AL ALB
Flag of Albania
PARLIAMENTARY REPUBLIC · SOUTHERN EUROPE

Albania.

Albania is a mountainous Balkan nation on the Adriatic and Ionian Sea coasts, bordered by Montenegro, Kosovo, North Macedonia and Greece. Its rugged interior and Riviera-style beaches have made it a fast-growing destination for travellers seeking unspoiled Mediterranean coastline.

2.8M Population
Tirana Capital
28,748 km² area
ALL Currency
Europe Albanian Temperate May – Sep (warm) +355 Drives right
05 · About

On ___PLACEHOLDER___

Albania is a mountainous Balkan nation on the Adriatic and Ionian Sea coasts, bordered by Montenegro, Kosovo, North Macedonia and Greece. Its rugged interior and Riviera-style beaches have made it a fast-growing destination for travellers seeking unspoiled Mediterranean coastline.

Geography & landscape

Albania sits in Southern Europe, in the northern hemisphere of Europe. With an area of approximately 28,748 km², it is a smaller nation, set in the northern hemisphere and exposed to the temperate climate band typical of its latitude. Its capital, Tirana, lies near coordinates 41°, 20°.

The country shares the cultural and geographic context of Europe, with neighbouring states and trade routes shaped by its position in the wider Southern Europe region. Topography, watersheds and coastline (where present) define the practical realities of agriculture, settlement and transport across Albania.

People & society

The population of Albania is around 2.8M. Communities, dialects and customs vary by region, and the country’s sense of identity is shaped by its history, its borders and the everyday rhythms of its towns and cities.

The official language is Albanian, used in government, education and most public life. Regional dialects, minority languages and immigrant communities add further linguistic texture.

Government & politics

Albania is structured as a parliamentary republic. Political authority is exercised through institutions based primarily in Tirana, with the head of state and head of government performing constitutional roles defined by the country’s legal framework. Domestic policy, foreign relations and the administration of public services all flow from this constitutional core.

Economy & currency

The official currency of Albania is the Albanian Lek (ALL). Monetary policy, banking, taxation and trade are managed nationally, often in coordination with regional and international institutions. Major economic activity tends to cluster around Tirana and other principal urban centres, with secondary economies built on the country’s natural resources, manufacturing capacity and service industries.

Culture & everyday life

The cultural footprint of Albania shows up in cuisine, music, sport, religious life, festivals and design. National holidays mark the country’s historical pivots; family meals, café culture and street life follow patterns rooted in geography and tradition. International audiences usually meet Albania through its sport, its music, its food, or the global diaspora that carries those things abroad.

Travel essentials

The capital, Tirana, is the natural starting point for first-time visitors. International dialling uses the country code +355, and clocks are set to the CET (UTC+1) time zone. ISO standards identify Albania as AL (alpha-2) and ALB (alpha-3) — useful when booking flights, decoding number plates, or matching customs paperwork. The flag, 🇦🇱, appears at every border post and on every passport.

By the numbers

Sort or filter the table below to compare key metrics at a glance.

Metric Value Unit / Note
Capital city Tirana
Continent Europe
Sub-region Southern Europe
Population 2.8M people
Area 28,748 km²
Currency Albanian Lek (ALL)
Calling code +355 international dialling
Time zone CET (UTC+1) standard time
Government type Parliamentary republic
ISO 3166 alpha-2 AL 2-letter code
ISO 3166 alpha-3 ALB 3-letter code
Latitude 41 degrees
Longitude 20 degrees

Did you know?

Albania has more than 750,000 Cold-War-era concrete bunkers — roughly one for every four citizens at the time of construction.

Dispatch 14 · MAY · 26

A small thing, worth noting.

Albania has more than 750,000 Cold-War-era concrete bunkers — roughly one for every four citizens at the time of construction.

— filed from Albania