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Car rental in Albania is the honest way to see the country in a single trip. The narrow coastline from Shkodër to Ksamil, the mountain villages of the north, ancient Berat in the south, the lacework of roads up to Lake Komani — by bus, that's a logistical puzzle with two services a day. By car, it's a relaxed five-to-ten-day loop.

The TakeCars catalogue holds 727 cars in Albania from dozens of local partners. Low-season prices start at €12 a day, peak summer from €30. One of the cheapest rental markets in Europe — and there's room to pick a compact for the alleys of Tirana or a crossover for Theth and Valbona.

A couple flew into Tirana last May, picked up a Fabia at the gate, and were in Berat for lunch. The whole handover took eight minutes on the bonnet.

The local market runs on cash. The deposit and most of the rental are paid in euros or lek straight to the host; the card only covers the online prepayment. For visitors arriving by ferry from Bari or by flight from across the EU and the UK, it's straightforward: book online, bring a small stack of euros for the rest.

We show the deposit amount, the payment method and real photos of the actual car upfront. No "I booked X but got Y" moment at the desk.

Seasons and prices

Albania has two clear seasons and the gap between them is nearly double. Low season runs October to April: economy from €12 a day, wider choice, quiet roads. Peak is July and August: the same model starts at €30, and in Ksamil and Himarë the best automatics go a month ahead.

The sweet spot is May and September. The sea is warm either side of summer, prices sit 30–50% below August, and you skip the wave that turns parking in Durrës or Sarandë into a half-hour hunt.

For July and August, book at least three weeks ahead. Not a marketing line — there are simply no automatics left in the popular classes.

Length matters too. A weekly rental usually carries a 15–25% discount on the daily rate; a month gets you 40–50%. Driving the whole country? Pick the car up at Tirana airport and drop it in Sarandë rather than juggling short rentals from different cities.

A family of four took a Skoda Octavia from TIA to Ksamil last August at €47/day. Public transport for the same route would have cost more once luggage transfers were counted.

What else moves the price: Super CDW (€10–25 a day), young-driver fees, cross-border permission, one-way drop-off. All visible in the quote before booking.

Most tourists in Albania start their trip here

Picking the car

Albanian city geometry shapes the choice. The old centres of Tirana, Berat and Gjirokastër were built for small saloons. Sarandë and Ksamil in summer mean dense traffic and rare parking. The most common request: a compact hatchback or B-class — Skoda Fabia, VW Polo, Hyundai i20, Kia Picanto.

Heading north to Theth, Valbona or Lake Komani? Look at a crossover or SUV with a diesel engine. Mountain switchbacks and long climbs reward diesel torque and ground clearance. A petrol compact will manage, but with five up and luggage it's at the limit.

A guest took a Polo to Theth in June. It made it both ways, but the brakes were hot by the time the road levelled out. The next year, same guest, same trip — diesel crossover.

Families and groups of three or four sit better in the mid-size class — VW Golf, Ford Focus, Skoda Octavia. The boot fits suitcases and beach gear, the A/C copes with August. For couples without children, a compact is usually the answer: more agile, cheaper to run.

Roughly one in three of our Albania renters picks an automatic. Manual on mountain climbs is fine in itself — but if you haven't shifted in years, a holiday is the wrong place to relearn.

EVs are still rare in Albania: few chargers, routes outside Tirana hard to plan. Pragmatic pick: petrol economy or diesel mid-size.

Real reviews on TakeCars in Albania

Feras Doghoz
Feras Doghoz
🇸🇪

Mercedes-Benz A-Class in Albania

It's ok

September 2024
Tomas Elbersen
Tomas Elbersen
🇳🇱

Fiat Panda in Albania

It was not the best rental car and service from the Guy. So yes 🙂 They Lie about everything… The car: Broken airco with 39 degrees, no 5th gear, light Inside is broken, 1 of the 2 wipers that is broken, tub right front mirror falls continu off, rim is maked with waist rips, rim is falling while driving, no range for the radio, if you can tell me this is a normal car and normal service…. And your company text me before that we get not what we want; Fiat Punto instead of the Peugeot 307 we booked… and I allready told them that I needed airco. They told is was managed… The car was dangerous, way too hot and ready to be demolished. That afterwards you had the guts to rent it out. They have 100% never seen the car before. When we want to return the car, the lie to me. It was possible to bring the car back at 02.00 o clock. But in the last moment I had to pat 40 euro. Ridiculus. And the worst, when i don’t want to pay extra money… I was the Mother Fucker, They want to kill me and more… So I run away and I was really scared …

August 2023
Vadym Koloniuk
Vadym Koloniuk
🇷🇺

Audi A4 in Albania

The staff is nice. The checkout was quick and easy. About the car: The car did not match the picture on the internet. Too old. The car was in a dangerous condition. On any hill when starting the car would stall, even though it was an automatic. It was extremely dangerous to drive this car in the city, because if I had to stop at an intersection (on a rise) to let other cars pass, the car I rented would stall. It was very dangerous. But it's fine. Next time I will use your services, but I will ask for a good car and I will check.

May 2024
Olha Lakhno
Olha Lakhno
🇺🇦

Volkswagen Polo in Albania

It was my first car rental and I had the best first experience. The car was delivered to airport that was very comfortable for me. Also Elton helped me with places to visit and tell about good and bad roads. So it is very friendly and comfortable service.

July 2024
Aleh Lukashenka
Aleh Lukashenka
🇵🇱

Hyundai Accent in Albania

The car was quite good, and in terms of value for money, it was just excellent. The rental was very cheap. The only issue was a significant scratch on the rear bumper, but Erald charged only the repair cost quoted by the service station and nothing more. Additionally, for the speeding violation, only the fine was charged, and that was it—no extra fees or deposits. I was left with a good impression. The rental owner, Erald was always available and quickly responded to any questions that arose.

September 2024
Piotr Gawior
Piotr Gawior
🇵🇱

Volkswagen Golf Plus in Albania

Very friendly and efficient service. The car is also fine, clean and ready to drive. I can wholeheartedly recommend this place.

August 2025
Matej Dzivy balucha
Matej Dzivy balucha
🇸🇰

Skoda Scala in Albania

It was great

June 2025
Oleh Kolesnyk
Oleh Kolesnyk
🇵🇱

Dacia Sandero Stepway in Albania

Do not recommend this company. Very bad experience. We arrived at the airport, but nobody was there to meet us, even though pickup was supposed to be included. I had to call them several times — they didn’t answer right away. When they finally did, they told us to walk with our luggage somewhere outside the airport and wait on the street. We waited about 30 minutes before someone showed up. When they finally picked us up, they said the car we had booked (a Dacia crossover) was not available. Instead, they offered a Fiat Tipo — not a crossover, but a regular sedan. They claimed it was “even better,” but it clearly wasn’t. There were no other options — either take it or get nothing. When returning the car, they accused us of not taking photos of some minor damage that we hadn’t even noticed when picking up the car. We had full insurance, yet they still tried to charge us extra for it. They also tried to make us pay for interior cleaning, even though it was already included in the price. The staff were rude, unhelpful, and tried to blame us for everything. It felt like they were constantly looking for ways to charge more money. Avoid this company at all costs. Terrible service and attitude.

October 2025
Ege Dündar
Ege Dündar
🇹🇷

Dacia Sandero Stepway in Albania

everything was fine.

July 2024
Yun Xu
Yun Xu
🇷🇺

SEAT Ibiza Tsi in Albania

Everything was fine in terms of registration and the rental process. A little inconvenience with the return arose with the office itself. We asked to postpone the time of car delivery a bit, but the office refused.

July 2025
SALİH RIZA Yanik
SALİH RIZA Yanik
🇹🇷

Renault Captur in Albania

They didnt give me the captur They say there is a accident they offer a manuel transmission stepway i don want that they say they dont have otomatic transmission car for me, every car is on the rent but i said “i want a automatic car, i dont accept any other options” and after they gave me a automatic stepway

July 2025
Piotr Jakubowski
Piotr Jakubowski
🇵🇱

Mercedes-Benz C180 in Albania

It was good

September 2023
Svitlana Ajnzer
Svitlana Ajnzer
🇺🇦

Hyundai Elantra in Albania

I would like to thank you for the vacation in Albania, because without a car you can not see the whole country. I am very happy with the company and the car, we received the car very quickly. The guys are always in touch. The car is very convenient, roomy and comfortable. Thank you very much)

July 2025

Take Cars in Albania

On TakeCars you see exactly which company and which manager you're renting from: profile, real customer reviews, photos, average response time in chat. It isn't an anonymous airport counter. Most of our Albania partners are family-run fleets — the same person greets you at the airport, signs the contract and takes the keys back at the end.

Aldi

Tirana
4.2
Aldi

Romeo

Tirana airport (TIA)
4.8
Romeo

Marenglen

Tirana airport (TIA)
4.3
Marenglen

Erald

Durres
4.8
Erald
RENT A CAR
  • Real reviews on every car

    You see ratings and comments for the exact vehicle you're booking, not just the company's average.

  • Cash deposits, no card hold

    Most local partners take €100–300 in cash at pickup; several hundred cars in the catalogue run on a zero-deposit tariff.

  • Free upgrade if your class is full

    If your chosen model is already out, the host bumps you to the next class up — no extra charge, no negotiation at the desk.

Documents and deposit

To rent in Albania you need a passport with the entry stamp, a driving licence and a bank card for the prepayment. EU/EEA, UK and most Latin-script licences are accepted by local suppliers, though an International Driving Permit (IDP) is recommended for non-EU visitors.

An IDP costs around £5–€10 and takes a couple of days. For a first trip to Albania, it's one possible roadblock removed.

Visa and entry

EU/EEA and UK citizens enter visa-free for up to 90 days. US, Canadian and Australian citizens — up to a year. For most other passports, an e-visa is available via e-visa.al for around €30.

Card or cash

Albania is a cash country. The deposit and the bulk of the rental are paid in euros or lek to the supplier. The card is used only for the 15–20% online prepayment. Withdraw euros at home or at Tirana airport ATMs.

Deposit €100–300, or zero

Local suppliers usually ask for €100–300 cash on collection. International chains block €250–1500 on a credit card. Rather not lock funds? Pick a "no deposit" tariff — several hundred such cars are in the catalogue.

A cash deposit comes back on the spot when you hand the car over, provided there's no damage. Faster than waiting for a card hold to clear — with some banks that takes weeks.

Insurance in Albania

Every rental car in Albania carries TPL (Third-Party Liability) by law. It covers damage to other people, vehicles and property — not your rental. Basic cover alone is rarely enough.

Basic CDW

CDW comes in most tariffs with an excess of €500–1500. It rarely covers tyres, wheels, windscreen, undercarriage or interior — exactly the parts that take the worst beating in Albania. Patchy asphalt, coastal gravel and old-town kerbs wear them down fast.

A couple took the basic CDW in March and clipped a stone on the Llogara descent. Windscreen wasn't covered. The repair cost almost as much as the rental.

Super CDW

Super CDW removes the excess and in most packages covers tyres, glass and the underbody — €10–25 a day. For city trips basic cover is fine. For Theth, Valbona or the Llogara pass, take Super CDW.

Full Damage Waiver

Full Damage Waiver is offered by some partners and covers most edge cases — lost keys, towing, chipped paint. Whatever the cover, any scratch or accident means calling the police on 126 or 112. Without a report, no insurer pays.

Even in an empty car park: spot a fresh dent or scratch on the car, call the police, get it logged. Ten minutes of waiting saves hundreds of euros down the line.

Albania with locals

Roads, rules and borders

Main roads and the Tirana–Durrës motorway are of European quality. In the provinces and the mountains, stretches can be under repair, and the habit of stopping mid-road "for a minute" applies everywhere.

Speed and alcohol

In town 40 km/h, rural roads 80, A1 110. Alcohol limit is 0.01‰, effectively zero: one glass means a €250–400 fine and possible licence suspension. Dipped headlights must be on day and night, year-round, since 2023.

The single most common reason a foreign car gets pulled over is daytime headlights left off. Fine €20–40, easiest paid on the spot. Most of our cars switch them on automatically.

Tolls and parking

The only toll is the A1 "Rruga e Kombit" with a booth at the Kalimash tunnel on the way to Kosovo, €5 per car. No national vignette. In Tirana, blue zones are paid via the T-Park app.

Where to start

The most popular scenario is car rental in Tirana at TIA airport. If you start on the beach, car hire in Durrës is handier. For the south, the starting point is car rental in Sarandë — close to Ksamil and Butrint.

From Albania you can reach Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Greece in a day. Make sure the cross-border permission stamp is in the contract — without it the insurance lapses at the frontier.

Rates in Albania vary throughout the year depending on the season and the rental length in days.

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29
33
33
38
44
47
47
44
35
32
35
  • January
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  • July
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  • October
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chartHow expensive is renting a car in Albania: average daily rates for a one-week car rental, across all car classes. Delivery across Albania not included.

Frequently asked questions about car rental in Albania

What's the minimum age to rent a car in Albania?

Standard is 21 with at least one year of driving experience. Premium classes raise the bar to 23–25. A young-driver fee of €3.50–10 a day, or a flat ~€50, applies under 25 — it is added at the desk and shown in the quote before you confirm. There is no upper age limit in Albania.

Can I rent a car in Albania without a credit card?

Yes. Most local TakeCars partners use the card only for the 15–20% online prepayment; the balance and the deposit are paid in cash in euros or lek on collection. EU and UK debit cards are widely accepted. A credit card is only mandatory at the global chains; the local market works fine without one.

Do EU and UK driving licences work in Albania?

Yes. EU and EEA licences are accepted as they are. UK, US, Canadian and Australian licences in Latin script are accepted by the vast majority of local suppliers. For first-time visits we recommend pairing the licence with an IDP — police checks sometimes ask for one, and it costs only a few pounds or euros to issue.

What documents do I need to rent a car in Albania?

A passport with the entry stamp, a driving licence in Latin script and a bank card for the online prepayment. An IDP is recommended for non-EU visitors. If you add a second driver, bring their licence too — at local suppliers this is usually free, while international chains charge €3–7 per day.

Can I take a rental car on the Sarandë–Corfu ferry?

No. The ferry company does not allow rental cars on board — this is the operator's rule, not the rental supplier's. Park the car in a paid lot in Sarandë (€5–10 a day) and travel as a foot passenger. The crossing costs €19–35 one way and takes 30–70 minutes depending on the vessel.

Are winter tyres required in Albania?

There is no fixed legal requirement; the rule is "by weather". Winter tyres (M+S) are strongly recommended from November to March if you plan to drive to Theth, Valbona, Korçë or the northern mountains. Studded tyres are banned year-round. In summer, cars run on summer or all-season tyres, which is enough for the coast.

How much is petrol in Albania?

95-octane petrol costs around €1.60–2.10 per litre, diesel slightly less at €1.50–1.80. LPG is widely available locally but rarely fitted to rental cars. Stations are dense along the coast and the Tirana — Durrës motorway, sparser in the mountains. Kosovo and North Macedonia are noticeably cheaper if you cross.

Do I need to refuel before returning the car?

Yes. Almost every supplier uses the "full-to-full" rule: you receive the car with a full tank and return it the same way. Top up 5–10 km before the return office and keep the receipt. If you bring it back with less, the supplier will refuel at a marked-up rate plus a €15–30 service fee.

How do I pay a traffic fine in Albania?

Fines are paid at any Posta Shqiptare branch, at a bank, or by card with the officer if a terminal is available. Pay within 15 days of the offence and a 50% discount applies. If a fine remains unpaid, the rental company will charge it to your card after return, plus a €10–30 admin fee.

Can I return the car in another Albanian city?

Yes — one-way within Albania is offered by almost all our partners. Standard surcharge is €20–80 on Tirana ↔ Sarandë / Vlorë / Gjirokastër routes. International one-way to Podgorica, Dubrovnik or Pristina costs €300–600 and is offered by a small number of suppliers. The fee is shown in the quote before booking.

Is there a mileage limit on rentals in Albania?

The vast majority of cars in the catalogue come with unlimited mileage — the local standard. A 150–250 km/day cap occasionally appears on long-term tariffs (30+ days) and on some luxury cars. If a limit applies, it is shown on the car's page; over-mileage costs €0.15–0.30 per kilometre.

Is it cheaper to rent at Tirana airport or in town?

At the airport you usually pay €3–8 a day more because of the airport surcharge. If you are staying one or two days in Tirana before driving on, picking the car up in town saves money. If you are heading straight out across the country, taking it at TIA saves you an hour and €15–20 on a taxi.

Are child seats compulsory in Albania?

Yes, by law: children under three must be in a proper seat; under 12 or below 150 cm cannot sit in the front. The fine is €50–100. Our partners offer child seats at €5–10 a day or €30–50 for the whole rental — book one when you reserve the car, summer stocks run out fast.

Can I smoke in a rental car in Albania?

No. Most contracts explicitly ban smoking, transporting pets without prior approval and food with strong smells. Breach of the clause carries a cleaning fee of €50–150. If you plan to travel with a dog, message the manager in advance — some partners accept pets with an additional cleaning deposit.

Can I rent a car in Albania for just one day?

Yes. The minimum rental is 24 hours from collection. A late return of up to one hour is usually free; beyond that, the next day is charged. A handful of small local suppliers ask for a three-day minimum (more common in high season), but they make up less than a fifth of the catalogue.

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