Independence Museum covers Albania’s fascinating and tumultuous 20th-century history from Ottoman province to communist isolation to modern republic. The drive back to Tirana follows the Adriatic highway north with views of the coast. A farewell lunch is served at a traditional restaurant en route before arrival in Tirana for evening flights.
Tour ends in Tirana
Accommodation ranges from boutique hotels in Tirana and Berat to seafront hotels on the Riviera. All properties are carefully selected by Inside Balkan for comfort, location, and local character. The boat excursion at Ksamil is weather-dependent; in the rare event of rough conditions, Inside Balkan will substitute an equally enjoyable alternative. Swimwear, sunscreen, and comfortable walking shoes are the most important items to pack for this tour.
Everything you need to know about the Albanian Riviera & Ruins
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