Albanian with Elisa
Real Albanian you’ll actually hear and use.
Let 2026 be the year you finally start speaking Albanian. Commit to yourself and do it
Choose how far you want to go
Choose the level of support that works for you.
Starter
5 Lessons
- Shared Google Document
- Online textbook + workbook
- Personalized explanation PDFs
30€ per lesson
Progress
10 Lessons
- Everything from "starter" +
- Cultural material
- Personalized flashcards
- Private contact for questions
27€ per lesson
Intensive
20 Lessons
- Everything from "Progress" +
- Priority scheduling & answers
- 24/7 support
- Extra material: podcasts, shadowing, books
25€ per lesson
Përshendetje, I am Elisa
I’ve been teaching Albanian for over 4 years and helping students from all over the world learn the language. What started as a side project became something I truly love.
Sharing my mother tongue and helping others feel confident using it is what motivates me every day.
Thank you for trusting me.
Francheska
Elisa is amazing at tutoring! we’ve only done about 4 lessons so far but each lesson has been prescise and very understanding. Great support!
Rachel
Elisa has been such an amazing tutor! The way she teaches Albanian makes it so clear and easy to understand. She goes at a pace where I’m always learning, but it never feels overwhelming. You can tell she’s really passionate about teaching and that she truly cares. I’m so excited to keep learning with her!
Carlos
Elisa is a great -- GREAT -- teacher because she is extremely personable, upbeat, knowledgeable and prepared. I look forward to my lessons with her, get plenty of speaking practice, and feel free to ask as many questions as I want. I have no doubt that my Albanian (shqip) will improve with her help. Faleminderit, Elisa. Oh, I recommend her, of course.
Gheg vs Tosk: understanding Albanian through geography, history, and identity
Shqip, Shqipëri, Shqiptar: what each word really means (and when Albanians use them)
Albanian family map: why there are 6 words for ‘uncle’ and how to use them right
It’s not just ‘uncle’—it’s xhaxha, dajë… and each signals a side.