Buneci Beach Albania: Free Shore and Pier, Off the SH8
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Buneci Beach (Plazhi i Bunecit), Albania: The 1km Beach With the Longest Free Public Stretch in Albania, Down a 1.5km Dirt Track
Albania | Lukovë | Albanian Riviera
Buneci Beach (Plazhi i Bunecit) is one of the most beautiful spots on the Albanian Riviera that most visitors pass over because they cannot see it from the road. The SH8 coastal highway passes above it — the sea is visible, the bay is visible in glimpses, but the turn-off is unmarked and the 1.5-kilometre unpaved descent is steep enough that casual visitors keep driving.
Buneci Beach is a tranquil, pebbly cove located between the villages of Lukovë and Piqeras, and one of the few remaining spots on the Albanian Riviera that balances basic tourist facilities with a rugged, uncommercialized atmosphere. The beach is 1 kilometre long. The northern section, where the road ends, has a parking area, the concrete pier, a campsite with tent and campervan accommodation, and a handful of beach clubs and restaurants. Beyond the pier, the free beach extends further — perhaps the longest uninterrupted stretch of free public beach in Albania — until it reaches the Taverna Nikolaos restaurant at the far southern end.
The specific Buneci quality: the organised section is small enough to maintain a low-key character, and the free section is large enough that the beach never feels overcrowded. Unlike the Ksamil beaches where the free public zone has been reduced to contested strips beside private sunbeds, the free beach at Buneci is genuinely extensive.
Getting There: 1.5km Unpaved Descent from the SH8, Low-Clearance Cars Will Struggle, Furgon Then Walk
The 1.5km descent from the SH8 to Buneci Beach is a steep, unpaved dirt track. It is manageable for most cars, but low-clearance rentals will struggle. Take the turn-off carefully and descend slowly — the track is passable but not comfortable at speed.
From Sarandë, drive north on the SH8 toward Lukovë for approximately 30 minutes. The turn-off for Buneci (Plazhi i Bunecit) is signed from the main road. Without a sign, look for the track turning seaward approximately between the villages of Lukovë and Piqeras.
By furgon from Sarandë, take any minibus running the Sarandë–Himarë or Sarandë–Vlorë route and ask to be dropped at the Plazhi i Bunecit exit on the SH8. From the road, the walk down to the beach takes approximately 20 minutes. The descent is hot in summer sun — bring water for the walk.
By taxi from Sarandë, the journey takes approximately 30 minutes on the SH8 and costs approximately €20 to €25 to the beach entrance.
The Beach: Two Northern Bays, Concrete Pier, Free Section Beyond, Mix of Pebble and Sand
The northern section is where the majority of people head, with two pebble bays hosting a handful of beach clubs and a shack bar or two. There is also a little bit of free beach available either side of the concrete pier, which is a photogenic spot and ideal for jumping and fishing. The free beach then extends much further out to the left.
Sunbeds with umbrella: 700 to 1,000 lek in the organised sections — among the most affordable on the Albanian Riviera. The free public section requires no payment and no arrangement.
The beach surface is a mix of pebble and sand. The stones at Buneci are quite large in some sections — water shoes are recommended, particularly at the northern end. The free beach further south tends toward smaller pebbles. The water deepens relatively quickly from the pebble entry.
The concrete pier is the photogenic and functional anchor of the northern section — the platform for jumping, for fishing by local residents, and for the photographs that have circulated widely enough to make Buneci recognisable despite its off-road access.
Camping and Accommodation: Campsite at the Northern End, Guesthouses, Beach Resort
The campsite at the northern end of Buneci Beach allows tent and campervan stays — the specific provision that makes the beach a van-life community destination and one of the few Albanian Riviera beaches with on-beach overnight accommodation. Ready-made tents can also be rented. For those who prefer more comfort, there is a beach resort at the northern end.
The camping programme: arrive in the late afternoon, pitch at the beach, walk to Taverna Nikolaos for dinner, watch the Ionian sunset from the free pebble stretch, swim in the morning before the day visitors arrive. This is the Buneci experience that the campsite enables and that the beach’s remote character preserves.
The Lukovë Area: Three Beaches, a Restored 17th-Century Church, and a Waterfall
Buneci is the busiest of three beaches in the Lukovë area accessible by car from the SH8. Lukova Beach (Plazhi i Lukovës) is the southernmost — quieter, no accommodation, good fish restaurants, accessible on a good asphalt road, and the starting point for the 6-kilometre coastal hike to Krorëza Beach.
The village of Lukovë above the coast has two specific cultural sites worth stopping for on the descent or the return: the Church of St. Paraskeva (Kisha e Shën Premtes) — a 17th-century structure that was in ruins until recent years when it was thoroughly restored, now one of the most beautiful churches on the Albanian Riviera — and the small waterfall Ujëvara e Lukovës, approximately 100 metres from the church.
Krorëza Beach: 6km Coastal Hike From Lukova Beach, Boat-Only Otherwise
The most stunning beach near Buneci — and arguably on the whole Albanian coast — is Krorëza, accessible from Lukova Beach by a 6-kilometre coastal hike one way, or by boat from Sarandë. The hike follows the coastline and is scenic throughout; the path is not always well-marked, and the terrain is challenging. Approximately a third of the way, the small Marutzi Beach is a natural rest stop.
For visitors based at Buneci, the combination of a beach day at Buneci and a hike to Krorëza the following morning — using Lukova Beach as the trailhead — is the two-day programme that the area’s geography enables. Alternatively, the Krorëza boat tour from Sarandë (which includes Kakome Bay as a stop) covers the same coastal sequence from the water.
Buneci Beach between Lukovë and Piqeras is the 1-kilometre pebble beach with perhaps the longest free public stretch in Albania — 1.5km unpaved descent from the SH8 (low-clearance cars struggle), concrete pier for jumping and fishing, campsite at the northern end, affordable sunbeds in the organised section, the water deepens quickly, the 17th-century Church of St. Paraskeva in Lukovë village worth the stop, and Krorëza Beach a 6-kilometre coastal hike from Lukova Beach below.
Turn off the SH8. Drive slowly on the descent. The long free beach is past the pier.
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