Sunlit opening of a blue sea cave on the Karaburun Peninsula north of Himara
cave

Secret Blue Cave

Direction from Himara
Northbound
Distance by sea
~32 km by sea (north, Karaburun Peninsula)
Swim stop
Photo + short swim (10–20 minutes)
Access
Boat-only — no road or hiking access

Secret Blue Cave is a small, hard-to-reach sea cave on the Karaburun Peninsula north of Himara. Boat-only and tucked into the cliffs, it's a short photo-and-swim stop folded into long-haul Grama Bay cruises when the sea is calm enough to approach.

What Secret Blue Cave Is

Secret Blue Cave is one of several small sea caves notched into the cliffs of the Karaburun Peninsula, the long, roadless headland that runs north from the Albanian Riviera toward the mouth of the Bay of Vlorë. Like its neighbours along this coast, it has no land access — the cliffs drop straight into deep water, and the only way to reach it is by boat.

The name points to the obvious draw: on a calm, sunny day, sunlight refracts through the clear water at the entrance and casts a blue glow inside. It's a smaller, quieter counterpart to the better-known caves further along the peninsula, and it earns the "secret" tag mostly because it's harder to approach and not every tour stops here.

Getting There

The cave lies roughly 32 km by sea north of Himara, well into Karaburun's western shoreline. That distance keeps it off the short half-day trips and on the long-haul cruises that round the peninsula. Boats generally pass it on the way to or from the main northern anchorage at Grama Bay, and whether they pause depends entirely on the sea state that day.

Because not every operator runs the full Karaburun loop, it's worth checking itineraries before booking. Start with the Himara boat tours overview and confirm with the boat-tour operators which trips go this far north.

What the Stop Is Like

Expect a short pause rather than a long swim stop — typically 10 to 20 minutes for photos and a quick dip if the water is settled. The cave is small, so the appeal is the light and the setting, not space to roam. On a flat-calm day the skipper can bring the boat close to the entrance; in any swell, they'll hold offshore and you'll view it from the deck.

Practical notes:

  • A waterproof case is useful for the blue-light photo.
  • Landings here are rock, not sand — aqua shoes help.
  • This is a "bonus" stop; if time or sea runs short, it's the first to be dropped in favour of Grama Bay.

Sea Conditions

The far-north Karaburun coast is exposed, and conditions change through the day. A morning northwesterly is usually light; afternoons can pick up. Skippers will only approach a small cliff cave like this when the sea is calm — surge at a narrow entrance is uncomfortable and unsafe for swimmers. If the operator says they'll see how the day goes, take them at their word.

Best visited on a settled, sunny day from June through September, ideally on a morning departure.

Water

Deep, very clear; blue light inside on a calm, sunny day

Best Time

Late morning to early afternoon on a settled day; June–September

Location on the Riviera