Albania is the next big Mediterranean holiday destination, Tui boss reveals

Exclusive: Sebastian Ebel, CEO of Europe’s biggest holiday company, calls Albania ‘a great country’ but says Algeria is not yet ready for customers

Simon Calder
Travel Correspondent
Wednesday 15 May 2024 14:18 BST
Comments
Related video: Grandpa introduces baby bliss to friendly deer outside home in Albania

Albania could be the next big Mediterranean destination, the boss of Europe’s biggest holiday company has said.

“It’s a great country,” Sebastian Ebel, chief executive of Tui, told The Independent.

“I’m a big fan of Albania and I think we should and could do more. It’s on our agenda to look at it. I think the prospect is huge and I wouldn’t be surprised if we start a significant programme there.”

Opening up: Tirana street scene, dominated by snow-capped mountains
Opening up: Tirana street scene, dominated by snow-capped mountains (Simon Calder)

Mr Ebel revealed that 10 years ago, when he joined the executive board at Tui, he had raised the prospect of launching holidays to Albania.

“I couldn’t convince people to invest there,” he said.

At present the only Tui operation to Albania is a twice-weekly flight by the company’s Belgian offshoot from Brussels to the capital, Tirana.

In comparison, the budget airlines now have a massive programme from the UK. Ryanair and Wizz Air each have three daily flights to Tirana from their London hubs, Stansted and Luton respectively.

Ryanair also flies from Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester and Edinburgh to the capital’s Mother Teresa International Airport.

Marlene and Bernard Kayley, from Preston, have just returned from a trip to Albania, saying they had “a marvellous five days”.

They split their time between the capital and the main resort, Durres. In the latter, Ms Kayley said: “Our hotel, Vila One Beach, was, as its name suggests, on the lovely clean beach. The excellent hotel chef provided us with traditional Albanian cuisine each night – not from the menu, he just asked what we liked.

“We are definitely returning to Albania.”

In December the nation’s tourism minister, Mirela Kumbaro, told The Independent: “We are aiming for high-end tourism in Albania.” The minister, whose brief also includes the environment, said she is “pushing for four- and five-star hotels with international brand names”.

Of all the eastern European nations, Albania endured the longest and most oppressive spell under state communism in the latter part of the 20th century. Almost no tourists were allowed to visit during the 40-year Stalinist dictatorship of Enver Hoxha.

But a then-small company, Regent Holidays, started bringing in visitors from the UK in the 1970s. Former director Neil Taylor recalls: “In most years through the 1970s and 1980s we sent about 12 groups a year there.

“The diversity of the clientele was the great appeal. We, perhaps rather naughtily, advertised in the Daily Telegraph and in the Morning Star to ensure that people who would normally have not given the time of day to each other, suddenly had to behave in a closely-knit group for 10 days.

“We had the idle rich, vaguely feeling they ought to see what communism was about, we had the academics noting every word that was said and buying every publication in English, and we had the wild revolutionaries determined to find paradise in Albania and to impose it on Britain when they returned.”

Another nation bordering the Mediterranean could also soon be welcoming British package holidaymakers.

The Tui boss also revealed to The Independent that he had just discussed opening up Algeria for beach holidays.

“There was a very clear message that the security situation is not as bad as you might think from what you hear in Europe.

“But it’s not in a way that we could send customers to. I would hesitate to do something before the overall situation improves.”

Algeria, the largest country in Africa, has a vast range of almost empty classical sites as well as a long, mostly empty, Mediterranean coastline.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in