Italy is home to one of the largest Albanian communities anywhere, built over decades of people working from Milan and Rome down to Bari and the Puglian coast — the shore that faces Albania across the Adriatic — while family stayed behind in Tirana, Vlorë or the villages. For a community that lives between two countries a narrow sea apart, the phone bill has two halves: staying in touch from Italy, and staying connected on the trips home. Both are cheaper than most people think.
Two costs, two answers
It helps to separate them:
- Calling home from Italy — daily voice and video to family across the Adriatic.
- Visiting Albania — keeping your phone working for the weeks you're actually there.
The cheapest answer to the first is internet calling. The cheapest answer to the second is a travel eSIM.
Calling Albania from Italy
You don't need an expensive international add-on:
- WhatsApp, Viber and Messenger carry voice and video using data only, for free.
- A few minutes of voice barely registers; a long video call is roughly 5 MB per minute.
- On home or office Wi-Fi it costs nothing at all.
If you're newer to Italy and still on a pricey prepaid plan, a local Italy eSIM can be a cheaper data-only top-up than your operator's overage rates — handy when you're out all day leaning on those calling apps.
When you travel to Albania
Here's where people overpay most. Albania sits outside the EU's free-roaming zone, so an Italian SIM used across the Adriatic can run up real charges. Instead, install an Albania eSIM before you leave Italy:
- Set it up on Italian Wi-Fi the day before you travel.
- Switch it on when you reach Albania.
- Keep your Italian number active for any bank SMS or two-factor codes.
Tip: Two-factor codes from your Italian bank arrive as SMS to your Italian line — keep that SIM enabled for texts even while the Albanian eSIM handles all your data.
Crossing by sea
Many in the community still make the crossing the classic way — the overnight ferry from Bari or Brindisi to Durrës. Italy is EU, Albania isn't, so the two shores play by different rules; how to stay connected on both, and through the night at sea, is in Italy to Albania by ferry: data that works on both shores.
A familiar pattern across the diaspora
The same two-country maths plays out wherever the Albanian diaspora has settled — a non-EU border and the same calling-app workaround. It's broken down for the communities in Greece, Switzerland, France, the UK and the US in Family in Albania, life in Greece: cheap data on both sides, Calling home: cheapest data for the Albanian diaspora in Switzerland, Roots in Kosovo, life in France: cheap data both ways, Roots in the Balkans, life in the UK: cheap data both ways and Roots in the Balkans, life in America: cheap data both ways.
Heading home soon? Sort the data first with an Albania eSIM and spend the trip talking, not topping up.