Before You Go: The Essentials

FLY
Flights to Tirana
Fly into Tirana (TIA), then drive or take a bus south on the SH8. Return fares routinely sit under €120 booked 6–8 weeks out.
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CAR
Car Rental at Tirana Airport
A hire car is the best way to access Himara’s remote beaches. Pre-book to guarantee availability in peak season.
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SIM
eSIM for Albania
Signal is patchy between Himara and Vlorë. A Saily eSIM covers Albania and 34 European countries — activate before you fly.
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SAFE
Travel Insurance
Medical facilities in Himara are adequate for minor issues. Comprehensive insurance with evacuation cover is essential for this region.
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Himara is the best base on the Albanian Riviera, and most people don't realise it until they've already booked Ksamil. This Himara Albania travel guide explains the difference: where Ksamil is a beach resort that happens to have extraordinary water, Himara is an actual town — a Byzantine castle town perched above the Ionian Sea, with a working community, a real restaurant culture, and beaches that are consistently less crowded than anything further south.

Location
Southern Albania, 55km north of Sarandë
Best for
Culture + beaches + best food on Riviera
Best months
June and September
From Sarandë
1 hour by car on the SH8
From Tirana
3.5–4 hours by car
Nearest beach
Himara Beach (10 min walk from castle)

Why Himara Over Ksamil?

The debate between Himara and Ksamil as a Riviera base is settled, in my view, by a single question: do you want a resort, or a place? Ksamil is spectacular, purpose-built for beach tourism, and genuinely beautiful. Himara is a lived-in mountain town that happens to have the Ionian Sea at the bottom of a cliff, a castle from the 14th century at the top of the hill, and tavernas where the owner will ask where you're from and then bring you something that wasn't on the menu because they think you'll like it.

If you're doing the full 7-day Albania itinerary, the right move is both: Days 1–3 in Ksamil for the islands and Butrint, Days 4–6 in Himara for everything else. Most people who do this leave Himara wishing they'd spent less time in Ksamil.

The Old Castle Town

Himara Castle sits on the hill above the modern resort — a 15-minute walk or 5-minute drive. It is not a ruin. It is a working neighbourhood: families live in the stone houses, there are three functioning churches, a small kafé, and a graveyard with Ottoman-era inscriptions. The views from the battlements over the Ionian Sea are the best on the entire Riviera — the kind of view where you stand for twenty minutes and the person you came with has to say your name twice to get your attention.

Entry to the castle area is free. Go in the late afternoon when the light turns the stone warm and the sea below goes from blue to dark gold. Stay for the sunset. There are worse ways to spend two hours in Europe.

Himara's Beaches

Himara Town Beach

The main organised beach directly below the modern town. Long stretch of pebble-and-sand, sun beds available, restaurants and bars at the back. Gets busy in high season but empties noticeably by 6pm, when the evening light makes it the best it looks all day. Good swimming — the water clarity is excellent, though not the blue-green shock of Ksamil.

Livadh Beach

3km south of Himara town. A long, gently-curving beach with cleaner water than the town beach and significantly fewer people. The road down to Livadh is narrow and requires a careful driver, but the car park at the bottom is free and the beach itself is worth the effort. Fewer facilities — one beach bar, no sun bed rental. Bring your own shade.

Drymades Beach

5km south of Himara, accessible by a rough track that requires confidence behind the wheel or a short walk from the road. This is the beach you tell people about when you get home: a long crescent of almost-white pebbles with water that genuinely rivals Ksamil for clarity. No facilities. Almost no one there on weekdays in June. Worth every metre of the rough road.

Borsh Beach

12km north of Himara — Albania's longest beach at 7km of continuous sand. A different proposition entirely: vast, underdeveloped, and empty in a way that feels slightly unreal. There's a beach bar at the southern end and nothing else for kilometres. Take the SH8 north and follow the signs. This is where you go when you want the Albanian Riviera to feel as remote as it actually is.

"Drymades in June: three other people on the beach at 10am. The water is the colour of shallow tropics and the road to get here is the only reason it stays this empty."

Where to Eat in Himara

Himara has the best restaurant scene on the Albanian Riviera. The combination of a working town (meaning restaurants that cater to locals year-round, not just summer tourists) and exceptional access to fresh Ionian seafood produces food that punches consistently above its price point.

The Seafood Rule

Order whatever came in that morning. Every good restaurant in Himara will tell you what's fresh if you ask. The supply chain between sea and plate is measured in hours. Grilled sea bream, whole octopus, mussels in white wine — these are €8–14 for a main course. The equivalent in coastal Italy is €30–50. The Albanian version will taste better because it was alive this morning.

Where to Sit

The best tables in Himara are the ones with sea views on the upper promenade, particularly in the early evening when the heat drops and the light is right. Book ahead for weekends in July and August — the best restaurants fill up. In June and September, walk-ins work fine even at 8pm.

The Byrek Situation

Byrek — the Albanian filo pastry with spinach, cheese, or meat — is produced at a level of quality in Himara that will ruin the version you get everywhere else. There is a bakery on the main street that produces it fresh from 7am. This is not optional.

FLY
Flights to Tirana for the Himara Route
Flying into Tirana is the standard entry for Himara. Return fares from London, Rome, or Paris routinely come in under €120 booked 6–8 weeks out. Kiwi aggregates budget and legacy airlines to find the best combinations.
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Getting to Himara

By Car (Recommended)

Hire a car at Tirana airport and drive the SH8. The stretch from Vlorë south to Himara is one of the best coastal drives in the Mediterranean — cliff roads above the Ionian, switchbacks down to hidden coves, the occasional goat. Allow 3.5–4 hours from Tirana, more if you stop (which you will). This is the only way to access Drymades, Borsh, and the unnamed coves between them.

From Sarandë

Regular minibuses run between Sarandë and Himara (1 hour, €3–5). Taxis are available for €20–30. If you arrive via the Corfu ferry — see our Corfu to Sarandë ferry guide — Himara is the logical next stop after a night or two in Ksamil.

Where to Stay in Himara

The best accommodation in Himara is in the guesthouses and small boutique properties built by local families, most of which offer sea views, included breakfast, and the kind of local knowledge that makes a trip. The castle area has a small number of exceptional properties that you'll find on Booking.com under "Himara old town" — these are quieter, higher up, and have the best views in town.

For the modern beach area, there are several mid-range hotels along the promenade. Fine but characterless. Choose a guesthouse if one is available at your dates.

STAY
Book Himara Accommodation
Himara's best properties are family-run guesthouses above the beach with sea views and included breakfast. They book fast for July–August.
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Planning your Himara trip
Everything you need to book
Flights, accommodation, activities, insurance — all in one place.

Day Trips from Himara

  • Borsh Beach — 12km north on the SH8. Albania's longest beach. Worth a full day.
  • Gjirokastra — 65km inland. UNESCO-listed Ottoman stone city, one of the most atmospheric towns in the Balkans. Half-day drive, full-day experience.
  • Butrint National Park — 55km south via Sarandë. UNESCO World Heritage Site. The most important archaeological site in Albania. See our itinerary guide for how to structure the day.
  • Lukova Viewpoint — 20km south on the SH8. A clifftop layby with a view that's as good as anything on the Amalfi Coast, with no coaches and no entry fee.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Himara worth visiting?
Yes — Himara is widely regarded as the best base on the Albanian Riviera. It has a working castle town, exceptional food, and beaches that remain far less crowded than Ksamil in high summer. For travellers who want quality over pure beach resort, Himara is the better choice.
What is the best beach in Himara?
Drymades Beach, 5km south, has the clearest water. Livadh Beach, 3km south, is the best for a full day with calmer water and fewer people. Borsh Beach, 12km north, is Albania's longest beach and worth the drive for the scale of it.
How do I get to Himara?
Most visitors drive from Tirana (3–4 hours on the SH8) or take a bus from Sarandë (1 hour). The SH8 drive is one of the most beautiful in Europe and the only way to access the best beaches between Himara and Sarandë.
What is there to do in Himara?
The castle town is the main cultural draw. Beaches — Himara town beach, Livadh, Drymades, and Borsh — are the main activity. Day trips to Gjirokastra (Ottoman stone city) and Butrint (UNESCO ruins) are the best excursions. The restaurant scene in the evenings is genuinely excellent.