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I come to Albania often, and every single time I land, I go through the exact same routine: phone in airplane mode, nothing works until I get a local SIM sorted. Getting data is one of two things every new arrival needs to handle immediately, the other is cash, which has its own small trap if you’re not careful 2025 Guide to ATM Withdrawal Fees in Tirana Albania. Over multiple trips, I’ve bought and used both of Albania’s main carriers: Vodafone and ONE, tested their tourist packages, and even compared signal in the same apartment. Here’s exactly what to do.

Buy from ONE if you can, in my testing it was cheaper across nearly every comparable plan and held a signal where Vodafone didn’t. The one exception: if you’re entering Albania by ferry into Saranda (a common route if you’re coming by ferry from Corfu), Vodafone may be your only option right at the port, and it worked perfectly fine there. More on both below.
You won’t have to search for this. The moment you clear passport control and grab your luggage, Vodafone and ONE have shops right next to each other, right by the arrivals exit. Both will offer you their tourist packages on the spot.
Bring your passport, it’s required for registration, no exceptions and expect the process to take about 5 minutes if there’s no line. Realistically, there’s often a line, since basically every tourist on your flight is heading to the same two counters at the same time.
Once you’re connected, the next thing on your list is actually getting into the city. We’ve got you covered on every way to get from the airport to the city center of Tirana and back 2025 Guide: Get to Tirana International Airport by Taxi, Bus, and More and a full breakdown of what an airport taxi actually costs Taxi Price Calculator For Tirana [Free] , so you’re not figuring that out on zero data.

Here’s the thing nobody tells you: the “tourist” branded packages are not always your cheapest option. If you’re staying more than a few days, a regular monthly plan is often significantly cheaper than the tourist pack, lasts a full 30 days, and you can simply turn it off the moment you leave the country. No commitment, no hassle.
Tourist Packages (available at the airport counter):
| Carrier | Package | Data | Validity | Price |
| ONE | Tourist 1M Albania | ~1TB | 15 days | 2,700 ALL |
| ONE | Tourist 1M Albania & Balkan | ~1TB + 22GB Balkan roaming | 30 days | 3,200 ALL |
| Vodafone | Tourist Tera Pack 1 | 1TB | 15 days | 2,700 ALL |
| Vodafone | Tourist Tera Pack 2 | 1.1TB | 21 days | 2,900 ALL |
| Vodafone | Tourist Tera Pack 3 | 1.2TB + 3GB Greece roaming | 30 days | 3,300 ALL |
Regular Monthly Plans (usually cheaper if you’re staying a while):
| Carrier | Plan | Data | Validity | Price |
| ONE | ONE GO+ | 3GB | 30 days | 1,100 ALL |
| ONE | ONE SMART+ | 15GB | 30 days | 1,600 ALL |
| ONE | ONE EXTRA+ | 25GB | 30 days | 1,900 ALL |
| ONE | ONE PREMIUM+ | 35GB | 30 days | 2,200 ALL |
| Vodafone | Vodafone GO | 2-3GB | 30 days | 1,100 ALL |
| Vodafone | Vodafone Run | 10-15GB | 30 days | 1,600 ALL |
| Vodafone | Vodafone Fly | 20-30GB | 30 days | 2,100 ALL |
If you’re just checking maps, WhatsApp, and Instagram, one of the mid-tier monthly plans (15-25GB) will comfortably cover a week or two, for less than the tourist pack costs for 15 days. The tourist packs make more sense if you know you’ll be streaming heavily or sharing your connection with a group.
Prices confirmed directly from ONE and Vodafone’s official pricing pages on date 14/07/2026, worth a quick double-check in person, since these do shift.
So which is actually cheaper? ONE, in almost every comparable tier. At the entry-level monthly plan, they’re tied at 1,100 ALL. But move up a level and ONE pulls ahead: 25GB on ONE EXTRA+ costs 1,900 ALL, while Vodafone’s closest match (Fly, up to 30GB) costs 2,100 ALL, more money for a plan that doesn’t even guarantee its top-end data. Same pattern on the 30-day tourist packages: ONE’s Tourist 1M Albania & Balkan runs 3,200 ALL versus Vodafone’s Tera Pack 3 at 3,300 ALL, and ONE throws in Balkan-wide roaming instead of Greece-only. The one tier where they’re dead even is the 15-day tourist pack, both exactly 2,700 ALL for essentially the same 1TB allowance.
Both carriers offer a free eSIM option, and I’d actually recommend it over a physical SIM. Here’s why: your original SIM card stays safely inside your phone the entire trip. You just switch it off and activate the Albanian eSIM instead, no popping your card in and out with a SIM tool, no risk of losing your home SIM in an airport bathroom or hotel room. When you land back home, just switch back.

I’ll be straight with you: most articles online repeat the same claim, that Vodafone has the edge outside Tirana. My own experience didn’t match that.
In my Airbnb in Blloku, Tirana’s most central, most built-up neighborhood, Vodafone had no signal at all inside the apartment. ONE, on the exact same spot, worked fine.
I also traveled north to Valbona, and had strong signal and solid internet the whole time on ONE (I didn’t go hiking on this trip, so I can only vouch for the village/valley area, not the trail network further out).
A different trip took me in through the south: I flew into Corfu and took the ferry across to Saranda. The moment we reached the coast, there was only one SIM booth right there, Vodafone, no ONE in sight, so that’s what I bought. It worked without any issues the whole time I was in Saranda. If you’re entering Albania this way rather than through Tirana Airport, Vodafone may simply be your only practical option on arrival, and it’s a perfectly good one.

Take this as one traveler’s real experience, not a lab test, but it’s exactly the kind of thing you won’t find confirmed anywhere else, and it’s why I’d lean ONE if you’re landing in Tirana, and Vodafone if you’re arriving by ferry into Saranda.
Do I need my passport to buy a SIM in Albania? Yes, every operator requires passport registration by law. Bring it with you to the counter.
Is eSIM better than a physical SIM? For most travelers, yes, you avoid the risk of losing your home SIM and can switch back the moment you land home.
What if I run out of data mid-trip? Both carriers have apps you can use to top up once you have an Albanian number, no need to go back to a shop.
Do I need to worry about coverage outside Tirana? Based on my own testing, ONE performed well both in central Tirana and up in Valbona. If you’re entering via ferry into Saranda, Vodafone may be the only option right at the port, and it worked fine there too. If your trip is Tirana-only, either carrier will serve you fine.
Whichever counter you end up at, the hard part is over the moment your data connects. Don’t stand around figuring out your next move on a 4% battery and a new SIM, open the Patoko app and book your ride into town before you’ve even left the arrivals hall. It’ll be waiting by the time you walk out.