Yes — the 30-minute hydrofoil from Corfu Town to Saranda is the easiest international day trip in the Ionian. Three operators run roughly 42 sailings per week between May and October, with prices from €15–25 one-way. For first-timers, book a guided tour (€55–95 pp) that bundles ferry + Butrint UNESCO ruins + the Blue Eye spring + Ksamil beach time. If you'd rather DIY, the ferry-plus-taxi combo costs around €60 total and gives you a flexible day. Albania is not in Schengen — bring your passport, arrive at the port 60 minutes early, and read on for the operator-by-operator comparison and the full hour-by-hour day plan. If Albania looks like more than a day trip, see our honest Ksamil verdict for 2026.
Why the Corfu–Albania Day Trip Is the Best-Value Excursion in the Ionian
If you're on a Corfu holiday in 2026, you're sitting roughly 12 nautical miles from a country with UNESCO ruins, three offshore islands with Maldives-blue water, and dinner prices half of what you're paying in Kerkyra Town. The crossing from Corfu Town to Saranda takes 30 minutes on the hydrofoil — faster than the ferry from Corfu to most other Greek islands. According to Direct Ferries' 2026 schedule, three operators combine for about 42 sailings per week at peak season, which means you can typically pick a morning departure and a late-afternoon return on any day you choose.
The proposition is simple: leave Corfu after breakfast, see Albania's two headline attractions (Butrint UNESCO ruins and Ksamil's lagoons), eat a €15 fresh-fish lunch, and be back in Corfu in time for sunset cocktails. The catch — and this is the honest version — is that one day is not enough to see Albania properly. Treat the day trip as a taster. Many travellers we've researched ended up extending the trip overnight after seeing what's actually there. The independent Manta Hotel guide to reaching Ksamil from Corfu describes the route as "the easiest way" — and we agree, with the caveats below.
Ferry Operators: The Side-by-Side Comparison
Three companies run the Corfu–Saranda crossing in 2026. They all leave from Corfu's New Port (Neo Limani), about a 15-minute walk or €5 taxi from Corfu Town centre. All three accept online booking and walk-up sales when seats remain.
| Operator | Vessel Type | Crossing Time | Weekly Sailings (Summer) | One-Way Price | Book |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finikas Lines | Hydrofoil + ferry | 30 min (hydrofoil) / 70 min (ferry) | ~13 | €19–25 | finikas-lines.com |
| Ionian Seaways | High-speed catamaran | 30 min | ~13 | €15–22 | ionianseaways.com |
| Albania Luxury Ferries | Modern catamaran | 30–45 min | ~18 | €18–24 | via Direct Ferries |
The travel-blog data is consistent with the operator pricing. UK travel writer Helena Bradbury paid £39.80 for a return hydrofoil ticket on a recent crossing, and the first-hand Saranda–Corfu report from Sunshine Seeker describes the booking process as straightforward for travellers used to European ferry websites. Rome2Rio's door-to-door costing from Corfu Town to Ksamil (combining ferry + taxi) lands at $26–40 USD and 1 hour 33 minutes total — matching what we'd budget in practice.
Guided Tour vs DIY: Which Is Right for You?
This is the single decision that shapes your entire day. Both options work; they suit different people.
| Option | Best For | What's Included | Cost (pp) | Effort |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guided day tour (Viator / GetYourGuide) | First-timers, families, anyone short on holiday hours | Return ferry, customs handling, coach in Albania, guide, Butrint entry, Blue Eye stop, Ksamil beach time | €55–95 | Low — just show up |
| DIY (ferry + taxi) | Repeat travellers, couples wanting flexibility, slow-travel types | Ferry only — you arrange Saranda transport, sights and food yourself | €40–60 | Medium — port admin, taxi negotiation |
| DIY (ferry + rental car in Saranda) | Independent travellers wanting to see Butrint + Blue Eye in one day | Ferry, then half-day car hire collected at Saranda port (€30–50) | €55–80 | Medium — driving on Albanian roads |
Our recommendation: if Albania is your only day off a Corfu holiday, the guided tour is worth the premium. The first-hand day-trip account from The Abroad Blog details how much faster a guided coach moves through Saranda's port and Butrint's ticket queues compared with arriving independently in peak season. If you have two or more days in Corfu and like organising your own travel, the DIY ferry-plus-taxi route is cheaper and gives you control over how long you linger in each spot.
Book the day trip from Corfu
A Sample Day from Corfu — Hour-by-Hour
This is the itinerary we'd build for first-timers travelling independently in shoulder season. Adjust by 60–90 minutes if you're on a guided tour (the coach trims taxi time but adds a group lunch stop).
- 07:00 — Leave your Corfu hotel. Cab or 15-minute walk to the New Port (Neo Limani). Bring passport.
- 07:15 — Check in at the Finikas / Ionian Seaways / Albania Luxury Ferries desk. Hand over your printed or mobile ticket. Greek customs stamp passport.
- 08:00 — Hydrofoil departs. Sit on the right (starboard) side for views of the Albanian coast as you approach.
- 08:30 — Dock at Saranda port. Albanian customs stamp passport. Allow 15 minutes.
- 08:50 — Negotiate a Bolt or pre-arranged taxi to Butrint National Park (18 km, ~25 minutes, fair price €20–25). Some travellers book the small local bus instead (€2, runs hourly).
- 09:30 — Arrive at Butrint UNESCO World Heritage Site. Entry €5–8. Spend 90 minutes walking the Greek theatre, Roman baths, Byzantine baptistery and Venetian tower.
- 11:00 — Taxi to Ksamil (12 km, ~20 minutes, €10–13). The road back from Butrint passes through the village.
- 11:30 — Beach time on Ksamil's main strip. Hire a sunbed pair (€10–15) or walk 300 metres south to the free public zones. Swim to the nearest of the three offshore islands — water is shallow and warm by midday.
- 13:30 — Lunch at an inland Ksamil restaurant (walk two blocks back from the beach). Whole fish, Albanian salad, raki — expect €15–20 per person.
- 15:00 — Taxi back to Saranda port (€10–13, 14 km). Stop for an espresso at the waterfront promenade if you have time.
- 16:30 — Back at Saranda port. Check in for the return hydrofoil. Albanian customs stamp out.
- 17:30 — Hydrofoil departs Saranda (most common late-afternoon time; the very last sailings are around 20:30 in midsummer).
- 18:00 — Dock at Corfu New Port. Walk to dinner in the old town. Done.
What to See If You Only Have a Day
Butrint National Park (UNESCO)
The single most under-rated stop in the southern Adriatic. Butrint is a 2,500-year archaeological site with Greek, Roman, Byzantine and Venetian layers all visible — and most day visitors leave wondering why it isn't internationally famous. Entry is €5–8 independently, or it's bundled into virtually every Viator and GetYourGuide tour from Corfu. Allow 90 minutes minimum. The site is shaded with pine and oak, so it's comfortable even at midday in July. Pre-book a guided Butrint excursion on GetYourGuide if you want a guide on-site.
Ksamil's Beaches & Offshore Islands
Ksamil is the Instagram star of the Albanian Riviera — three small offshore islands sit just off the main beach, creating shallow turquoise lagoons. You can wade or take a 5-minute water taxi (€2–3 return) to the nearest island. In May, mid-June or September the beaches are pleasant; in late July and August the main strip is genuinely crowded. We've written a 200-review deep-dive on whether Ksamil is worth visiting in 2026 — read it if you have the time.
The Blue Eye Spring (Syri i Kaltër)
A hypnotic natural spring where deep-blue water bubbles up from a cave of unknown depth. It's 22 km northeast of Saranda — only realistic on a day trip if you're on a guided coach tour that includes it, or if you've rented a car at Saranda port. Free entry, 30 minutes on site.
Saranda Town Itself
The waterfront promenade is pleasant for a coffee or gelato between the ferry and a taxi. Saranda is more urban port-town than holiday-resort beach, but it's a perfectly fine place to spend 30–45 minutes if you have time at the end of the day. For context on what staying overnight would unlock, see our Tirana to Saranda transport guide — Saranda makes a great two-night base.
How Much It Costs — Real 2026 Prices
| Expense | DIY Day Trip (pp) | Guided Day Tour (pp) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ferry (return hydrofoil) | €36–45 | Included | 10% return discount if booked together on Finikas |
| Taxi Saranda port ↔ Butrint ↔ Ksamil ↔ port | €40–50 total (split between passengers) | Included (coach) | Use Bolt; agree fares before boarding |
| Butrint entry | €5–8 | Included | Audio guide €2 extra |
| Sunbed pair (Ksamil) | €10–15 (per couple) | Often optional | Free zones available — see our Ksamil guide |
| Lunch (whole fish + salad, inland) | €15–20 | Often included or €15 supplement | Avoid main-strip restaurants — 40–60% mark-up |
| Coffee / drinks during day | €5–10 | €5–10 | Espresso €1, beer €2–3 inland |
| Total per person | ~€65–90 | ~€70–110 | Tour premium is ~€20 for first-timers |
A couple travelling together can do the whole day for €130–180 between them on the DIY route, including everything from the Corfu hotel doorstep back to it. That's exceptional value for an international day trip in the Mediterranean — comparable Cyclades island-hopping day trips from Athens cost twice as much for half the cultural payoff.
Should You Stay Overnight Instead?
This is the question we ask everyone planning a day trip. If your itinerary has any flexibility, the answer is usually yes.
An overnight in Saranda or Ksamil costs €40–80 in shoulder season (May, June, September) and €60–120 in peak July–August for a clean, well-reviewed double. That single overnight transforms the trip from a hurried checklist into a proper Albanian Riviera mini-break: relaxed Butrint visit, full beach day in Ksamil, dinner with the locals away from the strip, sunrise over the Ionian, and the Blue Eye spring done at a sane pace before the afternoon ferry back. Albania's 2025 tourism growth of 6.6%, as reported by Albanian Daily News citing INSTAT, has meant more overnight stock has come online — meaning supply is generally good outside the August peak.
Stay overnight in Saranda or Ksamil
Practical Tips: Customs, Currency & What to Pack
Passports and customs
- Bring your passport. An EU national ID is not accepted for non-EU citizens, and Albania is not in Schengen — you'll be stamped in and out both ways.
- Arrive at Corfu New Port 60 minutes before departure. Customs queues build for the morning sailings, especially in July and August.
- No visa is required for UK, EU, US, Canadian, Australian or New Zealand citizens for stays up to 90 days.
Currency
- The euro is widely accepted in Saranda and Ksamil for tourist services. Change may come back in lek (Albanian leke); the rough rate is 100 ALL ≈ €1.
- ATMs at Saranda port dispense lek if you need small-value cash for buses or kiosks.
- Use a Wise or Revolut card for the best exchange rate. ATM fees inland can be steep.
What to bring for the day
- Swimwear under your clothes (save 15 minutes of changing at Ksamil)
- Reef-safe sunscreen, a hat, sunglasses
- Comfortable shoes for Butrint's uneven stone paths
- Cash (€50 in small notes for taxis, sunbeds, coffees)
- A small dry-bag if you plan to swim out to the Ksamil islands
- A printout or screenshot of both ferry tickets and your booking confirmation
Connectivity
- An EU SIM card does not include free roaming in Albania — check with your operator before you assume your data will work. Most UK / EU travellers we've researched simply switched off mobile data for the day and used Wi-Fi at the port.
- An eSIM (Airalo's Albania pack is around €5 for a day) is the simplest solution if you want maps and Bolt to keep working.
Common Mistakes That Ruin the Day Trip
- Booking only the outbound ferry. The return sailings sell out in midsummer, and walking up at 4pm to find no seats is a real risk. Book both ways together.
- Bringing only an EU ID card. Non-EU citizens are routinely turned back at Corfu port for this. Bring your passport.
- Accepting the first taxi fare quoted. €20–30 for the Saranda–Ksamil leg is the tourist trap; €10–13 is fair. Use Bolt or negotiate firmly.
- Eating on Ksamil's beachfront strip. Prices are 40–60% higher than identical food two blocks inland. Walk away from the water for lunch.
- Trying to fit Butrint + Blue Eye + Ksamil into a self-driven day. It's possible but joyless. Pick two of the three, or take a guided tour that does the logistics.
- Missing the last return sailing. Confirm the exact return time when you book outbound — schedules shift weekly outside peak season.
Compare Operators: Quick Decision Matrix
| If you want… | Pick… | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The fastest crossing | Ionian Seaways or Finikas hydrofoil | 30 minutes door-to-door, smoother ride |
| The most departure options | Albania Luxury Ferries | ~18 weekly sailings, easier to find your time |
| To take a car | Finikas Lines (car ferry) | Car deck on slower 70-minute service |
| The best return discount | Finikas Lines | 10% off when both legs booked together |
| Zero logistics stress | A Viator or GetYourGuide tour | Ferry tickets, customs, taxis and entry all handled |
| Maximum flexibility | DIY hydrofoil + Bolt | Linger where you want, leave when you want |
Final Verdict
The Corfu-to-Albania day trip is, dollar-for-dollar, the best-value international excursion in the Mediterranean. A 30-minute hydrofoil ride deposits you in a country with UNESCO-level antiquities, lagoons that genuinely rival Greek-island beaches and food costs roughly half of Corfu's. Three operators, 42 weekly sailings and a fully formed tour-operator infrastructure mean it's no longer the off-the-grid adventure it was a decade ago — it's a polished, easy add-on to any Corfu holiday.
The one caveat we keep coming back to: one day is not enough. If you can stretch to an overnight in Saranda or Ksamil, do it. You'll come back understanding why early-season bookings in April 2026 were already surging. If you can't, take the guided tour, follow the itinerary above, and treat it as a scouting mission for next year's longer trip.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long is the ferry from Corfu to Albania?
The fast hydrofoil from Corfu Town to Saranda takes about 30 minutes. The standard car ferry takes 70–90 minutes depending on the operator. With 42 weekly sailings across three operators in summer 2026, you can be in Albania faster than crossing to most other Greek islands.
How much does the Corfu to Saranda ferry cost in 2026?
One-way passenger tickets cost €15–25 on the hydrofoil and slightly less on the slower car ferry. A round-trip hydrofoil booked together typically runs around €40 (about £40). Finikas Lines offers a 10% return discount when both legs are booked at once. Cars cost €40–55 each way.
Do I need a visa to visit Albania from Corfu for the day?
No visa is required for UK, EU, US, Canadian or Australian citizens for stays up to 90 days. Albania is not in the Schengen Area, so your passport will be stamped on both arrival and departure. Bring your passport (not just an EU national ID card for non-EU citizens) and arrive at Corfu port 60 minutes before departure for customs.
Is it better to do a guided tour or DIY the day trip?
Guided tours (€55–95 pp via Viator or GetYourGuide) are best for first-timers — they handle ferry tickets, customs paperwork, transport in Saranda and entry to Butrint. DIY is cheaper (€40–60 total) and more flexible, but you'll spend the first hour at Saranda port arranging a taxi or local bus. If it's your only day in Albania, take a tour. If you have multiple days, the ferry-and-taxi combo is straightforward.
Can I do Saranda, Butrint and Ksamil in one day from Corfu?
Yes, but it's tight. Catch the 08:00 hydrofoil, taxi straight to Butrint (€20–25, 25 min), spend 90 minutes there, continue to Ksamil for beach lunch and swim (€10–13 taxi from Butrint), then return to Saranda for the late-afternoon ferry. You'll get the highlights but won't have time to relax. A guided tour follows roughly this route with a coach instead of taxis.
When does the ferry from Corfu to Saranda run in 2026?
Three operators run a combined 42 sailings per week in summer 2026 (May–October). The first departure from Corfu is around 08:00 and the last return from Saranda is around 20:30, depending on the operator. Winter service drops to one to two daily sailings. Always check the operator's official schedule the week before you travel.
How much should a taxi from Saranda port to Ksamil cost?
The fair price for the 14 km ride from Saranda port to Ksamil is €10–13. Unmetered taxis at the port regularly quote €20–30 to new arrivals. Always agree on a price before getting in, or use Bolt (the app works in Saranda). For Butrint (18 km, 25 minutes) the fair price is around €20–25.
Should I stay overnight in Saranda instead of just a day trip?
If you have flexibility, yes. An overnight in Saranda or Ksamil costs €40–80 in shoulder season and lets you split Butrint, Ksamil and the Blue Eye across two relaxed days rather than racing through them. The day-trip-from-Corfu format works well only if Albania is a single bucket-list checkbox on a wider Greek-island holiday.
Do I need to book the Corfu to Albania ferry in advance?
Yes, in peak July and August. The hydrofoil sells out 3–7 days ahead and walk-up tickets are often unavailable. In May, June and September you can usually book online 24–48 hours ahead. Always book the return leg at the same time as the outbound — it locks in the 10% discount on Finikas Lines and guarantees your seat on the way back.
Is the Corfu to Albania day trip worth it?
For most Corfu holidaymakers, yes — it's the easiest international day trip in the Mediterranean. A 30-minute hydrofoil drops you into a country with UNESCO ruins (Butrint), turquoise lagoons (Ksamil) and prices roughly half of what you're paying in Greece. The catch is that one day is too short to see Albania properly. Use it as a taster, then come back for a week.
Sources & Further Reading
- Direct Ferries — Corfu to Saranda 2026 Timetables, 42 Weekly Sailings & Operator Comparison
- Finikas Lines — Official Corfu–Saranda Schedules & Booking
- Ionian Seaways — Hydrofoil Timetables Corfu ↔ Saranda
- Helena Bradbury — Corfu to Albania Day Trip First-Hand Account (£39.80 Return)
- Manta Hotel — The Easiest Way to Reach Ksamil From Corfu
- The Abroad Blog — Day Trip From Corfu to Albania by Ferry
- Rome2Rio — Corfu to Ksamil Door-to-Door Routing & Costs
- Sunshine Seeker — Saranda to Corfu Ferry First-Hand Experience
- Albanian Daily News — Albania Attracts 6.6% More Foreign Tourists in 2025 (INSTAT Data)
- CE Report — Albania's Ksamil Draws Early Surge of Foreign Tourists (April 2026)