FLY
Flights to Tirana
Flying into Tirana (TIA) is the standard entry for Ksamil. Return fares from London routinely sit under €120 booked 6–8 weeks out.
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CAR
Car Rental at Tirana Airport
A hire car unlocks Ksamil, Butrint, and the entire Albanian Riviera. Pre-book to guarantee availability in peak season.
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SIM
eSIM for Albania
Phone signal can be patchy on the coastal roads. A Saily eSIM covers Albania and 34 other European countries — activate before you fly.
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SAFE
Travel Insurance
Comprehensive travel insurance with medical cover is essential for Albania. EKTA provides solid Balkans coverage at low cost.
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Ksamil is the beach destination that changes people's relationship with Mediterranean travel. The Ksamil beach guide question we get asked most often is simply: "is it really that blue?" — and the honest answer is yes, the water colour in Ksamil is genuinely that extraordinary, and no, you don't need a filter. What you do need is this guide, because Ksamil has a handful of specific things that first-time visitors get wrong.

Location
Southern Albania, 17km from Sarandë
Best beaches
Three Islands, Pulebardha, Ksamil Main
Best months
June and September
Day trip from Corfu?
Yes — ferry to Sarandë + 20 min taxi
Sunbed cost
€5–10/day (some beaches free)
Island boat taxi
~€4 return

The Beaches — Which Are Actually Worth It

Ksamil has several distinct beach areas within a 3km radius of the village. They vary significantly in quality, crowd levels, and what you pay for access.

The Three Islands Beaches
Best for: snorkelling, photography, water quality · Crowd level: HIGH in Aug, moderate in June/Sept

The most famous and most photographed beaches in Ksamil, facing the three small offshore islands. The water here is the colour that ends up on every travel blog — shallow, crystal clear, graduated from turquoise to deep blue in fifty metres. There are sun beds (€5–8 each) on the main sections, but the northern stretch requires some scrambling over rocks and is completely free and significantly less crowded. The islands themselves are reachable by water taxi (€3–5 return) or kayak.

Pulebardha Beach
Best for: quieter water, families, afternoon light · Crowd level: LOW to MODERATE

Located 1.5km south of the main village, Pulebardha is Ksamil's best-kept secret. Slightly smaller, more sheltered, with calmer water than the main beaches. No organised sun bed rental — it's predominantly locals and people who've done some research. The walk from town is twenty minutes on a decent path. Worth it.

Ksamil Main Beach (First Beach)
Best for: convenience, proximity to restaurants · Crowd level: HIGH in summer

The most accessible beach — 200 metres from the main strip of restaurants and bars. Organised sun beds, a bar, and reliable water taxis to the islands. Gets crowded in July–August but remains manageable by Mediterranean resort standards. Good for an afternoon rather than a full day — use it as your base for the islands.

The Northern Coves (Unnamed)
Best for: solitude, swimming, exploration · Crowd level: VERY LOW

North of the main village, accessible by following the coastal path for 20–40 minutes or by water taxi, are a series of small coves with no infrastructure, no sun beds, and no other tourists. The water is equivalent quality to the Three Islands beaches. These are where you go when you've done the main circuit and want to experience what Ksamil felt like five years ago. Bring your own water and shade.

Getting to the Ksamil Islands

The three small islands that give the beaches their name sit 200–400 metres offshore. Getting to them is straightforward:

  • Water taxi: Small boats depart from the main beach throughout the day in summer. Cost is €3–5 return. The crossing takes 5–10 minutes. Boats run until early evening but start thinning out from 5pm — plan to return by 4:30 if you want options.
  • Kayak rental: Available from the main beach for €8–12/hour. Paddling to the nearest island takes about 15 minutes. The most enjoyable way to see all three independently.
  • Paddleboard: Also available for rental. The water between shore and islands is calm enough for beginners in normal weather.

The islands themselves are small — a few hundred metres across — with rocky shorelines, some flat swimming areas, and no facilities. Bring water. The snorkelling around the island perimeters is excellent: visibility to 10–15 metres, sea grass meadows, and occasional octopus sightings.

DO
From Ksamil: Butrint UNESCO Day Trip
Butrint National Park is 7km from Ksamil — one of the most extraordinary archaeological sites in Europe. A guided day trip with lunch is the highest-value add-on to any Riviera trip.
Book Butrint Day Tour from Ksamil →
DO
Ksamil Islands Boat Tour
Get to the Three Islands in style — boat tours depart regularly from the main beach. The best way to see all the coves in one go.
Book Ksamil Boat Tour →

When to Visit Ksamil

June is the best month. Water temperature is 22–24°C — comfortably warm for swimming. Crowds are at 30–40% of peak. Prices are at off-shoulder rates. The light in June is extraordinary — long evenings, golden hour starting around 7pm. Restaurants are fully open, accommodation is available on short notice, and you'll share the Three Islands beaches with a manageable number of people rather than a queue.

September is equally good and often better for food — the end-of-season mentality in Ksamil's restaurants produces some genuinely exceptional evenings where the owner comes and sits down with you and the fish is whatever came in that morning.

July and August are fine but noticeably busier. Accommodation prices roughly double. The main beaches get crowded by 10am. It is still far less crowded than Mykonos, Positano, or Dubrovnik at peak, but the gap from June is significant. If you must travel in peak summer, arrive at the beaches before 9am or after 4pm.

May works for solitude seekers who don't need warm water for swimming — some restaurants and accommodation are still opening for the season, and prices are very low.

Getting to Ksamil

From Tirana (most common route)

Hire a car at Tirana airport and drive the SH8 coastal road — 3.5 hours, one of the most scenic drives in Europe. Alternatively, Sarandë has direct buses from Tirana (4 hours), and Ksamil is a 20-minute taxi from Sarandë.

From Corfu (the best route for island hoppers)

The Corfu–Sarandë ferry takes 45 minutes and runs multiple times daily in summer. From Sarandë port, a taxi to Ksamil costs €10–15. This is the route for anyone combining Albania with the Greek islands — see our Corfu to Sarandë ferry guide for the complete booking process.

Where to Stay in Ksamil

The accommodation options in Ksamil split cleanly into two types: family-run guesthouses (the right choice) and newer resort-style hotels (functional but characterless). The guesthouses, built by local families who've been on this coastline for generations, offer sea views, included breakfast with local produce, and the kind of personal service that chains can't manufacture.

For specific recommendations, the guesthouses set slightly back from the main beach give you views without the main-strip noise. Booking 6–8 weeks ahead is adequate for June/September; for July and August, book 3–4 months out — the best properties fill fast.

STAY
Book Ksamil Accommodation
The best Ksamil guesthouses book out fast for summer. Sort by guest rating — the top-rated properties are consistently the small family-run guesthouses, not larger hotels.
Check Ksamil Availability →

What Does Ksamil Cost?

  • Sun bed on main beach: €5–10/day. Northern rocky sections: free.
  • Island boat taxi: €3–5 return.
  • Kayak rental: €8–12/hour.
  • Lunch for two (seafood + drinks): €15–25 at a local restaurant. €25–40 at a beach bar.
  • Dinner for two (full meal + wine): €20–35 at a local restaurant. €40–60 at a sea-view terrace restaurant.
  • Guesthouse room (June/Sept): €40–80/night with sea view, breakfast included.
  • Guesthouse room (July/Aug): €70–130/night.
  • Butrint day trip: €30–45 per person with transport and guide.

Albania uses the Albanian Lek, not the Euro. See our full Albanian currency guide for how to pay without losing money to bank fees.

Planning your Ksamil trip
Everything you need to book
Flights, accommodation, activities, insurance — all in one place.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best beaches in Ksamil?
The Three Islands beaches are the most scenic and best for snorkelling. Pulebardha Beach to the south is best for quieter, calmer water. The northern coves are best for complete solitude. The main First Beach is best for convenience and island access.
How do you get to the Ksamil Islands?
Water taxis depart from the main beach throughout the day for €3–5 return. You can also rent kayaks or paddleboards and reach the nearest island in about 15 minutes independently.
When is the best time to visit Ksamil?
June and September are optimal — warm water, manageable crowds, lower prices. July and August are busiest and most expensive. May is best for complete solitude if you don't mind cooler water.
How much does it cost to visit Ksamil?
A comfortable day in Ksamil costs €30–60 per person including sun bed, lunch, and island boat. A mid-range guesthouse costs €40–80 per night in June/September. Daily costs for a comfortable two-person trip including accommodation run €80–150.