A private tour in Albania usually comes down to one thing: a car and a driver who are yours for the day, not a coach full of strangers on a fixed 8am departure. That matters more here than in most of Europe, and it's down to the terrain. Albania is roughly three-quarters mountains, and the roads follow the land — so distances that look short on a map eat real hours. Tirana to Berat is a little over two hours; Tirana down to Gjirokastër or Saranda on the south coast is four to six. There are no useful trains (the main line was pulled up years ago), and intercity buses run on their own logic with no printed timetable. In that setting a private driver isn't a luxury add-on — it's the thing that turns a scattered map into a trip that actually works: door-to-door pickups, stops where you want them, and someone who can read a road sign and talk to a guesthouse owner in Albanian. Nearly everyone flies into Tirana's airport — the main one, where nearly everyone lands, about 30 minutes from the city — so most private itineraries start and end there. What you're really choosing here is how much of the driving and translating you hand off, and to whom.
Choosing a Private Tours tour
There are three ways to do this, and the right one depends on your nerves and your budget. Self-drive is cheapest and most flexible — rentals are easy to pick up at the Tirana airport — but be honest about the driving. City traffic is aggressive, mountain roads are narrow with the occasional missing guardrail, and signage thins out fast once you leave the main corridors. A private car with a driver costs more but erases all of that, and the driver doubles as translator and fixer, which counts because English gets patchy outside Tirana and the bigger towns. A small-group tour sits in the middle on price, if you don't mind sharing the vehicle and keeping to a set route. For couples and families who want the south coast plus an inland town or two, a private driver over several days is usually the sweet spot. Whatever you pick, plan fewer stops than you think — those drive times are real, and an afternoon on a Ksamil beach or a slow lunch in Berat beats a rushed checklist.
When to go
May, June, September and early October are the best months — warm, long days, and the coast isn't yet packed. July and August are hot and busy: inland towns like Berat bake in the afternoon, and the beaches around Saranda and Ksamil fill with local and regional holidaymakers, so book ahead and expect traffic on the coastal road. Spring is green and good for the inland castles and canyons, but the sea is still cool. Winter is mild on the coast and in Tirana but quiet, with short days and snow in the mountains — the northern Alps roads can close entirely. For a private-driver trip that mixes coast and culture, aim for late May to mid-June or September.