Durrës Yacht Marina
A mixed-use marina-plus-residence project on the Adriatic, 25 minutes from Tirana airport. Smaller units priced for short-let yield; larger ones for owner-occupiers.
Beachfront on the Riviera, marina residences in Vlore and Durres, Ottoman houses in Berat, working farms in Lezhe. This page is not a brochure — it is what you need to know before you sign, plus the partners we trust to help you buy without losing money.
That is the story. The rest of this page is what it actually takes — the costs, the legal process, the risks worth taking seriously, and the people we trust to help you avoid mistakes that look obvious in hindsight.
Premium-partner developments first, then editorial picks. We do not list everything — we list what we would put our own money into, or send a friend to look at.
A mixed-use marina-plus-residence project on the Adriatic, 25 minutes from Tirana airport. Smaller units priced for short-let yield; larger ones for owner-occupiers.
A working marina with apartments and townhouses above the Vlorë bay. Yacht berths sold separately. Italian architecture firm; phase 1 delivering 2026.
The most accessible price point on the coast — small apartments in a managed complex with shared pools 30 minutes north of Durrës.
Edil Al's beachfront resort at Lalzit Bay, 45 minutes from Tirana airport. A low-density 150,000 m2 development with 1.5 km of private coastline — villas, low-rise apartment blocks and a five-star hotel managed by Meliá.
BALFIN Group's master-planned resort on the Ionian coast at Palasë, below the Llogara pass. Serviced villas and one-to-two-bedroom apartments alongside five-star hotels, restaurants and a Blue Flag beach, with hotel-managed rental available.
Restored highland tower-houses sold ready-to-operate as guesthouses. Niche, beautiful, and not a yield play — a project, not a portfolio.
Ottoman merchant houses in the UNESCO old town. Restoration grants available; expect a two-year project and a lawyer who understands heritage law.
Small boutique block of apartments on the Osum river, facing the Mangalem quarter. Owner-occupier or premium short-let.
Smaller units priced for short-let yield in the busiest Riviera village. Strong July–August, soft shoulder; underwrite on 4 months not 12.
A new-build tower one block from Blloku. Long-let yield strong; central-bank and government tenants keep the immediate neighbourhood stable.
A working farm-restaurant near the same slow-food network as Mrizi i Zanave. Sold as a going concern with land, livestock, and a booked summer.
Lower-density villa development on the Rodon peninsula. For buyers who want the Adriatic but not Durrës density.
Branded marina projects on the Vlorë–Durrës axis. Berth access, hotel-operated rental management, and the lowest operational headache for absentee owners.
Riviera and Adriatic villas. Higher ticket, higher seasonality. Best held by owners who actually spend July–August in country.
Stone kullë in the Alps, Ottoman houses in Berat and Gjirokastër. A project, not a portfolio — expect a two-year restoration timeline.
Working farm-restaurants with land and rooms. Sold as going concerns; the price reflects livestock, vines, and a booked summer.
Most buyers come through a developer, an agent, or a personal contact. Cross-check the listing price against the public Cadastre value to avoid the foreign-buyer markup.
Non-negotiable. Use an Albanian-licensed lawyer with property experience — not the developer's lawyer, not the agent's cousin. Budget €1,500 – €4,000 for the full transaction.
Title history at the Cadastre, planning permission (leje ndërtimi), utility liens, building amnesty status — and an independent valuation so you know what the property is really worth, not the foreign-buyer price. Buyers lose money here, not at signing.
Final purchase is in front of a notary, in Albanian, with a sworn translator. Transfer tax (~2%), notary fee (~1%), and your first municipal property tax declaration follow within 30 days.
Step 3, done right: before you negotiate, get an independent valuation so you know the real number, not the foreign-buyer price. We use Studio ADPK — independent real-estate appraisers working across Albania since 2002.
Studio ADPK →Property restitution after the communist era is still unwinding. A previous owner (or their grandchild) can surface with a valid claim years after a sale. The fix is a Cadastre title-history check going back to 1944 — slow, cheap, and not optional.
Some Riviera "bargains" exist because the building has no planning permission. Albania has run several legalisation amnesties; check whether yours is fully legalised, in process, or ineligible. A half-legalised building cannot get utilities, cannot be mortgaged, and cannot be insured.
The price quoted to a foreign buyer can be 20–30% above the Cadastre reference value. This is not necessarily fraud — premium location, finishes, demand — but it is worth verifying against the public Cadastre price database before signing.
Pre-sale developments routinely deliver 6–12 months late. Your contract should specify a delivery date, a penalty clause for delays, and a refund mechanism if the project stalls. Premium developers accept these clauses; less-established ones push back.
A property purchase of EUR 100,000 or more qualifies the buyer to apply for a renewable Albanian residence permit. The permit is granted to the buyer, the spouse, and dependent children. It is independent of how many days you actually spend in Albania each year.
Residency is not citizenship. Albania does not currently offer a fast-track citizenship-by-investment programme. Naturalisation after several years of residence is possible through the standard route. We do not promise a passport — we promise a permit, and only if your application is clean.
Talk to a legal partner →
Independent real-estate valuation and risk consulting based in Tirana, working across Albania since 2002. Professional appraisal reports for villas, land and apartments, technical supervision of complex projects, and legally-compliant documentation — the independent number to check a seller's asking price against before you sign.
Buyer-side Albanian property lawyers — never the developer's, never the agent's. Full conveyancing from preliminary agreement to notarised deed: Cadastre title-history checks back to 1944, planning-permission and building-amnesty verification, lien and utility searches, and company formation when you buy agricultural land. Fixed scope, fixed fee, agreed before any work starts.
Compare offers from the three foreign-friendly Albanian banks plus a couple of Italian cross-border lenders. No upfront fee; broker is paid by the bank on completion.
Request intro →A regulated FX service for the bank transfer. Mid-market rate plus 0.4% — beats the spread your home bank will quote you by 1–2%.
Request intro →For buyers who keep a home tax residency abroad. Coordinates Albanian filings with your home country to avoid double-tax and surprise audits.
Request intro →“I would have overpaid by twenty percent without the independent valuation. Visit Albania did not sell me anything — they pointed me to the people who stopped me making a mistake.”
“Two years, one Ottoman house, zero legal surprises. The title check went back to 1944 exactly like they said it would. That is the whole game.”
“Editorial, not estate agents — that line is real. They sent me three honest options and an introduction to a lawyer, then got out of the way.”
Illustrative examples, shown pending publication of verified buyer testimonials.
We read every message. We will send back two or three options that match your brief, plus introductions to a lawyer and any other partners you need. We are not estate agents; we are editorial. The introduction is free; you pay each partner directly.
Twenty minutes on a call saves six months of regret. We do not push, we do not commission-chase, we do not own the deal — we just know who to call.