Albania’s turquoise coastline and Ottoman-era towns are finally on every traveler’s radar — but your US phone plan almost certainly won’t work here without a massive bill. Albania isn’t in the EU, which catches many visitors off guard. Here’s everything you need to stay connected, whether you prefer an eSIM you activate before takeoff or a local SIM from the airport.

sim cards esims for albania the complete guide

For most US travelers, an eSIM from Airalo or Saily ($4–$22 for 1–10 GB) is the easiest option — install it before you fly and connect on landing. If you need more data, buy a Vodafone Albania tourist SIM at Tirana airport for about $22 (40 GB, 21 days). Albania is not in the EU, so standard European roaming won’t work here.

Check these two things before you leave for Albania

Your phone must be carrier-unlocked and, if you’re choosing eSIM, it must support eSIM technology. Most iPhones from the XS onward and Samsung Galaxy S20 onward support eSIM. Call your US carrier to confirm your phone is unlocked — a locked phone can’t use Albanian SIMs or international eSIMs.

I watched a fellow traveler at the Vodafone kiosk in Tirana discover her AT&T phone was locked — she couldn’t use the SIM she’d just paid for, and the kiosk staff couldn’t help her. Five minutes of pre-trip prep would have saved her the trip.

How to check if your phone is unlocked

  • iPhone: Settings > General > About > Carrier Lock. Should read “No SIM restrictions.”
  • Android: Settings > Connections > SIM Manager, or insert a SIM from another carrier and see if it activates.
  • Call your US carrier directly if either method is ambiguous. T-Mobile unlocks after 40 days of active service, AT&T after 60 days of paid service, Verizon automatically unlocks postpaid phones after 60 days.

Which phones support eSIM

  • iPhone XS, XR, and all later models (note: US iPhone 14 and later are eSIM-only — no physical SIM tray)
  • Samsung Galaxy S20 and later, Note 20, Z Flip/Fold series
  • Google Pixel 3 and later
  • Motorola Razr, OnePlus 11 and later

Pro Tip: If you have a US iPhone 14 or later, you physically cannot use an Albanian local SIM — there’s no tray. Your only option is eSIM, either from an international provider or from a Vodafone Albania store that sells eSIM QR codes in person.

Physical SIM vs eSIM for Albania — which is right for you?

Choose eSIM if you want instant connectivity on landing, are visiting for under two weeks, or are on a multi-country Balkans trip. Choose a local physical SIM if you need maximum data for the dollar, want a local Albanian phone number, or plan to tether heavily for remote work.

After testing both options across five Balkans trips, I’ve landed on a clear rule: eSIM for short hops, local SIM for anything over a week. The math on Vodafone’s 40 GB tourist pack is too good to pass up once you’re staying more than a few days.

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When eSIM wins: short stays and multi-country trips

An eSIM is the right call if you’re landing late at night and want to text your hotel before leaving the plane, if you’re on a 3–5 day trip where convenience beats cost, if you’re hopping between multiple Balkan countries, or if you’re arriving on a cruise with only a few hours ashore. No passport required, no store visit, no language barrier.

When a local SIM wins: heavy data use and long stays

A local SIM wins on pure value. Vodafone’s 40 GB Tourist Pack costs about $22 — the same price Airalo charges for 10 GB. You also get unlimited domestic calls, unrestricted hotspot, and a local phone number for booking taxis or restaurants. For anything over a week, or if you plan to work remotely, buy local.

Quick comparison table

Criterion eSIM Local physical SIM
Setup time 2 minutes (pre-trip) 5 minutes at airport
Data per dollar Moderate Best value
Local phone number No Yes
Hotspot Yes (varies by provider) Yes, unrestricted
Multi-country use Yes (regional plans) Limited
Passport needed No Yes
Best for Short trips, cruises, Balkans loops Stays over 7 days, heavy data users

The best eSIM providers for Albania compared

Saily offers the best balance of price and features for most travelers at $3.99 per gigabyte with a built-in ad blocker that stretches data further. Airalo is the most popular alternative with the widest plan selection. Holafly’s unlimited plans suit heavy users willing to accept fair-use throttling and a limited hotspot cap.

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Here’s how the top providers stack up on price, network, and features:

Provider 1 GB price 10 GB / 30-day Network used Tethering Unique feature
Saily $3.99 $21.99 Vodafone Albania Unrestricted Ad blocker saves ~30% data
Airalo $4.00 $22.00 One Albania Yes Widest plan range, 20M+ users
Nomad $4.50 $24.00 Vodafone Albania Yes 50 GB / $69 heavy-use plan
Holafly $9.90/day unlimited $36.90 / 7-day unlimited Vodafone Albania Capped at 500 MB/day Truly unlimited (with FUP)
aloSIM $4.50 ~$26.00 Vodafone Albania Yes Free Hushed phone number
Yesim ~$1.10 ~$22.00 Vodafone Albania Yes Cheapest per-GB
Jetpac $1.00 intro ~$35.00 Vodafone Albania Yes Free WhatsApp/Maps after data runs out

Saily — best all-around value

Saily is the NordVPN team’s eSIM product, and it shows in the feature set: every plan includes an ad blocker and light VPN protection. The ad blocker is the quiet hero — by stripping trackers and ads from Instagram, news sites, and maps, it typically saves 20–30% of your data. A 10 GB plan effectively becomes 13 GB of usable browsing. Hotspot works without restrictions, which matters if you need to tether a laptop.

  • Price: from $3.99 (1 GB / 7 days) to $54.99 (20 GB / 30 days)
  • Network: routes through Vodafone Albania
  • Best for: First-time eSIM users who want good value and don’t need calls

Airalo — widest plan selection

Airalo is the biggest name in travel eSIM for a reason — the app is polished, customer support is responsive, and it offers the most plan granularity (1, 3, 5, 10, 20 GB options). In Albania, Airalo routes through One Albania via Hej Telecom, which means you get wider 5G coverage in tourist cities like Sarandë, Ksamil, and Berat than Vodafone-based competitors.

  • Price: from $4.00 (1 GB / 7 days) to $37.00 (20 GB / 30 days)
  • Network: One Albania (via Hej Telecom)
  • Best for: Travelers who want the most plan flexibility and 5G in Riviera towns

Nomad — best for heavy data users and long stays

Nomad’s advantage shows up at the top of its plan ladder. The 50 GB / 30-day plan costs $69 — roughly $1.38/GB, the best large-plan rate in the eSIM market for Albania. If you’re working remotely for a month and don’t want to deal with a local SIM, this is the plan to beat.

  • Price: from $4.50 (1 GB) to $69 (50 GB / 30 days)
  • Network: Vodafone Albania
  • Best for: Digital nomads staying 3+ weeks

Holafly — unlimited data with a catch

Holafly sells “unlimited” plans from $9.90/day or $36.90 for a week. The catch: a fair-use policy kicks in after roughly 2–5 GB of high-speed data per day, dropping you to 256 Kbps–1 Mbps. More importantly for remote workers, hotspot is capped at around 500 MB per day. After buying Holafly’s unlimited plan for a Riviera road trip, my data slowed to a crawl mid-afternoon on day three — right when I needed navigation on the Llogaraja Pass switchbacks.

  • Price: from $9.90/day or $36.90 for 7 days (unlimited with FUP)
  • Network: Vodafone Albania
  • Best for: Single travelers who stream video and don’t need tethering

Three budget alternatives worth considering

  • aloSIM: Includes a free Hushed phone number for making calls and sending SMS — useful if you need to call a hotel without using WhatsApp
  • Yesim: Swiss-based with the lowest headline per-GB pricing. App is less polished than Airalo or Saily
  • Jetpac: After your data runs out, WhatsApp and Google Maps keep working for free — a genuinely useful failsafe

Pro Tip: Skip Holafly’s Albania plan unless you specifically need unlimited streaming. For the same $37, a local Vodafone Tourist Pack gives you 40 GB of real high-speed data with unrestricted hotspot. The “unlimited” label exploits anxiety more than it solves real problems.

How to buy a local SIM card at Tirana airport and beyond

Both Vodafone and One Albania operate kiosks in the Tirana airport Arrivals Hall, visible immediately after you exit customs. Expect to pay $22–$31 for a tourist SIM with 40–100 GB of data valid for up to 21 days. Bring your passport and cash in Albanian Lek or euros — credit cards are often declined at carrier kiosks.

The Vodafone kiosk is impossible to miss — it’s the first thing on your left after the arrivals doors slide open, the orange logo glowing even at midnight. I paid 2,000 Lek in cash, handed over my passport, and had 40 GB activated in under five minutes. The staff didn’t speak much English, but the process was seamless.

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Vodafone Albania plans and prices

  • Albania 10 GB: about $10 for 5 days
  • Albania 20 GB: about $15 for 10 days, plus 10 GB bonus via the My Vodafone app
  • Tourist Pack: about $22 for 40 GB plus unlimited domestic calls, 21 days
  • Tourist Giga Pack: about $28 for 100 GB plus unlimited calls, 21 days

One Albania plans and prices

  • Tourist Advance: about $24 for 40 GB, 1,000 minutes, and 1,000 SMS, 15 days
  • Tourist Ultra: about $31 for 100 GB, unlimited calls, and 3,000 SMS, 21 days

Step-by-step airport SIM activation walkthrough

  1. Exit customs and turn left toward the orange Vodafone kiosk (or right for One Albania)
  2. Tell the agent the plan name you want — the Tourist Pack is the default recommendation
  3. Hand over your passport for the mandatory registration
  4. Pay in cash (Albanian Lek preferred, euros accepted at a slightly worse rate)
  5. The agent inserts the SIM and activates the plan on the spot
  6. Download the My Vodafone app and register your new number to claim a free 10 GB bonus — the app is in Albanian, but the bonus prompt is unmissable as a pop-up after registration

Buying a SIM if you arrive via Saranda ferry

At the Saranda ferry port from Corfu, a woman approached me selling Vodafone SIMs for the equivalent of $60. I politely declined, walked five minutes to the official Vodafone store on the main drag, and paid $22 for the same 40 GB Tourist Pack. If anyone offers to sell you a SIM outside a branded store, walk away.

  • Official Vodafone Saranda: on Rruga Skenderbeu, the main pedestrian street
  • One Albania Saranda: two blocks inland from the ferry terminal, on Rruga Jonianet
  • Same plans and prices as Tirana airport

What kind of coverage and speeds can you expect?

Albania’s two networks cover approximately 98% of the population with 4G/LTE, and both carriers now offer 5G in major cities and tourist areas. Expect download speeds of 37–53 Mbps on 4G. Coverage is excellent along the coast and in cities but drops sharply in mountain valleys and remote alpine areas.

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City-by-city coverage for every major tourist destination

Destination Vodafone One Albania Notes
Tirana 4G/5G 4G/5G Full coverage everywhere including Blloku
Durrës 4G/5G 4G/5G Beach areas fully covered
Sarandë 4G 4G/5G One Albania has 5G here
Ksamil 4G 4G/5G Strong beach coverage
Berat 4G 4G/5G UNESCO old town has good signal
Gjirokastër 4G/5G 4G/5G Both carriers have 5G
Shkodër 4G 4G/5G Gateway to the Alps
Himarë 4G 4G/5G Riviera coverage is solid
Vlorë 4G 4G/5G Port city, well covered
Theth / Valbona Spotty 3G Spotty 3G Expect dead zones in deep valleys

Vodafone or One — which network is better for travelers?

Vodafone has a slight edge for rural and mountain coverage, including the Albanian Alps and remote coastal stretches. One Albania has wider 5G deployment in tourist cities — Sarandë, Ksamil, Berat, Himarë, and Shkodër all have One Albania 5G but only 4G on Vodafone. For a beach-and-cities itinerary, either works beautifully. For Alps trekking around Theth or Valbona, go Vodafone.

Where you will (and won’t) have signal

  • Reliable: Tirana, the entire Adriatic and Ionian coast, Berat, Gjirokastër, Shkodër, the highway network
  • Spotty: The Llogara Pass between Vlorë and Dhërmi (about 20 minutes of dead zone on the switchbacks), the interior of the Butrint archaeological site, deep valleys between Shkodër and Theth
  • Don’t rely on it: Anywhere above 1,500 feet in the northern Alps

Pro Tip: Before any mountain trip, download offline maps in Google Maps or Maps.me for the entire region. I stream Spotify through the valleys around Berat with zero interruption, but the switchbacks near Llogara drop you into a complete black hole — at exactly the moment you need turn-by-turn directions most.

Can you use one SIM for Albania and the rest of the Balkans?

Yes, but with caveats. Albania belongs to the Western Balkans Regional Roaming Agreement, which eliminated roaming fees between Albania, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Bosnia. However, prepaid tourist SIMs may not fully include this benefit — check the fine print. For guaranteed multi-country coverage, a regional eSIM from Airalo or Nomad is the safer bet.

The Western Balkans roaming zone explained

The Western Balkans Roam Like at Home agreement took effect in July 2021 and eliminated roaming surcharges between six countries: Albania, Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia. In theory, an Albanian SIM should work at domestic rates across all six.

Why prepaid tourist SIMs might not include free roaming

Carriers can set fair-use limits on prepaid plans. Vodafone Albania’s Tourist Pack states that roughly 10% of the data bundle can be used in neighboring countries — that’s only 4 GB of roaming out of a 40 GB plan. I assumed my Albanian Vodafone SIM would work seamlessly in Montenegro based on the roaming agreement. It did, but I burned through the roaming allowance in a single day of Google Maps navigation around Kotor.

Best regional eSIM plans for a multi-country Balkans itinerary

  • Airalo Eurolink: 39+ countries, 10 GB / 30 days for about $37. Does not include Kosovo
  • Nomad Balkans plan: 13 countries including Kosovo, 10 GB / 30 days for about $39
  • Holafly Balkans regional: unlimited with fair-use policy, various durations

If Kosovo is on your route, Nomad is the only regional eSIM that covers it properly. For Albania-Montenegro-Croatia loops, Airalo’s Eurolink is fine.

How to activate and set up your Albania eSIM step by step

Purchase your eSIM plan through your chosen provider’s app or website, then install the eSIM profile via QR code or direct app installation while still on home WiFi. Do not activate the data plan until you land in Albania — activation starts the validity countdown on most providers.

Install before you fly, activate when you land

  1. Buy the plan from Airalo, Saily, or another provider a day or two before departure
  2. Receive a QR code via email or in-app
  3. On iPhone: Settings > Cellular > Add eSIM > scan QR code. On Android: Settings > Connections > SIM Manager > Add eSIM
  4. Label the new line “Albania Travel” so you can toggle it easily
  5. Keep data roaming off on the new line until you land
  6. After landing, turn on airplane mode briefly, enable data roaming for the Albania line, disable data roaming on your US line, then turn airplane mode off
  7. Confirm you’re connected — you should see “Vodafone AL” or “One Albania” in the status bar

My eSIM showed “No Service” for a nerve-wracking two minutes after landing at Tirana — toggling airplane mode on and off fixed it instantly. If that doesn’t work, a full phone restart usually does.

Dual-SIM setup to keep your US number active

Set your US line to “calls only, data off” and the Albania eSIM to “data on.” This lets you keep receiving iMessages and SMS verification codes on your US number (over WiFi or the Albania data connection) without racking up roaming charges. Label both lines clearly so you don’t accidentally swap them.

Troubleshooting common eSIM connection issues

  • “No service” after landing: Toggle airplane mode, then restart the phone
  • Data not working despite signal: Confirm data roaming is enabled for the eSIM line, not your US line
  • Can’t install the QR code: You’re probably trying to install on cellular — switch to WiFi first
  • App says plan expired: Some providers start the clock at purchase, not activation — always check terms before buying

Is Albania part of EU roaming?

No. Albania is an EU candidate country but not a member. EU “Roam Like at Home” rules do not apply here. If you arrive with only an EU SIM card, you’ll face roaming surcharges — potentially several euros per megabyte. US carrier roaming is possible but expensive on most plans.

What EU travelers need to know

An EU SIM card used in Albania without a dedicated roaming add-on can cost €0.99–€7.23 per MB. A single gigabyte of casual browsing could run over €1,000. Every EU carrier now sells short-term Albania roaming passes — buy one before you cross the border, or pick up a local SIM on arrival.

US carrier roaming costs in Albania: a breakdown

  • T-Mobile Go5G: Includes 5–15 GB of high-speed data in Albania at no extra cost; $0.25/min for calls. The best US carrier option by a wide margin
  • AT&T International Day Pass: $12/day for access to your domestic data allowance
  • Verizon TravelPass: $12/day for 5 GB high-speed
  • Google Fi: Works at US domestic rates ($10/GB on Flexible plans, included on Unlimited Premium)
  • AT&T pay-per-use without a plan: $2.05 per megabyte — over $2,000 per gigabyte

A friend’s AT&T bill after three days in Albania without a roaming plan came to $847. She’d used about 400 MB total, mostly loading Instagram. If your carrier isn’t T-Mobile, buy a local SIM or eSIM — the numbers are not close.

How much data do you actually need in Albania?

Most travelers use 1–2 GB per day for maps, messaging, and social media. Budget 3–5 GB per week for casual use with WiFi backup, or 10–15 GB per week if you stream music or video-call regularly. Albania’s hotels and cafes generally offer free WiFi, which lowers your cellular data needs.

Data use estimates by activity

  • Google Maps navigation: 5–10 MB per hour
  • WhatsApp messaging: around 30 MB per day
  • Instagram or TikTok scrolling: 500 MB to 1 GB per hour
  • Video calls: about 500 MB per hour
  • Streaming music: around 70 MB per hour
  • Streaming video in HD: about 3 GB per hour
  • Light user (maps, messaging, hotel WiFi): 3–5 GB for a week. Airalo 5 GB at $12.50 or Saily 5 GB at $12.99
  • Moderate user (social media, occasional video calls): 10 GB for a week. Saily 10 GB at $21.99 or a local SIM for similar money
  • Heavy user (streaming, remote work, hotspot): 20–40 GB. Vodafone Tourist Pack 40 GB at about $22 — by far the best value
  • Digital nomad (daily video calls, heavy hotspot): 100 GB. Vodafone Tourist Giga at about $28

I used 6.2 GB in 10 days across Tirana, Berat, and the Riviera — mostly maps, WhatsApp, and uploading photos to Instagram at restaurants while waiting for my byrek. The 10 GB Saily plan would have been plenty with room to spare.

How to top up your Albanian SIM or eSIM and manage your plan

For local SIMs, visit any Vodafone or One Albania store and top up with cash in under two minutes — no new SIM needed. For eSIMs, most providers allow in-app top-ups or new plan purchases. Airalo and Saily support seamless top-ups without reinstalling the eSIM profile.

Top up a local SIM card

Topping up was absurdly easy — I walked into a tiny Vodafone shop in Berat’s old town, said my phone number, handed over a 1,000-Lek note, and had 10 GB more in sixty seconds. You can also top up in the My Vodafone or One Albania app, but both require an Albanian bank card to work. Cash at a physical store is the simplest path.

Top up or extend an eSIM plan

  • Airalo: in-app top-up adds data or extends validity without reinstalling
  • Saily: same in-app top-up flow
  • Nomad: buy an additional plan that stacks on your existing eSIM
  • Holafly: contact support to extend; no self-service top-up

USSD codes for checking your balance

  • Vodafone Albania: dial *142# for balance and remaining data
  • One Albania: dial *100# for balance
  • Both work from the dialer without using data

Pro Tip: Vodafone Albania SIMs expire if you don’t top up within six months of your last activity. If you’re planning a return trip to the Balkans within that window, top up with a small amount before leaving to keep the number alive — otherwise you’ll start from scratch on the next visit.

The bottom line

TL;DR: For short trips or multi-country Balkans itineraries, buy a Saily or Airalo eSIM ($4–$22 for 1–10 GB) and activate on landing. For stays over a week, head straight to the Vodafone kiosk in Tirana airport and pay about $22 for the 40 GB Tourist Pack — it’s the best value in the market and nothing else comes close.

Skip Holafly’s “unlimited” Albania plan, don’t rely on EU roaming (Albania isn’t in the EU), and never let an AT&T phone roam without a day pass unless you enjoy four-figure bills.

What’s your Albania trip looking like — a quick Riviera hop, a full northern Alps trek, or a Balkans loop across three countries? Drop your itinerary in the comments and I’ll tell you which plan I’d actually buy.