Crossing into Kosovo with a rental car: the documents that are truly burdensome

Green Card, border tax, Blace versus Jazhince — the difference between a 20-minute and a 2-hour crossing + what your lease agreement really says.
Kosovo is 165 km from Skopje and the crossing is the easiest in the Balkans — if you have the right documents. If you don't, it's a 2-hour wait and return. This guide covers what really matters.
Before you leave Skopje
Three documents, in this order:
1. **Driving license + passport** — like any other day. EU/UK/USA licenses work; non-EU + IDP.
2. **Vehicle registration permit** — given to you at pickup, in the glove compartment.
3. **Green Card** — **the single most important document**. International insurance certificate proving liability coverage beyond the border. **Your rental contract must include Kosovo coverage**, and the green card must list Kosovo (XK) as a covered country.
**Check this at pickup.** Look at the green card. If "RKS" or "XK" are crossed out, the car **is not insured for Kosovo** and you cannot legally cross. The partner agent will swap it or sell you additional coverage (€10-15 per crossing). Standard mkrent.mk contracts include Kosovo by default; verify upon delivery.
The Two Crossings
Between Skopje and Pristina, there are two main border crossing points. **They are not equivalent.**
### Blace (Hani i Elezit) — main road M1
Fast, paved, signposted. 20 km from Skopje on highway A1, then signs for Hani i Elezit. **Average wait: 20-40 minutes on weekdays**, 90 minutes on Sunday afternoon (workers returning to Pristina after a weekend in Skopje).
What happens at the gate:
1. You give all three documents to the Macedonian official
2. They scan the passport, look at the green card, give you a small entry receipt
3. You drive 200 meters to the Kosovo side
4. Same again: passport scan, green card check, **€7-15 entry fee per vehicle** depending on engine size (cash in EUR, small kiosk after the booth)
5. You're in. Pristina is 60 minutes north.
Quick tip: weekdays 06:00-09:00 the lane is empty. Avoid Friday 17:00-21:00 and Sunday 14:00-21:00.
### Jazhincë — the back road
Smaller crossing, 50 km west of Skopje, via Tetovo. **Average wait: 5 minutes.** Used by locals and those in the know.
When to use it:
- •Blace looks like a parking lot (live cameras: doppios.gov.mk)
- •You're driving from the Tetovo / Mavrovo region anyway
- •You want a slower, more picturesque route through villages
After Jazhincë, the Kosovo side is a 90-minute drive to Pristina on small roads. Beautiful but not fast. Same €7-15 fee.
The Rental Contract Fine Print
Macedonian rental companies fall into three categories for Kosovo:
- •**Kosovo included** (most Mkrent partners) — cross, no extra documents.
- •**Kosovo allowed with surcharge** (~€20-30 per trip) — common at airport rental kiosks.
- •**Kosovo prohibited** — older or low-offer partners. The car activates an alarm if you try to cross.
mkrent.mk's policy: **all listed cars include Kosovo, Albania, and Montenegro coverage** by default. Bulgaria and Greece sometimes require a surcharge — ask at pickup.
If your rental does not include Kosovo and you cross anyway:
- •Insurance is **invalid** for the entire trip
- •Any accident or theft is your full responsibility
- •The partner may charge a contract violation fee (usually €100-300)
It's not worth it. An extra €15 is cheaper than the risk.
What Customs Cares About
Macedonia → Kosovo and back, customs cares about three things:
1. **Currency** — declaration limit €10,000. Most travelers are fine.
2. **Tobacco** — 1 carton (200 cigarettes) personal limit. Buying a carton in Pristina (cheap there) is fine. Two cartons + tax.
3. **Alcohol** — 1 liter of spirits or 2 liters of wine personal limit. Macedonian wine in Pristina, Kosovar rakia on return — both within limits are fine.
They don't care about:
- •Your route
- •Whether you go to Pristina or other cities
- •How long you stay
- •Whether you refuel in Kosovo (cheaper there)
Driving in Kosovo
Same side (right). Speed limits: 50 km/h in city, 80 km/h rural, 130 km/h highway (R6/R7). Police are stricter than in Macedonia for phones and speeding; **do not visibly use Waze while driving**.
Fuel: Kosovar petrol is **€0.10-0.15/liter cheaper** than Macedonian. Refuel on the Kosovo side before returning.
Parking in Pristina: metered zones around the boulevard, €0.50/hour, with an app (PIPP) or cards from kiosks. Free parking near the NEWBORN monument, 5 minutes walk to the center.
Common Mistakes
1. **Assuming the rental is insured everywhere.** Always check the green card at pickup.
2. **Going to Blace on Sunday afternoon.** The 90-minute wait is normal. Use Jazhincë.
3. **Forgetting the cash entry fee on the Pristina side.** The ATM at the booth has a €5 fee. Bring small EUR banknotes.
4. **Skipping the Newborn monument.** Free, 30 seconds from parking, one of the most photographed objects in Pristina.
[Browse rentals in Skopje with Kosovo coverage](/cars) — Mkrent partners include cross-border insurance by default.
The crossing itself is routine. Documents are the only thing that can ruin your day. Get them right and Pristina is a 90-minute drive from your hotel in Skopje.
Written by
Kaltrina Berisha
Accursed Mountains editor · Shkodër
From Shkodër, certified mountain guide. Kaltrina has led Peaks of the Balkans ten seasons running — Kosovo-Albania-Montenegro loops.
Comments
More stories from our road journal
11 Jun 2026
Skopje's Heartbeat: Discovering Weekend Food Markets
Dive into the authentic flavors of Skopje by exploring its lively weekend food markets. This guide offers practical tips on where locals shop for fresh produce, traditional snacks, and unique regional delicacies, making your North Macedonia trip truly memorable.
Read →01 Jun 2026
Skopje's Culinary Heart: A Weekend Guide to Local Food Markets
Dive into Skopje's vibrant food markets, where locals gather on weekends for fresh produce, traditional goods, and an authentic taste of North Macedonia. This guide offers practical tips for travelers seeking an immersive culinary experience.
Read →30 May 2026
Skopje's Secret Sips: A Local's Car Tour of Hidden Coffee Gems
Discover Skopje's best-kept coffee secrets beyond the main squares, navigating the city's charming streets by car to find authentic local cafes and experience the true Macedonian coffee culture, a perfect start to any North Macedonia road-trip.
Read →