Berat, Gjirokastër and the Wine Route

Berat, Gjirokastër and the Wine Route

Plan a slower route through Albania’s UNESCO towns, historic streets and scenic wine-country stops.

If the Riviera is Albania at full volume, Berat and Gjirokastër are the slower chapter. Stone houses, steep lanes, castle walls and lunches that drift into the afternoon. This is the stretch for people who like atmosphere as much as scenery.

With a car, the two towns stop being separate dots and become one easy inland loop. You can sleep inside castle walls one night, drive through valleys and vineyards the next, and still link back to Tirana or the coast without effort.

Why This Route Belongs in Your Trip

A lot of people land in Tirana and head straight for the coast. That works, but it skips the part of Albania that explains the country better. Berat and Gjirokastër show a slower, older rhythm: stone quarters, hillside houses, courtyards and streets that still feel shaped by daily life rather than tourism alone.

The drive between them is part of the value. Valleys, villages, fruit stalls, roadside cafés and the kind of “should we stop here?” moments that rarely happen when you move around by bus.

Berat: City of a Thousand Windows

Berat gets its nickname from the stacked white houses climbing the hill above the river. Mangalem and Gorica face each other across the water, while the castle district sits above them on the ridge and still feels like a place people actually live in.

Stay near the old quarters if you can. Mornings start quietly, evenings pull people onto the boulevard and bridges, and the whole town feels lived-in rather than staged.

Inside the Castle Walls

The castle district is not just something you look at from below. It is one of the best reasons to slow down properly. Inside the walls you get stone lanes, small churches, old houses and wide views over the valley, all with people still living around you.

This is the part to do without rushing. Walk it in the softer light, stop where the view opens up, and let Berat feel like more than a photo stop on the way south.

Wine and Countryside Around Berat

Berat is also one of Albania’s strongest wine-country stops. Twenty or thirty minutes outside town, the scenery opens into vineyards, farmhouses and agritourism spots where tasting usually comes with food, conversation and more time than you planned for.

That is where the car matters. You can choose one winery or build a slower countryside afternoon around lunch, a tasting and a drive back into town before evening. Just keep the designated-driver part non-negotiable.

The Drive to Gjirokastër

Leaving Berat, the road to Gjirokastër is not the flashiest drive in Albania, but it is one of the most useful. You feel the country changing between inland hills, flatter stretches and smaller towns that most visitors would otherwise pass straight through.

This is not a sprint between UNESCO labels. Stop for coffee, pull over when something catches your eye, and treat the drive as part of the route rather than empty space between two towns.

Gjirokastër: Stone City on the Hill

Gjirokastër rises steeply above the valley, all grey stone roofs, tower houses and sloping streets. The old bazaar curls uphill towards the fortress, and almost every turn gives you another view across the valley or another lane worth wandering into.

Give it real time. The town works best when you slow down: bazaar first, then a traditional house, then the castle later when the light starts changing over the rooftops.

Food, Evenings and That Slow Old‑Town Pace

This is one of the best parts of the route after dark. Berat and Gjirokastër both turn evenings into a reason to stay put: terrace tables, slow dinners, local wine, grilled meat, stuffed vegetables and long views once the heat drops.

That slower pace is part of why the route works. You are not racing back to the hotel after a day of driving. You are parking up, walking out and letting the evening do some of the work.

How This Route Ties Into the Rest of Albania

The Berat–Gjirokastër loop sits neatly in the middle of a wider Albania trip. From Tirana, you can drive to Berat first, continue to Gjirokastër, then decide whether to cut to the coast, head south towards Sarandë and Ksamil, or swing back north later.

That flexibility is the point. With your own car, it becomes one smooth inland chapter rather than a puzzle of bus changes and rigid timings.

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