Why do this trip
Shkodër is Albania's northernmost major town and one of its oldest. For Podgorica-based travellers it's the most realistic day trip into Albania, just over an hour's drive, a straightforward border, and enough to see for a comfortable day without staying over. Rozafa Castle alone is worth the crossing.
Lake Shkodër (Skadar on the Montenegrin side) laps the town's northern edge, it's the same lake, just the southern third, and the views across are among the best of the whole basin.
The border, Božaj / Hani i Hotit
From Podgorica, head south-east on the M-2.4 toward Tuzi, then continue to the Božaj border post (Hani i Hotit on the Albanian side). The whole drive from central Podgorica to the border is 20-25 minutes.
The crossing is usually quick, 10 to 20 minutes depending on season. In summer, queues build in the mid-morning so aim to cross by 09:30 outbound and before 16:00 on the return.
Rental paperwork: tell your rental agent you want to drive into Albania when booking. You'll need Green Card cross-border insurance on the registration documents. Almost all Montenegrin rental companies can arrange it, a small fee typically covers Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Serbia and Croatia.
The drive into Shkodër
From the border it's another 40-50 minutes down to Shkodër, 55 km roughly. The road improves on the Albanian side, and the scenery shifts: more olive groves, fewer dramatic mountains.
Once in Shkodër, park near the castle (small fee, car park on the hillside) or in the centre near Pjaca Parruce, the main square.

Rozafa Castle
The castle sits 130 metres up on a rocky hill at the confluence of the Bunë and Drin rivers, with Lake Shkodër stretching north behind it. The ruins include Illyrian, Venetian, and Ottoman layers, the castle has been fortified continuously for over 2,000 years.
The walk up takes about 15 minutes from the road. Entry is 400 lek (roughly €4) for adults, plus 200 lek for the small on-site museum. The panorama from the ramparts is the main reason you're here: Shkodër old town below, the lake to the north, the Albanian Alps east.
Legend: Rozafa, the castle's namesake, is the woman walled up alive inside the foundations in a local myth to save the walls from collapse. Grim, famous, and still told at the site.
The old town and bazaar
Ottoman-era pedestrianised core. Shkodër was the regional Ottoman capital for centuries and the layout still shows it. The bazaar, Pjaca Parruce, and the nearby "Kolë Idromeno" main pedestrian street have cafes and restaurants at half the Montenegrin prices.
Worth finding: Marubi National Museum of Photography, the Marubi family ran a photo studio here from 1856, and their archive of pre-WWII Albania is considerable.
Lake Shkodër from the south
Drive 15 minutes north-east from Shkodër to Shirokë, a small lakeside village on the south shore. Lakeside restaurants serve carp and eel. The view, the mountains behind Virpazar on the horizon, is the view from the Albanian side of the lake you'd otherwise only see from the Montenegrin boats.
Practical tips
- Currency: Albania uses the lek. Cards accepted in tourist-facing places but cash is useful for small stalls and parking. Exchange in Shkodër or an ATM at the border.
- Time zone: Same as Montenegro, no adjustment.
- Driving on the Albanian side: Drivers are more assertive; speed limits are often ignored. Traffic police are vigilant, don't.
- Language: Albanian in the north; Italian widely spoken by older people, English among the under-40s.
- Food: Shkodër is known for tavë kosi (baked lamb with yoghurt) and carp fish dishes.
- Return timing: Cross back before dark, the road from the border to Podgorica is fine, but winter evenings close in early.
Combine with
If you have time the day before, pair this with our Lake Skadar by Car trip, different perspective on the same lake from the Montenegrin side.

