Gjirokastër County (southern Albania)
Gjirokaster Castle
How to visit Gjirokaster Castle: the cheap on-the-door ticket, when to climb up to beat the Tirana coaches, and whether the spy plane and arms museum are worth it.
Where
Gjirokaster, Albania
Opening hours
Roughly 09:00–18:00 in summer, closing nearer 16:00–17:00 in winter; open daily including most public holidays. Hours can shift around the late-August National Folk Festival, when parts of the amphitheatre close — check at the Gjirokaster tourist office on the day.
Tickets
Around 400 lek (~£3.50) at the gate, cash in lek only; reductions for students and children. The weapons/arms museum is included; the separate Cold War tunnel below the bazaar is a different ~200 lek (~£1.75) ticket.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours inside the fortress; add 15 minutes for the steep cobbled walk up from the Old Bazaar.
In short
Visiting Gjirokaster Castle
Gjirokaster Castle is one of the few Albanian sights where you do not need to pre-book — you pay around 400 lek (~£3.50) cash at the gate and walk straight in. The trick is timing: go first thing or after about 16:00, when the Tirana and Corfu coaches have cleared, so you get the heavy-weapons gallery, the captured US spy plane on the ramparts and the long Drino-valley views to yourself. Allow 1.5–2 hours, carry lek (the kiosk takes no cards or euros), and wear grippy shoes for the polished stone ramps up from the bazaar.
How to visit without the coach crowds
This is the rare Albanian icon you do not pre-book. There are no timed slots and no online queue to skip — you walk up from the Old Bazaar and pay around 400 lek (~£3.50) in cash at the gate, lek only, so draw some before you climb because the kiosk takes neither cards nor euros. What you are buying is access to the inhabited hilltop fortress: the long vaulted gallery lined with seized cannon and artillery, the captured US spy plane parked out on the ramparts, and the open-air amphitheatre that hosts the National Folk Festival. The one thing worth booking is a guided walk, because the arms-museum labelling is thin and the history is more interesting than the signs let on.
The mistake people make is arriving with the mid-morning coaches from Tirana and Corfu, when the ramparts fill up and the valley sits under flat, hard light. Go soon after opening instead, or come back from about 16:00, when the day-trippers have gone and the views straight down the Drino valley are at their best.
Timing the climb, and is it worth it?
Allow an hour and a half to two hours up top, plus fifteen minutes for the steep walk from the bazaar — the limestone ramps are polished and slick, so wear shoes with grip rather than smooth soles. Summer hours run roughly 09:00–18:00, shortening to nearer 16:00–17:00 in winter, and the timetable wobbles around the late-August folk festival when parts of the amphitheatre close.
At £3.50 it is an easy yes, and it is the sight that justifies sleeping a night in Gjirokaster rather than treating the town as a photo stop. Pair it with the Cold War tunnel below the bazaar — a separate 200 lek (£1.75) ticket — and one of the Ottoman tower houses, and you have a full, cheap half-day before the stone town empties out for the evening.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Gjirokaster city guide.
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