
Sarandë or Corfu: Which Side of the Water Is Right for You?
Choose Sarandë (and the Albanian Riviera) for noticeably lower prices, fewer crowds, and a rougher-around-the-edges authenticity most of Western Europe has priced itself out of. Choose Corfu for more polish — better-developed tourist infrastructure, EU/Schengen convenience, and a more established hospitality scene. They're a 25-30 minute ferry apart, so with a bit of planning, you genuinely don't have to choose — many travelers do both in one trip.
This comparison writes itself once you look at a map: Sarandë and Corfu Town sit across the same narrow strait, sharing the same sea and nearly the same latitude, yet one costs roughly a third of the other. Here's an honest breakdown of what that price difference actually buys you — and why 'both' might be the right answer.
| Sarandë, Albania | Corfu, Greece | |
|---|---|---|
| Currency / EU status | Albanian lek; EU candidate, not EU/Schengen member | Euro; full EU and Schengen member |
| Typical daily budget (mid-range) | $55–90/day | $100–170/day |
| Beach and water quality | Excellent, comparable turquoise Ionian water | Excellent, slightly more developed beach infrastructure |
| Crowds (peak August) | Busy and growing, but still noticeably less packed | Very busy — an established, mature package-tourism market |
| Tourist infrastructure | Rapidly improving, still a bit rougher around the edges | Long-established, more polished, easier for first-timers |
| Getting there | No direct flights from the US/Australia; budget flights from UK/Europe | More direct flight options from UK/Europe; still no direct US flights to Corfu itself |
| Best for | Value-focused travelers, a more 'undiscovered' feel | Travelers wanting more polish and established infrastructure |
If budget and a less-crowded beach experience matter more than polish, Sarandë wins clearly. If you want the safety net of full EU/Schengen travel rules and a more mature tourism industry, Corfu is the easier choice. Given they're a 25-30 minute ferry apart, the honest best answer for a longer trip is: do both.
The one factor most comparisons miss: you can do both, easily
A high-speed passenger ferry connects Sarandë and Corfu Town in about 25–30 minutes, running multiple times daily in season. That makes this one of the easiest two-country beach combinations in Europe — spend a few days on the Albanian Riviera's cheaper, quieter beaches, hop the ferry, and finish the trip with Corfu's more polished restaurant and hotel scene, all without a single flight.

If budget is the deciding factor
Sarandë wins clearly and by a wide margin — accommodation, food, and drinks all run noticeably cheaper on the Albanian side of the strait, even accounting for Corfu's more competitive package-tour hotel rates. A week in Sarandë can genuinely cost half what the same week costs in Corfu.
If you want an easier, more familiar trip
Corfu edges ahead for first-timers to this part of the world — it's a full EU/Schengen member with the tourist infrastructure, English signage, and package-holiday familiarity that comes with decades of established tourism. Sarandë is catching up fast but still asks a little more flexibility from travelers.
Can you visit both on one trip?
Yes, and it's genuinely one of the easier two-country combinations in Europe to pull off — the ferry crossing is short, frequent in season, and doesn't require a flight or a rental-car drop-off. Most travelers combining both spend the majority of their time in Sarandë (better value) and add 1–2 days in Corfu Town for the contrast.












































