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Vlorë

Vlorë

Where Albania declared its independence — a bay city with Ottoman architecture, a long promenade, and the Llogara Pass at its back door.

Best time
May – Oct
Stay
1–2 nights
From Tirana
2h by car
Per day
€35 – €100
About VLORË

Where Albania began.

Vlorë is where Albania declared independence from the Ottoman Empire on 28 November 1912. The flag — black double-headed eagle on red — was raised here first, and the Independence Museum still occupies the building where the ceremony took place. It is a city with weight in Albanian history.

But Vlorë is also a beach city. The bay stretches in a wide crescent, with a palm-lined promenade, Ottoman-era houses in the old quarter, and the Kuzum Baba hill offering views across the water to the Karaburun Peninsula. The beaches south of town — Radhimë, Orikum, Dhermi — are among the best on the coast, and the Llogara Pass rises behind the city like a wall.

Vlorë is less polished than Sarandë, more working-class, more Albanian. The restaurants are cheaper, the coffee is stronger, and the pride in the city's history is palpable. Most travellers use it as a gateway — to the Riviera via Llogara, to the Karaburun Peninsula by boat, or to the ancient site of Apollonia inland. But Vlorë rewards a night of its own.

History & culture

The city that declared a country.

On 28 November 1912, in a modest two-storey house facing the Adriatic, Ismail Qemali and 83 other delegates raised the black double-headed eagle on red and announced that the Albanian people, after 434 years of Ottoman rule, were independent. Vlorë has been carrying that day ever since.

A short timeline
  • 6th c BCE The Greek colony of Aulón is founded on the bay (root of the modern name).
  • 229 BCE Rome takes the city; it becomes a key harbour on the Via Egnatia between Brindisi and Constantinople.
  • 1417 Ottoman conquest. Vlorë becomes the empire's main Adriatic naval base.
  • 1912 · 28 November Ismail Qemali declares Albanian independence in a house on what is now Pavarësia Square.
  • 1914–1920 Italian occupation. The 1920 Vlorë War sees local fighters expel the Italian army — Albania's first military victory as an independent state.
  • 1939–1944 Italian and German occupation. The Vlorë resistance is the largest in southern Albania.
  • 1997 The collapse of Albanian pyramid schemes triggers a national uprising that begins in Vlorë and nearly topples the state.
  • 2012 Centenary of independence. The Independence Monument is unveiled and Pavarësia Square is reconstructed.

Ancient Aulón

Vlorë's name comes from the 6th-century-BCE Greek colony of Aulón, established on the natural harbour formed by the Karaburun peninsula. Romans called it Aulona; Byzantines kept the name; Ottomans turned it into Avlonya. The position made it strategically valuable to every empire that wanted to control the Adriatic — which is most of them — and the city was destroyed and rebuilt multiple times across two and a half thousand years.

The Ottoman naval base

Under the Ottomans (1417–1912), Vlorë became the empire's western naval anchor on the Adriatic, facing Italy. The Muradiye Mosque (1542), built by the empire's most prolific architect Mimar Sinan, still stands in the old town — one of the few Sinan buildings outside Turkey. Sinan also designed the Hagia Sophia restoration in Istanbul; the Vlorë mosque is small, beautifully proportioned, and almost no foreign visitor finds it.

November 28, 1912

By the autumn of 1912 the Ottoman Empire was losing the First Balkan War, and the Great Powers were already discussing how to partition Albanian territory between Serbia, Greece, and Montenegro. Ismail Qemali, an experienced Ottoman administrator turned Albanian nationalist, called a national assembly in Vlorë on short notice. Eighty-three delegates from across Albanian-speaking lands attended. On 28 November they signed the declaration of independence and raised the flag. Vlorë was chosen because it was the southernmost city not yet under Greek occupation, because the harbour gave delegates an escape route by sea, and because the local Ottoman governor sympathised. The flag they raised was Skanderbeg's — connecting the new state directly to the 15th-century resistance.

The Vlorë War, 1920

After WWI, Italian troops who had occupied Vlorë in 1914 refused to leave. In June 1920, Albanian volunteer fighters from the surrounding mountains besieged the Italian garrison. After three months of guerrilla warfare, the Italians withdrew. It was Albania's first military victory as an independent state and the moment Vlorë's identity as the patriotic capital cemented. The grave of one of the war's commanders, Sali Nivica, is still tended in the town.

The 1997 uprising

The Albanian transition from communism to capitalism was managed badly. By late 1996, more than half the country had invested savings into pyramid schemes that the government allowed and quietly endorsed. When they collapsed in early 1997, Vlorë was the first city to rise — armouries were looted, the state authority collapsed, and the country slid into months of civil violence. International peacekeepers eventually restored order. The episode is uncomfortable national memory; the Vlorë response was both the symptom and the rebellion. Some of the bunkers on the surrounding hills date from then, not from Hoxha's era.

Why it matters today

Vlorë wears its history more openly than Tirana does. The Independence Museum on Pavarësia Square is small and free and worth an hour. The Muradiye Mosque is a five-minute walk. The Kuzum Baba Bektashi shrine on the hill above town gives the best view of the bay and the route Ismail Qemali's delegates would have taken to reach the city. The promenade at sunset is full of three generations of Albanians walking the xhiro. Stay a night.

Other Albanian cities are older. Vlorë is the one that called the country into being.

Where to stay in Vlorë

Where to stay in Vlorë

Coastal road
Rent a car · VLORë

You'll want a car.

Vlorë opens up when you can drive — to the coves, the villages, the mountain restaurant that doesn't take bookings. Pick up at the airport, drop off in another city.

See cars & prices →
Dental tourism in Vlorë

Pair a treatment week in Vlorë with the bay and the Llogara Pass at your back door. Vlora Mediterranean Dental is on our partner list — implants, sedation dentistry, and Italian/German spoken in the chair.

See dental tourism →
Where to eat

Where to eat

Things to do

Four things you shouldn't miss.

Tours & activities

Bookable routes from Vlorë.

All tours
Getting to Vlorë

Two ways in.

From Tirana
2h by car · 2h 30m by bus

The A2 motorway makes this a straightforward drive. Buses leave Tirana every hour. A taxi costs around €60–70.

From Italy (ferry)
Bari–Durrës ferry + 2h drive

If arriving by ferry from Bari, Durrës is your entry point. From there it is an easy 2-hour drive south to Vlorë on the A2.

On the map

Everything, pinned.

Vlorë
Radhimë
Llogara
Karaburun
Nearby destinations

If Vlorë is your base.

Frequently asked

The questions travellers actually ask.

Is Vlorë worth staying in?
As a one-night stopover, absolutely — particularly if you're driving the Riviera. The Independence Museum is genuinely moving, the promenade is pleasant, and the Llogara Pass starts here. As a beach destination, the city itself is fine but the beaches south (Radhimë, Orikum) are better.
What is the Llogara Pass?
A mountain road that climbs from Vlorë to 1,045m before dropping down to the Riviera. It is one of Albania's great drives — switchbacks, cliff drops, and views over the Ionian Sea. Allow time to stop. The Llogara National Park has restaurants with panoramic terraces.
Can you visit Apollonia from Vlorë?
Yes — about an hour north by car. Apollonia is an ancient Greek and Roman site with a remarkably preserved bouleuterion (council chamber) and an on-site monastery turned museum. Combine it with a morning in Fier for a full day.
Is it expensive?
No. Vlorë is cheaper than Sarandë and Himarë. A good meal is €8–16, a hotel is €40–70, and the Independence Museum is free. The Karaburun boat trip is the main expense at €30–50 per person.
What is the Karaburun Peninsula?
A rugged, roadless peninsula west of Vlorë, accessible only by boat. The water is the clearest on the coast, there are sea caves, and the beaches are empty. Boat trips leave from Vlorë harbour daily in summer.
Stay connected in Vlorë
Order an Albanian e-SIM before you arrive. Activate on landing — no shop visit required.
Get e-SIM