Travelling to Pristina from Pristina Airport (PRN)? Begin your journey in comfort with our professional Pristina Airport to Pristina transfer service. We provide direct private transportation from Pristina Airport to Pristina -- 19 kilometres in approximately 25 minutes -- with a professional driver confirmed and waiting at arrivals.
Pristina Adem Jashari Airport connects arriving visitors to the young capital Pristina, the Nerodimje bifurcation at Ferizaj, the divided Ibar city of Mitrovica, the Ottoman treasure of Prizren, the Patriarchate and Rugova Gorge at Peja, the traditional bazaar of Gjakova, the UNESCO monastery at Decan, and the Macedonian capital Skopje. Our Pristina Airport to Pristina private transfer delivers you directly -- confirmed, comfortable and door-to-door.
Our private transfer from Pristina Airport to Pristina provides the most direct, comfortable and reliable connection -- door to door, fixed price, no connections.
Pristina is the capital and largest city of Kosovo (territory administered under UN Security Council Resolution 1244) -- a rapidly developing city of 220,000 inhabitants just 19km east of Pristina Airport, whose extraordinary transformation from a provincial Yugoslav city into a young, dynamic and internationally connected capital since 1999 gives it one of the most energetic and most rapidly changing urban identities of any city in the western Balkans. The Newborn Monument (the most internationally recognised single symbol of Kosovan independence -- the giant yellow letters spelling NEWBORN, unveiled on 17 February 2008 on the day Kosovo declared independence, repainted every year with a new design in the most creatively renewed political monument in the Balkans, the most photographed single street art object in the western Balkans and the most powerful visual expression of the youngest state in Europe) and the Mother Teresa Square (the most important public space in Pristina -- the pedestrian boulevard named for the most celebrated person of Albanian heritage in the world, the most lively and most socially animated public square in the city, the centre of Pristina's cafe culture and the most popular gathering point in the capital) give the city a contemporary urban identity of considerable vibrancy and political symbolism.
Pristina's most important heritage sites are the Imperial Mosque (the most completely preserved Ottoman mosque in Pristina -- the Fatih Mosque, 15th century, the most historically significant Islamic monument in the city, one of the oldest surviving Ottoman mosques in Kosovo), the National Library of Kosovo (the most architecturally controversial and most internationally discussed building in Kosovo -- the 1982 library designed by Croatian architect Andrija Mutnajakovic, its extraordinary structure of 99 white domes and metal mesh cladding described as the most polarising single piece of modernist architecture in the former Yugoslav space, simultaneously cited as one of the most original and one of the most unusual public buildings in the Balkans) and the Kosovo Museum (the most important archaeological and historical collection in the territory, housing the most complete sequence of artefacts from the Neolithic Vinca culture through the Bronze Age, the Roman Ulpiana site and the Ottoman period -- the most comprehensive single documentation of the heritage of the Kosovo territory). The Grand Hotel Pristina (the most iconic Yugoslav-era building in the city, the most symbolically charged single structure of the socialist period) and the vibrant nightlife scene (Pristina has one of the youngest populations of any European capital, the most energetically youthful cafe and bar culture in the western Balkans) give the city a contemporary dynamism unique in the region.
Newborn Monument -- Most Internationally Recognised Symbol of Kosovan Independence (2008), Most Creatively Renewed Political Monument in the Balkans: The Newborn Monument (unveiled 17 February 2008 -- the day Kosovo declared independence, repainted annually with a new design, the most internationally recognised single symbol of the youngest European state, the most photographed street art object in the western Balkans) gives Pristina a contemporary political identity of extraordinary international visibility -- the most powerful single visual expression of post-Yugoslav state formation.
National Library -- Most Architecturally Discussed Building in Kosovo, 99 White Domes, Most Original Modernist Public Building in Former Yugoslavia (1982): The National Library of Kosovo (1982, architect Andrija Mutnajakovic, 99 white domes and metal mesh -- the most architecturally polarising and most internationally discussed building in Kosovo, simultaneously cited as one of the most original modernist public buildings in the former Yugoslav space) gives Pristina an architectural identity of unique and internationally recognised distinction.
Direct Airport Transfer -- 19km, 25 Minutes, One of the Most Direct Capital Airport Connections in the Western Balkans: Pristina Airport lies just 19km west of the city centre -- a 25-minute direct transfer along the E65, one of the most conveniently positioned airports relative to any capital in the western Balkans. Note: Kosovo is a territory whose status is subject to ongoing international discussion under UN Security Council Resolution 1244 (1999). Pristina Airport (Adem Jashari International Airport) serves the territory and operates international connections to destinations throughout Europe.
Secure your comfortable, reliable journey from Pristina Airport to Pristina with JamTransfer today.
Visit JamTransfer.com for transfers from Pristina Airport throughout Kosovo and the region.
