Namos Beach Himarë: Bohemian Club on Prinos Beach
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Namos Beach, Himarë: The Bohemian Beach Club on Prinos Beach, 4km South of Town, With the Best Cocktails on the Albanian Riviera
Albania | Himarë | Albanian Riviera
Namos Beach is without a doubt one of the most beautiful and well-maintained spots in southern Albania. Located in one of the cleanest and most peaceful areas of Himarë, it offers a relaxing and stylish beach experience. The setting is modern with elegant boho design touches, creating a chill and photogenic atmosphere.
Namos Beach is situated on Prinos Beach in the Potam neighbourhood, approximately 4 kilometres south of Himarë town centre. Himarë’s beach strip runs from the central promenade beaches northward to Livadhi and southward through Maracit, Prinos, and Potami beaches — with the southern end being the beach club and sunset zone, and Prinos being the specific beach where Namos operates. Prinos Beach is also a great spot to watch the sunset, which is the natural programme for the afternoon beach club visit followed by the evening light.
The honest context: Himarë has far less beach club privatisation than Ksamil or Dhërmi. The central beaches around the promenade remain public year-round. The beach clubs — Namos and Te Varka being the most cited — occupy sections of the southern beaches. Two sunbeds and an umbrella cost between 1,000 and 2,500 lek depending on the month and row position.
Getting There: 4km South from Himarë Centre on the SH8, Short Walk from the Road
From Himarë town centre, drive south on the SH8 for approximately 4 kilometres. Follow the sign for Namos Beach and turn left, then follow the winding road down to the beach. Parking is available nearby — a small fee of approximately 200 to 500 lek applies depending on the season.
By bus or minibus from Himarë heading toward Dhërmi, ask the driver to stop at the Namos Beach stop, which is approximately 4 kilometres south of the town centre. The fare is around 100 to 200 lek. From the bus stop on the main road, the walk down to the beach takes approximately 10 minutes.
By taxi from the Himarë promenade, the journey takes approximately 5 minutes and costs €5 to €10.
The Beach: Pebble, Deep Water Fast, Boho Decor, €15–20 Sunbeds, Best Cocktails in Himarë
The beach is pebble — the Ionian coast south of Himarë is consistently pebble rather than sand, and water shoes are the practical requirement throughout. The water deepens relatively quickly from the pebble entry, which is the consistent feature of the Himarë southern beach coastline.
The specific qualities that distinguish Namos from other Himarë beach clubs: the bohemian design — whitewashed wood, reed umbrellas, the relaxed aesthetic that the accounts describe as chill and photogenic — and the cocktail programme. The cocktails are the best in Himarë by multiple reviewer accounts: the seafood is fresh and the cocktails are amazing.
Sunbeds cost approximately €15 to €20 for two — higher than the 1,000 lek standard that many Himarë beach clubs charge, but within the context of the beach club service provided. The first two rows are the premium positions; the third row and beyond offer a lower rate. Negotiating the price on arrival has produced mixed results — one visitor reported being quoted 1,000 lek the day before and charged 1,500 lek on arrival, with the owner describing this as standard practice. Confirming the price at the point of sitting down is the practical precaution.
The Pricing Controversy: Confirm Before Sitting
One visitor reported reserving a sunbed at a specific price and arriving to find it had increased by 50%. The owner characterised this as normal because prices can change every hour. A business should take responsibility and honour the original price for a good customer experience.
This is a single documented incident in the review record and the majority of accounts describe pricing as fair for the quality. It is noted because it is specific — not a general impression but a named incident with a named response — and because the precaution (confirming price at arrival before committing to a position) is simple and avoids the situation.
The Himarë Beach Club Context: Less Privatised Than Ksamil, More Local Feel
Himarë remains one of the Albanian Riviera towns where the central beaches have not been privatised. The central beaches around the promenade remain public year-round. The beach clubs occupy sections of the southern beaches — Maracit, Prinos, and Potami — but the overall balance between public and private beach access in Himarë is significantly better than in Ksamil or at the Dhërmi main beach.
If you want your days filled with beach clubs and Instagram-worthy settings, Ksamil and Dhërmi are better choices. Himarë is the recommendation for a more local vibe, with the option to enjoy a beach club at Namos or Te Varka when the mood for organised comfort arrives.
The xhiro — the Albanian tradition of the evening promenade walk, families and friends on foot along the seafront in the cooling evening air — is the specific Himarë evening activity that the more resort-oriented Ksamil and Dhërmi beach zones have displaced in favour of nightlife. Walking the Himarë promenade after Namos is the specific programme.
The Sunset and the Prinos Beach Position
Prinos Beach is also a great spot to watch the sunset — the specific Himarë southern beach quality that gives Namos its afternoon and evening programme. The beach faces west-southwest, which gives it the full afternoon sun and the direct sunset view over the Ionian Sea. The afternoon at Namos — cocktails, sunset, then back to the promenade for the xhiro — is the complete Himarë beach club day.
Nearby: Potami Beach and Filikuri Cove
Potami Beach is adjacent to Prinos and Namos in the southern Himarë beach zone — a quieter, less beach-club-intensive option within the same 4-kilometre stretch south of town. For those at Namos, paddling north or south to the neighbouring sections on the same stretch is the natural extension of the beach day.
Gjiri i Filikurit — one of the most beautiful hidden coves near Himarë, accessible by paddle boat or a 15-minute paddle from Te Varka bar — is the specific excursion from the Prinos/Namos area that the accounts recommend for visitors who want the wild cove experience alongside the beach club day.
Namos Beach on Prinos Beach in Himarë is the bohemian beach club 4 kilometres south of town — pebble, water deepens fast, €15–€20 sunbeds (confirm the price on arrival), the best cocktails in Himarë by multiple accounts, boho design, sunset-facing position, bus from Himarë centre for 100–200 lek, and the evening xhiro on the Himarë promenade the natural next move.
Drive or bus south. Walk down from the road. Confirm the price. Order the cocktail.
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