Seaplanes Open a Greece–Albania Shortcut
Hellenic Seaplanes has operated the first seaplane flight between Greece and Albania, linking Ioannina with Vlorë and starting a planned cross-border network in the Ionian-Adriatic area. The company says the mission is the first air link between two south-east European countries using a seaplane, with future services intended to connect coastal cities, lake regions and tourist destinations across the Mediterranean.
The project followed an official invitation from Albanian authorities and sits within cooperation on seaplane infrastructure and new cross-border transport corridors. Hellenic Seaplanes says Vlorë and Pogradec are the first Albanian points in a broader plan. Greece would act as the operational base, supported by the licensed water aerodromes already developed in its domestic network before wider international expansion begins.
What Is Confirmed So Far
No public fares, booking dates or regular passenger timetable have been announced, so this remains an early-stage launch. The official mission programme put the Ioannina–Vlorë flight at about 40 minutes. Details currently confirmed include:
- first mission: Ioannina–Vlorë;
- planned Albanian points: Vlorë and Pogradec;
- wider target: Adriatic, Ionian, Eastern Mediterranean and North Africa.
Travellers should wait for sales channels and seasonal details before planning a fixed itinerary.
If regular services follow, Ioannina could become more useful for cross-border trips, not only as a northern Greece stop. Travellers would have easier access to Lake Pamvotida, Vlorë’s coastline and Pogradec on Lake Ohrid. The route could also support mixed Greece–Albania holidays built around beaches, lakes, historic towns and slower regional travel, without relying only on roads or larger airports.
This is worth watching, but not yet worth rebuilding a trip around. The useful step now is to monitor Hellenic Seaplanes for booking, baggage, check-in and weather rules, because seaplane operations can be more sensitive to local conditions. Once regular flights are confirmed, the link could cut awkward surface journeys and make the Ionian-Adriatic area easier to combine in one holiday.