Two New Yachts Have Just Joined the Via Croatia Fleet
Two exceptional motor yachts just joined Via Croatia's fleet: the 41m K Series Renata and the Azimut Grande 26 First Horizon. Here's everything your clients need to know.
Is Albania the New Up-and-Coming Luxury Destination in Europe?
Albania is emerging as Europe's most exciting luxury destination. Discover why global hotel brands, record visitor numbers, and an untouched Adriatic coastline are changing the conversation.
Via Croatia·There is a particular kind of travel conversation that happens when a destination is on the edge of something. The people who have been there are slightly evangelical about it. The people who haven't are starting to ask questions. The travel industry is paying attention. The hotel brands are moving in. And the window, that rare window where a place is extraordinary but not yet crowded with the crowd, is still open but visibly narrowing.
Albania is in that moment right now.
For a long time, Albania sat at the edges of European travel consciousness. Largely closed during the communist period, then slow to build the infrastructure that international tourism demands, the country was known to adventurous backpackers and little else. That version of Albania has not disappeared entirely. But it is being joined by something new: a rapidly developing luxury tourism sector, with world-class hotel brands arriving, major coastal investments underway, record visitor numbers climbing year on year, and a government strategy built specifically around positioning Albania as a premium year-round destination by 2030.
The question is no longer whether Albania is worth visiting. The question is whether you get there before everyone else does.
The scale of Albania's tourism growth over the last decade is genuinely striking. International visitors rose from about 3.6 million in 2014 to over 12 million expected in 2025, one of the fastest tourism growth rates in Europe over that period. That is not the kind of growth that happens by accident. It reflects a country that has been steadily improving its infrastructure, its connectivity, and its appeal to a more sophisticated international traveler.
In 2024, Albania welcomed an unprecedented 11.7 million foreign visitors, a 15.2% increase from the previous year, generating €3.8 billion in revenues during the first nine months of the year alone. For context on Albania's standing globally: according to the UN Tourism Barometer, Albania secured third position worldwide for the highest percentage change in international tourist arrivals compared to 2019, with a growth rate exceeding 80%.
These are not the numbers of a budget backpacker destination finding its feet. They are the numbers of a country that has made a strategic decision to compete at an international level and is executing against it.
One of the clearest signals that a destination has crossed a threshold in the luxury travel world is the arrival of the global hotel brands. They do not move speculatively. They do extensive market analysis, they evaluate infrastructure readiness, and they commit only when the conditions for a successful premium property are in place.
Albania now hosts 17 global hotel brands, including Melia, Marriott, Movenpick-Accor, Mercure-Accor, Maritim, Radisson, Hyatt, Hilton, and Pullman-Accor. Remarkably, none of these brands were present in the country just five years ago.
That is not incremental development. That is a wholesale entry of the international hospitality industry into a market that was essentially absent from their portfolios half a decade ago. The flagship projects reflect the scale of ambition: the Gran Meliá Durrës, a $41 million resort with 500 rooms, and the MGallery Palasë, a $51 million development, are already setting the stage for further investment. The pipeline includes the $2.4 billion Durrës Yachts and Marina by Eagle Hills, which signals Albania's serious ambition to develop world-class maritime infrastructure alongside its coastal hotel offer.
For travel advisors and travelers evaluating Albania as a luxury destination, this matters practically. The accommodation landscape that exists today is already considerably different from what was available three years ago, and the pipeline for the next three years is more ambitious still.
The coastline is where the conversation about Albanian luxury travel begins for most visitors, and with good reason. The Albanian Riviera runs south from Vlorë to Sarandë along the Ionian coast, backed by the Ceraunian Mountains and opening onto water that shifts between pale turquoise and deep blue in a way that genuinely stops people.
The beaches at Ksamil, Dhermi, Himara, and Borsh are largely sandy, white, and in many cases still uncrowded by the standards of comparable Mediterranean destinations. The mountain backdrop adds a drama that the flat coastlines of most Adriatic rivals cannot match. The sea itself benefits from the Ionian currents that produce exceptional clarity and warmth through the summer months.
The construction of the Llogara Tunnel has significantly reduced travel time to the Albanian Riviera, making the region considerably more accessible to tourists arriving from Tirana. For travelers who previously faced a winding mountain road between the capital and the coast, this infrastructure change is a meaningful practical improvement to the experience of getting there.
What makes the Riviera compelling as a luxury destination is not just the water. It is the combination of physical beauty, relative privacy, and a food culture that is built on genuinely fresh local ingredients. Seafood pulled from the Ionian that morning. Olive oil from groves on the hillside above the restaurant. Figs and tomatoes that taste of actual sun. The supply chain between field and table in this part of Albania is short in a way that is increasingly rare in more developed European tourist economies.
Albania's luxury appeal extends well beyond its coastline, and the destinations that reward the curious traveler are substantial.
Tirana has transformed itself into one of the most unexpectedly engaging capitals in Europe. The colourful architecture, the converted communist-era bunkers that now house art galleries and museums, the vibrant restaurant scene, and the particular energy of a city that has been reinventing itself at speed for two decades: Tirana delivers in ways that travelers who have written it off as a transit stop consistently discover too late. The House of Leaves, a museum documenting the surveillance apparatus of the communist secret police, is one of the most sobering and compelling museum experiences available anywhere on the continent.
Historical towns like Berat and Gjirokastra, both UNESCO World Heritage Sites, offer centuries of history, Ottoman-era architecture, and traditional Albanian culture. Berat, the "City of a Thousand Windows," is a 2,400-year-old town of stacked white stone houses that has been continuously inhabited for millennia. Gjirokastra is built entirely from stone, its cobbled streets climbing toward a hilltop castle that dates to the 12th century. Both are places where history is still visibly lived in, not managed for tourism behind ropes and barriers.
The Albanian Alps in the country's north, accessible via the spectacular Lake Koman ferry and the valleys of Valbona and Theth, offer a mountain landscape that is almost entirely undeveloped by international tourism standards. Multi-day trekking routes through the Accursed Mountains pass through villages where the traditional Besa code of hospitality is not a marketing concept but a daily practice. For travelers who want genuine engagement with landscape and culture rather than a packaged encounter with it, this region of Albania is one of the most rewarding destinations in the Balkans.
The case for visiting Albania now rather than later rests on a simple observation: the best experiences at any destination tend to happen in the window between discovery and saturation. Albania is in that window.
The beaches that are still genuinely uncrowded. The restaurants that are still genuinely local. The mountain valleys that are still genuinely wild. The coastal towns where tourism has arrived but has not yet overwhelmed the texture of daily life that makes a place worth visiting. These qualities are not permanent. They are the product of a particular moment in a destination's development, and that moment has a time limit.
Albania is emerging as more than just a budget destination. With a focus on cultural tourism, authentic experiences, and sustainable practices, the country is attracting travelers looking for meaningful and diverse experiences. The luxury tier is developing quickly, but it has not yet arrived at the homogeneity that tends to accompany a fully mature luxury market. The boutique hotels in Berat feel different from the boutique hotels in Dubrovnik. The private boat experience off the Riviera feels different from the equivalent in Hvar. The difference is authenticity, and it is the kind of authenticity that cannot be manufactured once a destination has passed a certain point.
That point is approaching for Albania. It has not been reached yet. For travelers and travel advisors who want to get there first, the window is open.
And guest what - when know every corner of it already as we have been exploring it deeply for the past 10 or more years. Check out some of the sample itineraries that will showcase best of the Albania to be explored.
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