Travel Guides

Digital Nomad Life in Morocco: Best Cities, Costs & WiFi Reality
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Digital Nomad Life in Morocco: Best Cities, Costs & WiFi Reality
Digital Nomad Life in Morocco I worked remotely across Morocco while travelling the country by car, moving between cities, coastal towns and even the Sahara Desert. Work continued as normal. If you’re structuring movement alongside work, see our full Morocco 10 Day Itinerary to understand how the regions connect. There was no separation between travel and deadlines. I was already building a nomadic life across Europe and Africa with my dog Roly; clients booked in, delivery ongoing, movement constant. Morocco became part of that stretch, and it proved to be a genuinely solid place to work from. If you’re bringing a pet, read Travelling Morocco with a Dog alongside this. If you’re considering digital nomad life in Morocco, this is the grounded version. The best cities to base yourself, what WiFi in Morocco actually looks like, realistic monthly costs, and the cultural factors that shape working life here. Many of the cities mentioned here also feature in our guide to the Best Places to Visit in Morocco if you’re choosing destinations before committing to a base. Table of Contents Is Morocco Good for Digital Nomads? Best Cities for Digital Nomads in Morocco (and who each suits) WiFi Reality + SIM/eSIM Setup Cost of Living in Morocco (realistic ranges) Getting Around (driving, trains, taxis, safety) Cultural Reality (week rhythm, prayer times, Ramadan impact) What I Learned Working Remotely in Morocco Is Morocco Good for Digital Nomads? Morocco can work well for digital nomads, but it isn’t automatic. If you’re expecting seamless infrastructure, ultra-fast fibre everywhere and coworking spaces on every corner, you’ll notice the gaps quickly. Connectivity varies by city. Some neighbourhoods are far more practical than others. And you need a backup plan for internet, not blind trust in Airbnb listings. That said, working remotely in Morocco is absolutely viable and it became one of the most rewarding chapters of my travels for its mix of culture, coast, city life and hospitality. In cities like Marrakech, Rabat and Casablanca, WiFi was strong enough for video calls, uploads and day-to-day client work. In coastal towns like Asilah and Essaouira, it depended more on the individual property but with a local SIM as backup, I never felt stuck, hotspotting from my unlimited data when needed. As of 2026, Morocco does not have a formal, dedicated digital nomad visa. Most nationalities including citizens of the UK, EU, US, Canada and Australia receive a 90-day tourist stay on arrival. For longer stays, people typically apply for a residency permit (Carte de Séjour) or structure their time carefully around entry limits. Morocco does have active remote hubs particularly in Marrakech, Casablanca and parts of the Atlantic coast. The key difference is that infrastructure varies by neighbourhood rather than being uniform across the country. Best Cities for Digital Nomads in Morocco (and Who Each Suits) Marrakech Region: Central MoroccoType: City (historic + modern) Marrakech has the strongest visible digital movement. There’s a mix of entrepreneurs, agency owners, content creators and location-independent founders basing themselves here for months at a time. Gueliz and Hivernage offer the most practical setup with modern apartments, stronger WiFi, reliable cafes, and easier day-to-day logistics. The medina is atmospheric, but not always the easiest place to work from long term. If you want a balance of culture, international energy and workable infrastructure, Marrakech is the most straightforward base. Best for: founders, creatives, remote teams and anyone who wants stimulation alongside structure. Cafes & work-friendly spots to explore: Coworking L’BLASSA, Targa Cowork Club, Café Clock, Café des Épices, Cactus Café Marrakech, Kechmara, Brunch Terrasses. Casablanca Region: Atlantic CoastType: Major commercial city  Casablanca carries a corporate backbone, but it also has a cosmopolitan edge. It’s Morocco’s business capital, and that shows in the infrastructure with modern apartments, stronger commercial WiFi setups and a pace that feels more international. Alongside that, there’s cafe culture, coastal walks, trendy restaurants and a visible mix of locals and expats shaping the city’s atmosphere. It’s newer in feel compared to cities like Marrakech or Fez. Less ornamental, more contemporary. That can make it easy to work from. Neighbourhood choice matters. Areas like Anfa, Gauthier and Racine offer the most practical base; residential, well connected and lined with cafes where working doesn’t feel out of place. Best for: consultants, founders, remote professionals who want infrastructure without sacrificing city energy. Cafes & work-friendly spots to explore: Bianca Café, Bondi Coffee Kitchen, Holy Brunch, % Arabica. Essaouira Region: Atlantic CoastType: Coastal town (compact + creative) Essaouira feels open and vibrant. The Atlantic is constant. The medina is compact but never claustrophobic. You can walk from your apartment to the beach in minutes. There’s space here, physically and mentally.  I based myself in Essaouira for eight weeks, and it became one of the easiest places in Morocco to settle into a working routine. It attracts artists, surfers, designers, musicians and long-stay Europeans who’ve chosen it intentionally. You’ll see laptops in cafes, freelancers working from rooftops, calls taken between beach walks. From a practical standpoint, WiFi depends on the property. Some Airbnbs have strong fibre. Others don’t. A reliable local SIM makes the setup stable. Once that’s covered, it’s an easy place to build from. There is an active remote scene. Noqta Space offers a structured coworking environment, and cafes like Three Little Birds, Koozina, Picnic and Mandala Society regularly have people working during the day. It doesn’t feel corporate, it feels independent. Best for: remote workers, writers, creatives, founders and anyone who prefers balance over city pace. Cafes & work-friendly spots to explore: Mandala Society, Three Little Birds, Koozina, Picnic, Le Panoramique, Mega Loft. Taghazout Region: Atlantic Coast (north of Agadir)Type: Surf town (international + seasonal) Taghazout is visibly nomadic. It’s small, but the international presence is strong. Surfers, remote freelancers, online coaches and content creators cycle through year-round, with peak seasons bringing a noticeable influx of short-term digital nomads. The town has evolved quickly over the past few years. What used to feel like a loose surf village now has a growing number of boutique hotels, apartment rentals and coworking options. Infrastructure exists, and in many places, it’s surprisingly solid. Workdays here tend to flex around the ocean. Early surf, late calls. Or calls first, then beach. It suits people who can structure their own time rather than those locked into rigid meeting schedules. WiFi varies by accommodation, so again, a strong local SIM is essential. Once that’s covered, it’s entirely workable. Best for: surfers, flexible freelancers, online coaches, content creators and remote workers who value lifestyle integration. Cafes & work-friendly spots to explore: World of Waves Coworking, Munga’s Kitchen, SunDesk Coworking. Imsouane Region: Atlantic Coast (between Essaouira & Agadir)Type: Small surf village (minimal + seasonal) Imsouane is stripped back. It’s much smaller than Taghazout and far quieter outside peak surf season. The appeal here isn’t infrastructure, it’s simplicity. Ocean, cliffs, a handful of cafes, long beach walks and very little distraction. There is a nomadic presence, but it’s lighter and more seasonal. You’ll see surfers staying for weeks, remote workers extending trips, people building flexible routines around the tides. It isn’t a structured remote hub in the way Marrakech, Essaouira or Taghazout can be. WiFi depends almost entirely on your accommodation. Some places are surprisingly strong. Others are not. A reliable SIM is non-negotiable here. If your work requires constant high-bandwidth calls or strict daily meeting blocks, Imsouane may feel limiting. If your work is self-directed and flexible, it can be a compelling base for focused stretches. Best for: surfers, freelancers, creatives and remote workers who want minimal distraction. Cafes & work-friendly spots to explore: Amouage Café, Café Tifawin, Olo Surf & Nature (quieter daytime hours). WiFi Reality + SIM / eSIM Setup The first thing I sorted when I arrived in Morocco was mobile data. I was driving onwards from Tangier Med, so having mobile access for Google Maps was essential. Once you clear the ferry and pass through the outbound security checks, you’ll immediately see vendors selling SIM cards, temporary car insurance and currency exchange. ATMs are right there too if you want your first withdrawal of Moroccan dirham (MAD). It’s efficient. Within minutes, you can arrive, clear the port, withdraw cash and activate data before even leaving the terminal area. I bought an Inwi SIM on arrival, activated an unlimited monthly data plan and used it for hotspotting throughout my stay, topping it up as needed. That backup removed uncertainty completely. Even when apartment WiFi dipped, work didn’t stop. In larger cities like Marrakech, Rabat and Casablanca, fibre connections are common in modern apartments and business districts. Video calls, uploads and day-to-day client work were completely manageable. In coastal towns like Asilah, Essaouira and Taghazout, internet quality depends on the property. Some Airbnbs have strong fibre. Others slow during peak hours. Having your own data plan removes the risk. For Zoom calls, which demand consistent bandwidth, I’d hotspot from my phone rather than rely on local WiFi that occasionally cut out. SIM & eSIM Options The main providers in Morocco are: Maroc Telecom Orange Morocco Inwi All three offer strong 4G coverage in cities and coastal towns. Speeds were consistently fast enough for video calls and tethering. If you’re planning to work remotely in Morocco, mobile data is essential. Coverage drops in some inland and desert regions, so plan important calls and uploads around days when you’re in stronger-signal areas. Cost of Living in Morocco (What It Actually Feels Like) Morocco is affordable compared to Western Europe, but it isn’t ultra-cheap if you want: a well-designed apartment strong WiFi good coffee central neighbourhoods flexibility a lifestyle that feels aligned, not just functional There’s a big difference between “possible on paper” and “comfortable in reality.” Here’s what that realistically looks like. Marrakesh Creative, social, layered but pricing scales fast depending on neighbourhood. If you want to live well (Gueliz, good cafes, stable internet, eating out a few times a week): €1,100 – €1,800 per month Lower is possible, but that usually means basic apartment, cooking almost everything and staying outside central areas. Casablanca More corporate, more cosmopolitan, less aesthetic, but practical. Apartments can offer better value than Marrakesh. €1,000 – €1,600 per month It’s easier to find stable housing here. Essaouira Open, walkable, creative and one of the easiest places to build a routine. If you book monthly and want a comfortable, well-located apartment near the medina or beach: €950 – €1,500 per month Ocean-view or highly designed spaces push the upper end quickly. Cook at home regularly and it stays reasonable. Eat out daily and it climbs. Food and taxis are affordable. Accommodation is the lever. Taghazout Small surf town with strong seasonal swings. €1,000 – €1,700 per month (in season) Out of season drops. Peak winter months rise fast. Agadir Modern, spread out and easy to navigate. Less historic charm than Essaouira or Marrakesh, but often one of the most cost-effective coastal options €900 – €1,400 per month Morocco has two price layers, local and international-facing. Daily Costs (What You’ll Actually Spend) Morocco operates on two parallel pricing levels. Layer 1 - Local Pricing Coffee in a the local neighbourhood cafe: €0.80–€1.50 Simple local tajine: €4–€7 Petit taxi ride: €1.50–€3 This is everyday Morocco. It’s affordable and accessible. Layer 2 - International / Nomad-Facing Pricing Specialty coffee (Bianca, Bondi, Mandala, etc): €2.50–€4 Western-style brunch or dinner: €10–€18 Dinner at a nicer restaurant with wine: €20–€40 Taxi via Careem or longer ride: €3–€8 This is the layer most remote workers naturally sit within; central neighbourhoods, well-designed cafes, restaurants serving alcohol, international menus. Morocco is still affordable compared to Western Europe, but which layer you operate in will define your monthly spend far more than the country itself. Getting Around (Driving, Trains, Taxis, Safety) Morocco is easy to move through once you understand the structure. Trains connect major cities like Casablanca, Rabat and Marrakech reliably and affordably. Within Rabat, the modern tram system makes daily movement simple and efficient. For city-to-city movement along that corridor, rail works well. Coastal towns like Essaouira and Taghazout require buses, taxis or a car. I drove across Morocco, which gave me flexibility, especially when balancing movement with work, with a dog. Roads between major cities are modern and well maintained. Tolls are common on highways, so keep small cash accessible. Petit taxis within cities are inexpensive and widely available. In larger cities, Careem operates and makes things easier if you prefer app-based booking. From a safety perspective, I never felt uneasy working or moving around. As with any country, awareness matters, but Morocco doesn’t feel unstable or unpredictable in major hubs. If you plan to move often while working remotely, build travel days around lighter workloads.  Cultural Reality (Work Week, Prayer Times, Ramadan) Morocco operates on its own cadence. The work week typically runs Monday to Friday, but Friday holds religious significance. Some businesses close for extended periods around Friday prayers, particularly smaller local shops. Prayer calls are audible in most cities. They’re part of the soundscape.  Ramadan changes some daily life. Some restaurants and cafes close during daylight hours. Working spaces operate differently. It’s not a disruption but it’s something to be aware of if your remote schedule relies on public workspaces or restaurant availability. Alcohol is available in licensed restaurants and hotels, but it’s not integrated into daily culture the way it is in parts of Europe.  Understanding these nuances doesn’t complicate remote work, it just makes it smoother. If you’re planning to base yourself during this period, read our full guide Visiting Morocco During Ramadan. What I Learned Working Remotely in Morocco Morocco works for digital nomads and I would absolutely recommend it. It rewards people who: choose their base carefully secure reliable internet understand neighbourhood differences and don’t expect uniform infrastructure It isn’t Bali. It isn’t Lisbon. It doesn’t package itself as a remote-work playground but it offers something different. Lower living costs than Western Europe. Cultural depth. Ocean access. Strong connectivity in key cities, and proximity to Europe without European pricing. Morocco is viable, layered and, in the right places, genuinely strong as a remote base. For itineraries, city guides and practical travel planning, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides. To compare remote life across borders, read my digital nomad guides to Spain, France and the UK.
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Travelling Morocco with a Dog: What to Know Before You Go
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Travelling Morocco with a Dog: What to Know Before You Go
Table of Contents Is Morocco Dog Friendly? Entry Requirements for Bringing a Dog to Morocco Returning to Europe or the UK from Morocco Driving in Morocco with a Dog Dog-Friendly Accommodation in Morocco Beaches & Public Spaces: What to Expect Vet Access in Morocco Cultural Considerations What I Learned Travelling Morocco with Roly Is Morocco Dog Friendly? As someone who travelled to Morocco by car from Spain with my dog Roly, my first observation was: cats rule the streets here. They’re everywhere, in medinas, harbours, cafe corners, even on car bonnets quietly woven into daily life. Dogs, on the other hand, occupy a very different space culturally. Morocco is dog-friendly but not in the way Western Europe is dog-friendly. You won’t find dogs under restaurant tables as standard, nor water bowls outside every shop. In many areas, dogs are not commonly kept as household pets in the same way they are in the UK or France. That difference shapes the atmosphere. That said, travelling Morocco with a dog isn’t difficult, it just requires awareness. In coastal towns like Essaouira, Asilah, Taghazout, long beach walks felt easy and relaxed. In Rabat, promenade strolls were comfortable, but beyond that, most formal public spaces weren’t dog-friendly, and access to restaurants, monuments, and enclosed areas were generally restricted. Marrakech depended more on the neighbourhood: modern districts and terraces were generally fine, while the tighter medina streets required more attentiveness. Many of these also feature in our guide to the Best Places to Visit in Morocco, especially if you’re choosing your route around dog-friendly terrain. Stray dogs do exist, and reactions from locals range from warm curiosity to polite distance. I never experienced hostility, but I did stay observant. Respecting the environment, choosing accommodation carefully, and understanding cultural nuance made all the difference. Morocco overall, may not be as effortlessly dog-friendly as Europe but with realistic expectations and thoughtful planning, it’s absolutely manageable. If you’re mapping this into a structured route, see our full Morocco 10 Day Itinerary for how to combine coastal towns, cities and desert stretches without rushing. Entry Requirements for Bringing a Dog to Morocco We entered Morocco by ferry from Tarifa (Spain) to Tangier Med after driving down from the UK through France and Spain, following the paperwork outlined in our Travelling to Europe with a Dog from the UK guide. You'll also find route structures explained in our Ferry to France from the UK (With a Car) guide if you’re driving down through Europe first. By that stage of the trip, Roly was travelling on a French-issued EU pet passport, which we arranged in Rennes after converting his original UK Animal Health Certificate. For UK passport holders, Morocco grants a 90-day stay on arrival with no prior visa required. My passport was stamped at entry in Tangier Med, and the process was quick and straightforward. In our case, there were no formal document checks carried out for Roly at boarding or on arrival. His microchip was not scanned, and his vaccination records were not inspected. However, official requirements do exist. To bring a dog into Morocco, your pet should: Be microchipped Have a valid rabies vaccination Travel with official veterinary documentation (such as an EU pet passport or equivalent health certificate) Although these documents were not requested at the port during our crossing, we were fully compliant with all vaccination and identification requirements. If you are travelling from Spain to Morocco with a dog by ferry, it’s important to assume that checks can happen, even if they don’t always. Border enforcement can vary, and regulations may be applied differently depending on port and timing. The ferry crossing itself takes approximately 1.5 hours, and once off the boat at Tangier Med, the drive south toward Asilah takes just over an hour.  Returning to Europe or the UK from Morocco (Rabies Blood Test Rule) This is the part many people miss and it can completely disrupt your route if you don’t plan for it. Morocco is classed as an “unlisted country” for pet travel into the EU and UK. That means returning isn’t as simple as crossing back on the ferry. If you want to re-enter Europe (or the UK) with your dog, you need: A rabies blood test (titre test) Taken at least 30 days after rabies vaccination Then a mandatory 3-month waiting period before travel So in practice, it looks like this: Rabies vaccine → wait 30 days → blood test → wait 3 months → travel Only after that timeline can your dog legally re-enter the EU or UK. Why This Matters If you enter Morocco without planning this: You cannot just drive back into Spain when you want You may be forced to stay longer than planned Or arrange alternative solutions (which can become complicated and expensive) The Simple Rule to Remember Before leaving Europe for Morocco, make sure your dog has had a rabies blood test taken in the EU. This must be done at least 30 days after their rabies vaccination, followed by a 3-month waiting period before you can return to the EU or UK. Driving in Morocco with a Dog  Morocco drives on the right, the same as mainland Europe but different from my home country, the UK, where we drive on the left. You can read more about that here in my Driving in the UK (England Guide for International Visitors) guide. As we had already driven through France and Spain before crossing into Morocco, I was comfortable with right-hand driving by the time we arrived. Road conditions in Morocco are varied and that’s part of what makes driving here so interesting. On major motorways, the experience is seamless. Long, well-maintained stretches connect cities like Tangier, Rabat, Casablanca, and Marrakech, and much of the journey feels straightforward. There are toll checkpoints on certain routes, so it’s worth keeping small cash accessible. Police presence is also common, particularly on highways and at city entry points. Speed checks and routine traffic stops are normal, so driving within the limit and carrying your documents is essential. You can read more on this in my Driving in Morocco as a Tourist: What to Expect on the Road guide. Once you move off the motorways, the landscape shifts. Drives become more scenic and unpredictable. Livestock often cross the road with their herders, especially in rural areas. Locals may hitchhike from the roadside. Passing through small towns requires slower pacing, awareness, and patience. On narrower secondary roads, potholes can appear suddenly, meaning you sometimes need to adjust your line to avoid damaging your tyres. It’s not chaotic, but it is different. The key is alertness and steady driving rather than speed. As for travelling Morocco by car with a dog, Roly settled into the journeys quickly. He’s used to long drives and travels calmly, either watching the scenery from the seat beside me or curling up for a nap as the road stretches ahead. The varied terrain, open landscapes, and slower pace made road days feel less stressful than you might expect. Driving in Morocco with a dog is entirely manageable as long as you’re attentive, patient, and comfortable adapting to the local road culture. Dog-Friendly Accommodation in Morocco During our time travelling Morocco with a dog, I primarily used Airbnb and Booking.com to secure accommodation. Both platforms offer a dog-friendly filter, which makes it easy to narrow options quickly and focus only on properties that explicitly allow pets. Even when a listing was marked as pet-friendly, I always followed up with a short message to the host to confirm I was travelling with a dog. Every host responded positively and confirmed acceptance before arrival. In most cases, there was no additional fee for bringing a dog. However, in some properties particularly in Marrakech, a pet cleaning surcharge was added which ranges from €15 - €30 per night so it’s worth factoring into your budget. We stayed across a range of accommodation styles, from rural guesthouses to city apartments. In Asilah, we stayed at a guesthouse slightly off the beaten path, surrounded by open land and nature. It wasn’t unusual to wake to birdsong, the distant call to prayer, or even a donkey grazing nearby. The setting felt relaxed and spacious, ideal for travelling with a dog. The communal areas also created a social atmosphere, with shared meals and evenings spent around the fireplace.  In Rabat, Casablanca, Marrakech and Essaouira, we opted for Airbnbs. In Marrakech, we chose a property on the outskirts within a gated golf community. That location offered balance: green space for morning walks combined with easy access to the medina, cafes, and restaurants when we wanted to dip into the city. In Essaouira, we split our stay between two locations. The first was an apartment five minutes from the beach, perfect for daily walks. Later, we moved inside the medina, which offered a different pace while still remaining close to the coastline. Having a rooftop terrace made a significant difference; both as a workspace and as a safe, contained space for Roly to relax outdoors. I based myself in Essaouira for 8 weeks, a city I break down in more detail in Digital Nomad Life in Morocco, especially from a longer-stay perspective. Overall, finding dog-friendly accommodation in Morocco was far easier than expected. The key is filtering properly, confirming with hosts in advance, and choosing locations that provide access to open space, especially in larger cities. Beaches & Public Spaces: What to Expect Beaches in Morocco were, in many ways, the most effortless part of travelling with a dog. In coastal towns like Essaouira and Asilah, vast stretches of open sand made daily walks expansive and unhurried. There were no formal restrictions on dogs, and the scale of the beaches naturally created space. Early mornings and late afternoons offered the best experience, particularly outside peak domestic holiday periods. That said, Morocco doesn’t operate with clearly signposted “dog beaches” or designated pet zones. The approach is informal. It’s about reading the environment rather than relying on structured rules. If a beach felt crowded or heavily used by families, I kept Roly close and respectful. On quieter stretches, there was genuine freedom to move. Public spaces inland were more variable. Promenades and open seafront paths were manageable, but formal gardens, monuments, and enclosed public parks were often not dog-friendly. In Rabat in particular, access to many landscaped gardens and historic sites was restricted. Marrakech’s medina required focus with its tight streets, motorbikes weaving through traffic, and a higher density of stray animals demand attentiveness. Stray dogs are present across Morocco, especially in rural areas and less tourist-focused towns. Most kept their distance, but awareness is essential.  Cats are far more integrated into daily life than dogs, and you’ll see them everywhere. For most dogs, they become background movement. Roly quickly learned to observe rather than engage. Overall, public spaces in Morocco are easy to navigate with a dog, but they require awareness and adaptability. There isn’t dedicated dog infrastructure. You move thoughtfully, assess each setting, and adjust accordingly. Vet Access in Morocco Finding veterinary care in Morocco was straightforward. While we were in Essaouira, Roly was due his annual vaccination. My UK vet, The Hackney Vet, had sent a reminder, so I simply booked an appointment locally. The Moroccan vet carried out a full health check, administered the vaccination efficiently, and updated the details directly into Roly’s French-issued EU pet passport. Afterwards, I scanned the updated page and sent it back to my UK vet so their records remained current. Seamless and uncomplicated. In larger towns and cities, vet clinics are easy to find. Standards were professional, and appointments were easy to secure. Dog food is also readily available. Veterinary clinics often stock it, and there are dedicated pet shops in most urban areas. That said, much of the retail pet market in Morocco caters more heavily toward cats, given their visibility and numbers. It’s worth checking availability of your preferred brand in advance, particularly if your dog has specific dietary requirements. Overall, access to routine veterinary care and supplies wasn’t a challenge. With basic planning, it’s entirely manageable. Cultural Considerations Morocco is not a dog-centric culture in the way much of Western Europe is. In Islamic tradition, dogs are often viewed differently than in Western pet culture. While not forbidden, they are sometimes considered ritually impure in certain contexts, and historically have been kept more for guarding, herding, or working roles rather than as household companions. As a result, the relationship with dogs can feel more functional than emotional in some settings. That cultural backdrop shapes public life. You won’t see the same cafe culture of dogs under tables or inside boutiques as you might in France or Spain. In cities like Marrakech and Rabat, dogs are less integrated into daily social spaces. You may receive curious looks. In some places, you may simply be turned away. It isn’t hostility. It’s difference. Respect goes a long way. Keeping your dog on a lead, avoiding crowded markets and religious sites, and being mindful around street animals is essential. In coastal towns and more relaxed areas, attitudes felt more flexible. Overall, travelling with a dog in Morocco requires some awareness and cultural sensitivity rather than assumption. For me, that meant observing first, adjusting where needed, and remembering I was a guest in a country with its own norms. What I Learned Travelling Morocco with Roly Travelling Morocco with a dog isn’t complicated. Logistically, it was far more manageable than many people assume. Entry was straightforward. Driving was seamless once you understood the road dynamics. Veterinary access was reliable. Accommodation was easy to secure with planning. The real shift was cultural. Morocco doesn’t revolve around dogs in the way parts of Europe do. You won’t find widespread dog-friendly cafes or dedicated pet infrastructure. Instead, you adapt. You observe. You move with awareness and respect for the setting you’re in. For us, that meant choosing accommodation and locations carefully, and reading each environment before assuming access. And once we understood that, Morocco opened up beautifully. From beach walks in Essaouira to road miles between Tangier and Marrakech and beyond, Roly travelled confidently by my side. We experienced the richness of Moroccan culture, the warmth and generosity of locals, and the contrast between medina life and wide Atlantic coastlines. You can read more about this in our Best Places to Visit in Morocco guide.  Morocco isn’t dog-centric but it is deeply layered, vibrant, and full of character. With preparation and awareness, it’s absolutely a place you can experience with your dog. And for us, it was one of the most memorable chapters of the journey so far. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides.
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Visiting Morocco During Ramadan
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Visiting Morocco During Ramadan
Table of Contents Visiting Morocco During Ramadan Does Ramadan Change the Experience? The Clock Change Most Travellers Miss Dress Code During Ramadan Visiting Morocco During Ramadan  (What Changes, What Stays Open & What To Expect) Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, a month of fasting observed by Muslims worldwide. From sunrise to sunset, those observing don’t eat or drink. Evenings are reserved for iftar, the meal that breaks the fast, and for gathering with family. In Morocco, Ramadan isn’t just religious. It reshapes daily life. Roly and I had already been travelling through Morocco for two months when Ramadan began. We’d crossed from Spain by ferry, moved down the coast, into cities and coastal towns, and settled base in Essaouira for 8 weeks. On February 18th, Morocco moved into Ramadan, and the country adjusted overnight. We weren’t arriving into it. We were already inside it, and that made the difference. Does Ramadan Change the Experience? It Depends Where You Are. In larger, tourist-facing cities like Marrakech, Essaouira and Agadir, the shift was subtle. In Essaouira, nothing felt shut down. The beach remained active. Restaurants were open. Cafes were serving. Tourists walked the medina, sat by the sea, filled tables at lunch. Commerce continued. The difference wasn’t activity, it was who was present. There were fewer locals out during the day. Fewer children playing in the same numbers. Fewer long cafe sit-ins from residents who were fasting. The city felt lighter in density, not empty. If you hadn’t known it was Ramadan, you might have assumed it was simply a less busy weekday. Alcohol was more limited. That was noticeable. In tourist-facing areas you could still find it, but it was less visible and less central to daily life. I chose to stop drinking entirely for the month. After travelling through France, Spain and Morocco with long dinners, good wine and indulgent food, it felt like the right moment to pause. One month. No alcohol. Long beach walks. Runs along the coast. Hitting 10,000 steps daily. Cooking fresh produce from the market instead of eating out constantly. With Portugal next on the route, and inevitably more wine ahead, it felt like a reset rather than a restriction. Ramadan made that easier but daily life, especially in tourist zones, kept moving. The most visible shift came at sunset. The call to prayer sounded. In some places, a siren echoed across rooftops to signal the break of fast. For a brief window, streets thinned as families gathered indoors. Then the city reassembled. Evenings carried more weight. Locals broke fast together. Food moved quickly from trays. Streets filled again. Laughter. Music. Plates passed hand to hand. The energy wasn’t reduced. It was redistributed. The Clock Change Most Travellers Miss Ramadan in Morocco doesn’t just shift daily habits. It shifts time itself.Since 2018, Morocco operates on GMT+1 year-round. But during Ramadan, the country temporarily reverts to GMT (UTC+00:00), then switches back to GMT+1 once the month ends.In 2026: Morocco reverted to GMT on February 15 Returned to GMT+1 on March 22 If you’re crossing borders, booking flights, or coordinating international calls, this matters.It’s easy to miss, especially if your phone updates automatically and you don’t realise the change is tied to Ramadan.It’s not complicated. It’s just specific, and it’s something most travel blogs forget to mention. Dress Code During Ramadan Morocco doesn’t introduce new rules for tourists during Ramadan, but modesty becomes more noticeable.You don’t need to cover your hair. You don’t need to change your identity. But choosing looser silhouettes, longer hemlines, and lighter coverage reduces friction, particularly in non-tourist neighbourhoods.In beach towns like Essaouira, daytime clothing felt no different from the rest of the year. Swimwear at the beach remained normal. Tourists dressed as they usually would. In cities like Rabat, the capital or Fes, which feel more traditional and less tourism-led than Marrakech or coastal towns, modesty was more noticeable during fasting hours. Not enforced. Not policed. Just culturally present. In city centres and medinas, especially during fasting hours, dressing slightly more conservatively simply felt aligned with the environment.It wasn’t about obligation. It was about awareness. Final Thought Ramadan didn’t restrict the journey. It reframed it. Days felt lighter. Nights felt fuller. Timing mattered more. For tourists in major destinations, very little was taken away. You just saw Morocco operate on a different internal clock, and it was a layer of the country I was glad to experience. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides.
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Where to Stay in Marrakech
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Where to Stay in Marrakech
Table of Contents Where to Stay in Marrakech Marrakech at a Glance The Best Areas to Stay in Marrakech Is Marrakech Safe? Visiting Marrakech as a Woman Where to Stay in Marrakech (And How to Choose the Right Area) Marrakech doesn’t have one personality. It has multiple frequencies.One runs hot: scooters cutting through crowds, spice towers stacked high, hands gesturing you deeper into side alleys like the city is testing how far you’ll follow.Another is open and deliberate: wide pavements, brunch terraces, nail salons, rooftop cocktails, a grid you can actually breathe inside.And then there’s the outer edge: gated, green, practical. Morning space before you step back into the intensity.If you’re researching where to stay in Marrakech, the mistake is choosing accommodation first.The smarter move is choosing the version of Marrakech you want to wake up in. Because here, your neighbourhood doesn’t just frame your trip, it defines it.I arrived by car from Casablanca and based myself on the outskirts of Marrakech. Travelling with my dog Roly meant choosing space first. From there, I stepped into the Medina and Gueliz on my own terms. Here’s how to choose yours properly. Marrakech at a Glance (The Shortcut Before You Book) If you’re deciding where to stay in Marrakech, start here: Full immersion / classic Marrakech → Stay in the Medina Balance and easier day-to-day living → Base yourself in Gueliz Luxury hotels and nightlife energy → Choose Hivernage Space, villas and retreat-style privacy → Head to Palmeraie Road-trip practicality or dog-friendly accomodation → Look at the outskirts / golf resorts Now let’s break down what each of those actually feels like and who they’re right for. The Best Areas to Stay in Marrakech If You Want Marrakech at Full Volume: Stay in the Medina. The Medina is the version people imagine before they arrive. You walk in and the city immediately starts moving through you: scooters appear behind your shoulder before you see them the air thickens with spice, leather, smoke, citrus wooden lattice filters the light into patterned strips voices overlap in Arabic, French, Spanish, English and you stop trying to “navigate” and start flowing with it This is Marrakech without a buffer. It doesn’t introduce itself gently. It expects you to step in. Best for: first-time visitors, short stays, riads, rooftop culture, full sensory immersion. Not ideal if: you need quiet mornings, have a car, heavy luggage, or you’re travelling with a dog. Where to stay in Marrakech first time? If you want the iconic version, stay in the Medina, but commit to it. Don’t expect it to behave like a conventional city. If You Want Marrakech With Breathing Space: Stay in Gueliz. Gueliz is Marrakech with structure. Wide pavements. Grid streets. Modern cafes. Brunch terraces. Boutiques. Rooftop conversations that stretch into the afternoon and quietly shift the direction of your day. This is where the city becomes liveable. You can work properly. Walk without constant alertness. Step into the Medina for intensity, then step back out again. That contrast is what keeps Marrakech sharp. Best for: longer stays, digital nomads, solo travellers, balance, modern food and rooftop culture. If you’re asking, “What’s the best area to stay in Marrakech?” for most travellers, this is the most balanced answer. If You Want Polished Evenings and Hotel Energy: Stay in Hivernage. Hivernage leans curated. Hotels with manicured entrances. Pool days. Cocktail bars. Evenings that feel intentional. You’re close enough to reach the Medina easily, but you’re not waking up inside its current. If you want Marrakech to feel composed and slightly more controlled this is where you base yourself. Best for: couples, luxury stays, nightlife, hotel-focused trips. If You Want Space and Villa Privacy: Stay in Palmeraie. Palmeraie stretches out into palm groves and villa compounds. It’s quieter. Residential.You’ll need a car. You won’t casually wander out for coffee. But if what you want is space, pools, slower mornings and deliberate access to the city, this works.Here, Marrakech becomes something you enter, not something you’re surrounded by all day. Best for: retreats, longer stays, privacy, families or villa rentals. If You’re Road-Tripping or Travelling With a Dog: Stay on the Outskirts. This version doesn’t get talked about enough. Gated complexes. Green space. Parking that isn’t a puzzle. Morning walks before the city fully wakes.If you’re driving, or travelling with a dog this setup can change the entire experience. You get structure and space first, then step into the Medina and Gueliz deliberately.That separation keeps the city electric. Best for: road-trippers, remote workers, dog travel, travellers who want space and practicality. Is Marrakech Safe? And Does Where You Stay Change That? Marrakech is generally safe for visitors. But “safe” isn’t the only question. The real question is: how does it feel?The Medina is intense. That intensity isn’t danger, it’s density. Noise. Attention. Narrow lanes. You’ll be approached. You’ll be watched. You’ll be spoken to. For some travellers that feels electric. For others, it feels draining by night three.Gueliz feels different with wider pavements, and a more mixed local life. Walking at night here feels easier because the infrastructure supports it.Hivernage feels contained with hotel security, lighting, controlled entrances.The outskirts feel private. Gated complexes. Security. Predictability.So when people ask, “Is Marrakech safe?” the better question is: where are you basing yourself?Safety in Marrakech isn’t about crime rates. It’s about environment. Visiting Marrakech as a Woman Marrakech isn’t unsafe for women. But it is direct.You’ll be looked at. You’ll be spoken to. You may hear comments you didn’t invite. Most of it is verbal. Most of it passes quickly but it’s part of the environment. The key difference isn’t danger, it’s attention.If you’re used to moving anonymously, Marrakech feels more visible especially in the Medina, where space is tight and interaction is constant. It’s rarely aggressive. It can be persistent.That doesn’t mean avoid it. It means understand it.What Helps Walk with purpose. Keep responses short if you engage at all. “La, shukran” (no, thank you) is usually enough. Dress with awareness; not obligation, but practicality. Confidence changes the tone of interactions here. So does non-engagement.I moved through the city solo with Roly, including evenings. I wasn’t reckless. I wasn’t on edge. I was aware. After DarkUse taxis if you’re unsure. Choose well-lit streets. Avoid wandering aimlessly through unfamiliar back lanes late at night.The city runs on commerce more than confrontation. Once you understand that, it becomes easier to move through it.So yes, Marrakech is safe for solo female travellers, but it rewards awareness over assumption. Final Thought Marrakech isn’t difficult. It’s dynamic. Where you stay determines whether the city feels immersive, balanced, polished, or private. The same streets can feel electric or exhausting depending on where you wake up.There isn’t a universally “best” area. There’s only the version that matches how you want to experience it.Choose that first. Then book. For city-by-city breakdowns, explore the full Morocco Travel Guides hub.
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Best Places to Visit in Morocco
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Best Places to Visit in Morocco
Best Places to Visit in Morocco Morocco is one of the most varied countries you can explore in a single trip. Within a few hours you can move from Atlantic coastline to mountain villages, from dense historic medinas to vast desert landscapes. If you’re researching the best places to visit in Morocco, the key isn’t choosing destinations in isolation, it’s understanding how they connect. Your route, your entry point and your pace shape the entire experience. Whether you’re flying in or road-tripping across the border, this guide breaks down the 10 best places to visit in Morocco and how to combine them properly. If you’re mapping out a full route, start with our Morocco 10 Day Itinerary guide. I travelled Morocco by car, crossing from Spain by ferry with my dog Roly, building the journey region by region. Whether you’re flying in or road-tripping across the border, this guide breaks down the 10 best places to visit in Morocco and how to combine them properly. Table of Contents Arrival to Morocco 10 Best Places to Visit in Morocco Other Places Worth Adding to The Route Best Places in Morocco for First-Time Visitors Best Places to Go in Morocco for Culture Best Places in Morocco for Nature How You Arrive in Morocco Shapes Your Route If You’re Flying: Most international travellers land in: Marrakech (RAK) – ideal for central Morocco Casablanca (CMN) – strongest international connections Fes (FEZ) – best for northern routes Tangier (TNG) – good for north + coastal start Agadir (AGA) – southern coastline access From Marrakech, it’s easy to combine: Marrakech → Atlas Mountains → Essaouira From Fes: Fes → Chefchaouen → RabatFrom Casablanca: Casablanca → Essaouira → Marrakech From Agadir: Agadir → Taghazout → Imsouane → Essaouira → Marrakech If You’re Driving from Spain: The most common crossings are: Tarifa → Tangier Ville (fast passenger ferry) Algeciras → Tangier Med (car ferry, ~1–1.5 hours) Crossing by car changes the dynamic completely. The morning we crossed, Spain slowly disappeared behind us and Morocco came into view through sunlight. By late morning we were driving south from Tangier Med with goats crossing roads, hills opening up, everything feeling unmistakably different.The drive from Tangier Med to: Tangier city → 45 minutes Asilah → 1 hour Rabat → 3 hours Chefchaouen → 2–2.5 hours If you’re road-tripping, northern Morocco becomes your natural starting point. 10 Best Places to Visit in Morocco Here are 10 of the best places to visit in Morocco, whether you’re planning a one-week trip or a longer road journey. Imperial Cities Marrakech Region: Central MoroccoType: City (historic + modern)Marrakech is one of Morocco’s most iconic stops; intense, energetic, and visually unforgettable. For neighbourhood breakdowns and accommodation guidance, see our full Where to Stay in Marrakech guide. You’ll get the full medina experience here (souks, rooftops, noise, colour), but it also has a more modern side in Gueliz with cafes, brunch spots and an easier day-to-day pace. Best for: first-time visitors, rooftop dining, shopping, classic Morocco energy Nomad note: easiest to work from if you base in Gueliz or a quieter compound and dip into the medina Dog note: doable in parks + open areas, but the medina isn’t the easiest with a dog Fes Region: Northern MoroccoType: City (historic / cultural)Fes is Morocco at its most historic and detailed. The kind of place you visit for depth. The medina is one of the most famous in the world, and it’s less polished than Marrakech in a way that makes it feel more raw and real. Best for: history, architecture, traditional culture, photography Nomad note: better for a focused few days than a long base Dog note: expect restrictions in indoor spaces; plan around outdoor walks + quieter streets Rabat Region: Atlantic Coast (Northwest Morocco)Type: Capital cityRabat feels more structured and local than the cities tourists usually chase. I break this down further in Rabat, Morocco: Daily Life in the Capital. It’s more functional, and gives you a sense of Moroccan life in the city alongside history (kasbah, coastline, key landmarks). Best for: a capital stop, daily-life vibe Nomad note: good “reset base” for work days because the pace is steadier Dog note: one of the least dog-friendly cities. Plan for takeaway and outdoor-only stops Desert & Mountains Sahara Desert (Merzouga) Region: Southeast MoroccoType: Desert landscapeMerzouga is the gateway to the Sahara dunes experience, the classic “Morocco desert” you picture. It’s a longer drive to reach, but it’s one of the most unique landscapes in the country and feels completely different to the cities and coast. Best for: bucket-list landscapes, dunes, stargazing, overnight desert camps Nomad note: treat it like a trip segment, not a work base Dog note: doable with planning, but consider heat, sand, and long travel days Atlas Mountains Region: Central / High AtlasType: Mountains / villages / hikingThe Atlas Mountains are where Morocco opens up with cooler air, big scenery, winding roads and small villages that feel a world away from the cities. It’s one of the best places in Morocco to slow the pace and get into nature. Best for: hiking, mountain stays, scenic drives, escaping city intensity Nomad note: great if you want quiet and deep focus (check Wi-Fi before booking) Dog note: one of the best regions for travelling with a dog with lots of space and outdoor living Aït Benhaddou Region: Near Ouarzazate (South of the Atlas)Type: Historic ksar / road trip stopAït Benhaddou is one of Morocco’s most famous road-trip stops. A fortified village made of earth-toned buildings that looks cinematic in real life. It’s an easy add-on if you’re driving across the Atlas region. Best for: road trips, history, photography, film locations Nomad note: perfect as a stopover between bases Dog note: good because it’s outdoors-focused and walkable Coastal Morocco Essaouira Region: Atlantic Coast (West Morocco)Type: Coastal townEssaouira is one of the easiest places to live in Morocco. It's walkable, relaxed, creative, and (in my experience) one of the most dog-friendly. It has a softer medina than Marrakech, beach routines, and enough cafes and restaurants to stay for longer. Best for: longer stays, ocean air, medina wandering, relaxed pace Nomad note: genuinely strong work base, routines are easy to build here Dog note: one of the best places in Morocco for dogs (cafes/restaurants are far more welcoming) For a deeper look at daily life here, read Essaouira, Morocco: Easy Living, Creative, Coastal Living. Taghazout Region: Atlantic Coast (near Agadir)Type: Surf town / coastal villageTaghazout is best known for surf culture and beach living. It’s the kind of place people choose for a few days to switch off, or for longer stays if they want sun, ocean and simple routines. Best for: surf, coastal living, laid-back stays Nomad note: popular with remote workers. Check Wi-Fi and accommodation setup Dog note: strong option for dogs because life is outdoors and beach-led For a deeper look at daily life here, read Best Surf Towns in Morocco: A Guide to the Atlantic Coast. Casablanca Region: Atlantic Coast (West Morocco)Type: Major city Casablanca is modern, busy, and less medina-led with more boulevards, coffee culture, restaurants and day-to-day movement. It’s not the “classic Morocco” most people picture, but it’s a great contrast and a strong city base if you like urban energy. Best for: modern city life, food, cafes, coastal walks, cosmopolitan vibes Nomad note: one of the easiest cities to work from (modern apartments, strong amenities) Dog note: mixed. It's doable outdoors, but expect restrictions indoors For a deeper look at daily life here, read Casablanca, Morocco: Cosmopolitan Life in Motion. Northern Morocco  Chefchaouen Region: Rif Mountains (Northern Morocco)Type: Mountain townChefchaouen is famous for its blue streets, but it’s not just pretty, it’s also a compact mountain town that feels like a visual reset. It’s a great add-on if you’re exploring Northern Morocco. Read our Travelling Morocco with a Dog guide if you’re planning a pet-friendly route. Best for: photography, slow wandering, mountain scenery, short stays Nomad note: good for a calm few days (Wi-Fi depends on accommodation) Dog note: generally easier than big cities because it’s walkable and outdoorsy Honourable Mention Asilah Region: Atlantic Coast (North Morocco)Type: Coastal townAsilah is a distinctive coastal town in Morocco with whitewashed walls, bold blue doors, large-scale murals across the medina and Atlantic views from the ramparts. It’s visually strong and creative without feeling overworked for tourism. Best for: art, coastal walks, medina, adding contrast to bigger cities Nomad note: a strong short-term base. Peaceful enough to focus, lively enough not to feel isolated Dog note: An easy place in Morocco to navigate with a dog with beach access, open streets and fewer restrictions than larger cities For a deeper look at daily life here, read Asilah, Morocco Travel Guide: Where to Stay, Eat & Wander. Other Places Worth Adding to Your Route Not every stop in Morocco makes a “top 10” list. Some places work better as route add-ons, alternatives, or more local detours. If you’re driving especially, these are worth considering. Imsouane (Atlantic Coast) Between Essaouira and Taghazout, Imsouane is smaller, less built-up, and centred almost entirely around the ocean. It’s known for long surf breaks and open coastal views. Best for: slow coastal stops, surf days, low-density beach living Works well as: a 1–2 night pause between larger bases For a deeper look at daily life here, read Best Surf Towns in Morocco: A Guide to the Atlantic Coast. Safi (Atlantic Coast) Often skipped, Safi sits between Essaouira and Casablanca. It’s less polished, more industrial in places, but that’s part of its character. The pottery tradition here is strong, and the coastal fortifications give it a different feel to Morocco’s more touristy towns. Best for: off-route exploration, pottery heritage, seeing a less curated coastal city Tamraght (Near Taghazout) Just south of Taghazout, Tamraght offers similar coastal access with slightly less density. If Taghazout feels too established, Tamraght can be a softer alternative Best for: surf access with more space Ouzoud Waterfalls (Near the Atlas) One of Morocco’s most dramatic waterfalls, located northeast of Marrakech. It’s popular, and geographically striking, especially if you’re combining Marrakech with Atlas travel. Best for: a nature-focused day or overnight trip from Marrakech Tazekka National Park (Near Fes) If you’re starting in Fes and want something less tour-bus heavy, Tazekka offers caves, forested areas and mountain trails that feel more rugged and less filtered. Best for: hiking near Fes M’Hamid (Southern Sahara Edge) Further south than Merzouga, M’Hamid sits on the edge of the Sahara with a more remote feel, and more raw desert access. Best for: travellers wanting a less commercial desert experience. Best Places in Morocco for First-Time Visitors If it’s your first trip to Morocco, don’t build your itinerary around a checklist. Build it around contrast. Morocco isn’t one experience, it’s several. Your route should reflect that. Decide how you travel. Are you flying in for a short break? Working remotely for a month? Road-tripping down from Europe? Travelling with a dog? Morocco shifts depending on your pace and entry point. Here’s how to think about it. If You’re Flying In for a Short Stay (5–7 Days) Start with Marrakech. It gives you the full sensory introduction with the medina, rooftops, architecture, energy. Then add Essaouira for beaches, coastline and contrast. Its more walkable medina gives you space after Marrakech’s intensity. It’s one of the easiest places in Morocco to settle into, whether that’s for two nights or two weeks. If You Want Culture Without the Hype Land in Fes instead. Pair it with Chefchaouen in the Rif Mountains, and finish in Rabat for a more local capital feel. This route is less commercially intense than Marrakech and often overlooked by first-timers. If You’re Driving from Spain (My Route) Crossing by ferry into Tangier Med changes the tone of the trip. Instead of flying straight into the deep end, you enter gradually: Tangier → Asilah → Rabat → Casablanca  → Marrakech → Essaouira → Imsouane → Taghazout If you’re bringing a vehicle across, read our full guide on the Ferry to France from the UK (With a Car) before planning onward routes into Morocco. The shift from Europe into Morocco unfolds in stages. The roads open up. The landscape changes. It feels like crossing into somewhere new, not arriving abruptly.It’s a slower introduction, but a memorable one. If You’re Choosing a Digital Nomad Base Not every Moroccan city works equally well long-term. I break this down in detail in Digital Nomad Life in Morocco: Best Cities, Costs & WiFi Reality. Essaouira is one of the most liveable bases: compact, coastal, easy to build routine. Taghazout works if you want surf culture and ocean access. Casablanca offers the strongest infrastructure if you prefer a bigger-city movement. Marrakech works but neighbourhood choice makes all the difference. Choose based on daily life, not just landmarks. If You’re Travelling with a Dog Morocco is possible with a dog, but route planning matters, especially if you’re coming from Europe using the paperwork covered in our Travelling to Europe with a Dog from the UK: The Complete Guide. Coastal towns like Essaouira, Asilah, Taghazout, Imsouane are noticeably easier. Mountain regions are manageable. Dense medinas require more planning. It’s not about whether you can do it, it’s about choosing the places that make it smoother. If You Have Two Weeks Two weeks gives you space to combine regions properly:Marrakech → Atlas Mountains → Sahara → EssaouiraorTangier → Chefchaouen → Fes → Rabat → MarrakechYou don’t need to rush. Morocco rewards depth over speed. Best Places to Go in Morocco for Culture Culture in Morocco isn’t something you observe from a distance. It’s something you step into. It shows up in food, in music, in trade, in surf breaks, in desert camps, in daily rituals. Not just monuments.Here’s where you actually feel it. The Desert: Camel Riding & Campfire Evenings Yes, camel riding is cultural because it isn’t just an activity, it’s tied to how people moved across the Sahara for centuries. The desert isn’t empty land. It’s trade routes, nomadic history, survival knowledge.In Merzouga or M’Hamid, riding out into the dunes at sunset isn’t about the photo. It’s about scale. Silence. Sitting around a fire under a sky with no light pollution while local guides play traditional music.That’s lived heritage, not performance. The Kitchen: Cooking Classes & Market Shopping If you want to understand Morocco properly, you go to the market first.In Marrakech or Fes, walking through the produce stalls with someone who knows what they’re buying changes everything. Spices aren’t aesthetic. They’re functional. Preserved lemons, olives, fresh bread, it’s layered.Taking a cooking class here isn’t a tourist add-on. It’s a window into domestic life. You learn how tagine is built, why mint tea is poured from height, how hospitality operates.Food is culture in Morocco. Full stop. The Atlantic: Surfing as Identity Surfing in Taghazout or Imsouane isn’t just a sport scene. It’s reshaped entire towns.Fishing villages became surf hubs. Cafes cater to early morning tides. Boards lean against whitewashed walls. The ocean sets the pace of the day.That’s culture too, modern, coastal, evolving.It’s different from the medinas. It’s still Morocco. The Medina: Craft & Trade In Fes especially, culture is still craft-based. Leather, metalwork, weaving, ceramics, these aren’t souvenir factories, they’re skills passed down through families. The medina functions like a working organism.Even if you don’t buy anything, watching artisans work tells you more than any guidebook paragraph could. Music: Gnawa in Essaouira In Essaouira, culture comes through sound.Gnawa music isn’t background noise. It’s spiritual, rhythmic, rooted in West African history. During festival season the entire town shifts, but even outside of it, you’ll hear it in small squares and side streets.It’s woven into the place. Best Places in Morocco for Nature Nature in Morocco isn’t one landscape. It’s contrast. You can drive for three hours and feel like you’ve changed continents. Coastline to mountains. Mountains to desert. Desert to Atlantic wind.If you’re coming for scenery, don’t just pick a destination. Pick a terrain. The Sahara: Scale & Silence The desert isn’t impressive because it’s sandy. It’s impressive because of proportion. The dunes absorb sound. Footsteps disappear quickly. Night falls fast and the temperature drops with it. When you step away from camp lights, the sky sharpens into something you don’t see in cities.Camel riding here isn’t a gimmick, it’s the traditional way people moved through this terrain. Sitting that high above the sand changes your perspective. You feel the vastness instead of just looking at it.The Sahara is less about activity and more about exposure. You either embrace the stillness or you don’t. The High Atlas: Altitude & Air The Atlas Mountains don’t feel like a backdrop, they feel like a shift. Leaving Marrakech, the road begins to climb and the city intensity fades behind you. Switchbacks cut through dry valleys. Villages cling to slopes. In winter, peaks hold snow. In summer, the light is sharp and dry.You don’t need to trek for days to feel the difference. Even a single night at elevation changes the tone of your trip.The Atlas gives Morocco vertical dimension. The Atlantic Coast: Wind & Movement Morocco’s Atlantic coastline isn’t tropical. It’s powerful. Essaouira has a wide beach with an open horizon. The wind defines it. The ocean is rarely still.Further south, Taghazout and Imsouane feel more exposed. Surf breaks shape daily life. People plan around tides. The coastline isn’t manicured, it’s active.If the desert is silence, the Atlantic is motion. The In-Between: Driving as Nature Some of Morocco’s most interesting scenery isn’t a final destination. It’s the drive.Crossing from Spain by ferry and watching Africa appear. Driving south from Tangier with hills rolling out. Moving from Marrakech towards Essaouira as the land softens and flattens.Morocco reveals itself in transitions. If you’re driving, you see more of its texture than most fly-in itineraries allow. Water & Greenery: The Unexpected Layer Most people associate Morocco with desert and heat. Then you stand at Ouzoud Waterfalls and realise that isn’t the whole picture. Forested areas near Tazekka National Park. Green valleys hidden between mountain ridges.Morocco isn’t monochrome. It just doesn’t advertise its green side loudly.Nature in Morocco isn’t curated. It’s layered. You don’t visit “a nature site.” You move through terrain.That’s the difference. Morocco isn’t a single experience you tick off. It’s a sequence of contrasts; coast, city, desert, altitude. The more intentionally you design your route, the more it reveals. Whether you’re flying in for a week or driving in for months, the best places to visit in Morocco are the ones that fit your pace. For full route planning, city guides and supporting travel logistics, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides.
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Marrakech, Morocco: Beauty & Chaos
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Marrakech, Morocco: Beauty & Chaos
The Drive South: Rain, Roads & Arrival The drive from Casablanca to Marrakech took around three hours. Heavy showers rolled across the motorway, wipers on full speed, visibility dipping in and out. The landscape flattened into grey tones, the kind of drive that demands focus rather than daydreaming. As I got closer to Marrakech, the rain didn’t ease. If anything, it doubled down. My Airbnb was set within a golf resort complex on the outskirts of the city with gated security, lots of green space, within residential blocks. You can read more in my Where to Stay in Marrakech guide. By the time I finally located the right block, the unloading of the car began, suitcase, bags, dog gear, groceries, all in territorial rain. But that moment when the door shuts behind you and you're settled in? Worth it. I dried off, unpacked properly, and called it a night. Clay Oven indian takeway delivered dinner to the door, exactly what the evening required. I was here for five days. The forecast showed two more grey ones to begin. Not the postcard Marrakech entrance, but maybe that’s the point. Beauty and chaos don’t ask for perfect lighting. Rain Days, Work Mode & Wine Evenings The first couple of days in Marrakech weren’t headline weather with heavy skies, on-and-off rain, puddles gathering along the paths but having green space right outside the door changed everything. The golf course became our loop. Roly sprinting regardless and even in the rain, it felt expansive. I leaned into work mode. Laptop open, projects moving forward, calls scheduled around coffee refills. That’s the rhythm of this life, travel doesn’t replace work, it just reframes it. Marrakech became my backdrop while deadlines still got met. In the evenings I cooked in the Airbnb, the kind of meals that make a place feel temporarily yours and poured a glass of red. I watched 14 Peaks, a documentary that feels fitting when you’re on your own version of a long-haul journey.  It wasn’t the cinematic Marrakech people picture, no golden sunsets over the medina just yet but it had its own kind of satisfaction. Grounded. Productive. Reset without being static. Morning at the Park When the rain finally lifted in the week and a slice of blue pushed through, we moved fast. We headed straight to Park Arsat Moulay Abdesalam, just minutes from the Medina with red gravel paths and palm trees stretching high. The park is almost theatrical in its symmetry. Long walkways framed by clipped hedges, fountains catching light, benches positioned for conversation. Roly was instantly recharged, sprinting ahead on the red earth, nose down, tail up while I fell into easy conversations with other people doing their morning laps. It felt social without being crowded. A shared pause before the city ramps up and being so close to the Medina, you sense the shift waiting just beyond the gates; calm greenery on one side, sensory overload on the other. Sun back. Energy restored. Marrakech, finally, starting to show itself. Into the Medina: Noise, Colour & No Holding Back From the park, I walked toward the Koutoubia Mosque, its sandstone tower cutting clean into the sky. As you get closer to the Medina, the pace shifts. Pavements thicken. Carriages roll past, horses trotting through traffic. Vendors call out. The air tightens with movement. This is where Marrakech fully reveals itself. I stopped at an ATM before going in properly because once you’re inside, cash makes everything easier. At the front edge of the Medina, women sat with their boards offering braids. I took a seat and let them work; quick hands, tight plaits, no hesitation. Around us oranges pressed into juice on demand, men led monkeys through the square, carts stacked with souvenirs, spices and scarves. Cafes and restaurants lined the corners, terraces leaned over the action below. It’s not subtle. It’s not curated. It’s layered, loud, dynamic. This side of Marrakech doesn’t ease you in. It opens the gates and lets you decide how deep you’re willing to step. Marrakech Medina: Into the Maze One minute you’re standing at the edge of the medina, sunlight pouring over dusty pink walls, and the next you’re inside a living maze of sound, scent and movement. Scooters come first. You hear them before you see them, a sharp rev behind you, a quick beep, and suddenly they’re slicing through the crowd, weaving between tourists, locals, carts and wandering children like it’s choreographed. No hesitation. No slowing. Just instinct and flow. The streets narrow quickly. Overhead, wooden lattice panels filter the light into patterned strips across the ground. The air feels warm and busy. Every few steps, something changes. Spice bins spill colour onto the pavement. Next to them, shelves stacked with oils, soaps and glass jars. Then leather bags hanging in tight rows. Then football shirts. Then silver jewellery catching the light. Vendors call out casually, not aggressively, just enough to hook your attention. “Where you from?” “Good price for you.” “Look only, no problem.” There’s no single lane for walking. It’s shared territory. Scooters. Handcarts. People carrying boxes. It all moves at once, somehow without collision. And then there’s the mix of Arabic conversation layered with French, English, Spanish. You turn a corner and it shifts again. A quiet alley with textiles hanging floor to ceiling. A glass case filled with pastries. A barber pole spinning slowly in the shade. A sudden view of a minaret rising above the rooftops against a blue sky. It’s chaotic, yes but not random. There’s a pulse to the medina. A confidence. A kind of organised intensity that only makes sense once you surrender to it. You don’t walk through it in a straight line. You drift You adjust You step aside You get swept forward again And somewhere in the middle of it all between the scooters, the spices, the call to prayer echoing faintly over the rooftops, you realise this isn’t a place you observe. It’s a place you move with. Above the Medina: Lunch with a View at MÖ-MÖ After a few hours inside the medina, I’d worked up an appetite and followed the signs up to MÖ-MÖ Restaurant, tucked just off Jemaa el-Fnaa. A short climb up the stairs and suddenly the energy shifts. From above, the square becomes theatre. You watch the choreography instead of dodging it. The terrace is colour layered on colour with mosaic tables in greens and reds, striped awnings, soft peach walls, woven chairs, and staff moving calmly between tables in deep green uniforms. I ordered a meat tagine, slow-cooked and tender, served in a clay dish with warm bread on the side. Simple, rich, exactly what was needed after the sensory overload below. Marrakech doesn’t do half measures. It gives you the maze and then it hands you a balcony to look back at it from. Beauty & Chaos, In Real Time The next day the sun was already out and Roly and I headed onto the golf course paths for a long walk. Along the walk, Roly made friends with two small dogs darting across the grass. What started as a walk turned into a sprint session. It felt open. Light. Easy. I came back to the apartment late afternoon and had a chilled day, working and cooking at the airbnb.  And then, as the light started to fade into evening, the shift came. I was in the bedroom when I heard a loud crack followed by rushing water. By the time I reached the kitchen, it was already spreading, a pipe had burst, water pushing quickly across the tiles and seeping toward the living area. I called the host immediately. He said he was on his way, but he lived an hour out. By the time he arrived, the floors were soaked. There were no plumbers available that late in the evening, so the water had to be shut off entirely.  Roly and I retreated to the bedroom, the only dry space left and waited it out. It wasn’t dramatic in a cinematic way, just frustrating and inconvenient. The next morning was my last full day in Marrakech, so I left early and let the host and plumber deal with the flat while I went out determined to enjoy the rest of the city and not let it dampen the rest of the trip, no pun intended. The longer hassle came afterwards, trying to negotiate a refund through Booking.com. Calls, repeated explanations, conflicting information. Eventually they agreed to issue some credit toward a future booking which was minimal compared to what I’d paid. It was a useful lesson that not all booking platforms respond the same way when things go wrong. In my experience, Airbnb tends to step in more quickly and compensate more fairly. Marrakech really does give you beauty and chaos. Sometimes it’s in the medina. Sometimes it’s in your own airbnb kitchen. A Soft Landing: Brunch, Beauty & One Last Sunset at Kechmara My final day began gently with breakfast at Brunch Terrasses, tucked into a relaxed pocket of Gueliz known for its wide pavements, modern cafes and low-rise buildings in warm terracotta tones. It's Marrakech, but without the medina intensity. The kind of neighbourhood where you can sit outside, sip fresh juice, and watch the city wake up at its own pace. From there I drove further into central Gueliz, the more modern, European-influenced side of Marrakech. Less maze, more grid. I got my nails done, a small act of restoration after stepping through floodwater the evening before. Order restored, at least aesthetically. Then I headed to Kechmara for lunch and cocktails on the rooftop terrace. And this is where the day properly unfolded. The sun poured through the bohemian canopy, woven lampshades suspended overhead, natural plants spilling from corners, leafy prints across the cushions. It carried that effortless late-afternoon energy. No rush. No agenda. Just being exactly where I was. I ordered food. Then a cocktail. Then another. The air felt lighter again. A group of Belgian men were seated at the table beside mine. Conversation drifted across. Tables merged. Suddenly the afternoon stretched into early evening in the easiest way. Stories, laughter, travel tales, card games; the kind of spontaneous social moment solo travel quietly makes room for. It was fun. Unscripted. A fitting end to a stay that had swung between polished rooftops and flooded kitchens. Marrakech had given me markets, terraces, golf course walks, burst pipes, fresh manicured nails and new acquaintances, sometimes all within the same 24 hours. Not a bad way to close a chapter. Marrakech Neighbourhoods at a Glance Marrakech shifts dramatically depending on where you base yourself. You can read the full guide Where to Stay in Marrakech for more information. Here’s how it breaks down: Medina The historic heart. A dense, looping maze of riads, souks, rooftops and constant motion. You’re steps from Jemaa el-Fnaa, the Koutoubia Mosque, and the full sensory overload Marrakech is famous for. Best for: immersion, rooftops, atmosphere Not ideal if you: need quiet, drive daily, or have a dog (access can be tricky) Gueliz Modern Marrakech. Wide streets, grid layout, boutiques, brunch spots, sushi, nail salons, rooftop bars. European influence is visible in architecture and lifestyle. Best for: digital nomads, longer stays, cafe culture, easier navigation Dog-friendly. More manageable than the medina, but still limited indoors. Hivernage Polished and upscale. Five-star hotels, private villas, manicured gardens, nightlife spots. Feels more curated and resort-like. Best for: luxury stays, pool days, polished evenings Palmeraie Palm groves and private compounds on the outskirts. Space, quiet, villas with pools. You’ll need a car. Best for: privacy, retreats, decompressing Golf Resorts / Outskirts (like where I stayed) Gated complexes, green space, security, parking. Practical if you’re road-tripping with a car and dog. Feels removed from the medina chaos. Best for: driving travellers, digital nomads needing space, slower mornings before heading into the city Quick Take: Want intensity? Stay in the Medina Want balance? Base yourself in Gueliz Want quiet and space? Head outward Marrakech isn’t one mood. It’s several. Choosing the right neighbourhood changes everything. Notes from the Road: Marrakech Marrakech doesn’t introduce itself gently. It throws you straight into colour, sound, heat, negotiation, beauty.  It’s a city of extremes. The medina runs at full voltage: scooters threading through crowds, spices stacked in pyramids, terrace views above the noise. Then you step into Gueliz and the pace shifts to grid streets, brunch spots, nail salons, sushi bars, rooftop cocktails. Same city, different frequency. For me, Marrakech was exactly what the title promised: beauty and chaos. It’s not polished. It’s not linear. But that’s the point. Would I stay in the medina next time? Maybe. Would I choose Airbnb over Booking.com after a plumbing incident? Definitely. Would I come back? Yes, without hesitation. Marrakech is layered, kinetic and unapologetic and if you let it, it leaves a mark. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides. Now, it’s time for the next route. Next stop: Essaouira
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Casablanca, Morocco: Cosmopolitan Life in Motion
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Casablanca, Morocco: Cosmopolitan Life in Motion
The Drive North: Rabat to Casablanca The drive from Rabat to Casablanca is short, just over an hour. Somewhere between cities, the car had picked up the unmistakable Moroccan layer of fine brown dust, the kind every car collects after a few weeks on the road. A sign it’s been used properly. Along this stretch, people stand by the roadside, waving as you pass, offering car washes. I pulled over. While the car was cleaned, I sat at a small cafe facing the road with a Moroccon mint tea, surrounded by locals doing the same thing; sitting, watching, passing time. The wash took about twenty minutes. When it was done, the car felt reset. Clean again. Ready. As I drove further in, Casablanca opened out. Wide roads lined with palm trees. Modern blocks and cafes stacked into the city rather than spilling out from a historic core. It felt cosmopolitan in a way the other cities hadn’t. Less medina-first, more built for movement. Casablanca is one of Morocco’s newer cities, shaped as much by the 20th century as anything older. You feel that immediately.  You can read more in the Best Places to Visit in Morocco travel guide.  Settling In: A Home Base in Casablanca I checked into my Airbnb on Rue Prince du Jour, tucked into Racine, a leafy residential pocket in the heart of Casablanca. The apartment opened into warmth: wood-panelled walls, soft lighting, clean lines with a mid-century feel. Outside, the neighbourhood felt lived-in with small cafes spilling onto the pavement, corner shops, locals drifting with no sense of rush. After weeks on the road, it suited me perfectly. It felt like somewhere you could settle, and start moving through the city properly rather than skimming its surface. First Steps in Casablanca After dropping the bags, Roly and I headed straight back out to get a feel for the neighbourhood. We stopped at Soo Beef for a late bite, casual and unfussy. On the way back, I picked up a bottle of wine from Aperik Casablanca, one of those local wine shops that quietly signals the city’s more cosmopolitan side. By the time we walked home, the light had softened and the pace of the street had eased. Casablanca felt easy to slip into. It was the kind of first evening that doesn’t try to impress, it just lets you arrive. Casablanca, From Morning to Midnight The next day kicked off with coffee at % Arabica Casablanca, right on Boulevard d’Anfa. Bright, modern, sharply designed, the kind of spot that immediately sets the tone for Casablanca. Good coffee, city energy already switched on. From there, I headed to Arab League Park on a date with Jamie, a guy from Bristol who’d also escaped the British winter and was spending a couple of months travelling through Morocco. The park felt like neutral ground, where conversation can move as freely as you do. We walked, talked, looped without really noticing the route. Locals passed by in every direction: families, couples, runners, friends meeting mid-path. It’s one of Casablanca’s rare pauses of green in a city that otherwise runs on wide roads and forward motion, and it worked perfectly as a starting point.  By early afternoon, the Atlantic became the plan. We landed at Bianca Café, set right beside Plage Lalla Meryem, and let the day run on its own terms. This part of the coast is pure Casablanca. Busy tables, mixed crowds, wine poured freely, conversations stretching long past lunch. The ocean sits right there in view, anchoring the scene while the city carries on around it. We walked the beach as the light began to shift. Horses and camels moved along the shoreline, riders cutting clean silhouettes against the Atlantic. Families and couples claimed patches of sand, angling for the best view as the sun dropped toward the horizon. As dusk set in, we peeled back inland. Dinner was at Yoobi Sushi, followed by cocktails at Chez Fred. It was Casablanca in full flow. Coffee to park. Park to ocean. Ocean to night. Wide streets, palm-lined avenues, constant movement. A city that doesn’t slow down, it just changes gear. Casablanca, Between the Moments The rest of my time in Casablanca came from moving through the city, not ticking it off. Window shopping turned into repeat passes along neighbourhood streets lined with independent fashion boutiques, sharp tailoring, European silhouettes, unexpected details that didn’t need explaining. Daily food markets slipped naturally into the pattern. Crates of fruit stacked high, familiar faces reappearing. Casablanca reveals itself in fragments like that: a mural cutting across a blank wall, a mosque minaret rising between apartment blocks, a pocket park carving green space through concrete. Meals anchored the days. A long lunch at Vichos Casablanca, tapas designed to stretch an afternoon without trying to. Pastries at Guest Pastry Bakery, locals drifting in and out with purpose. Casablanca eats well, often, and without fuss. Match Night: Casablanca After Dark That night, the city flipped into full celebration mode. I caught Morocco’s Africa Cup of Nations semi-final on my laptop. When the final whistle went and Morocco took the win, Casablanca answered instantly. Cars flooded the roads, horns blaring in waves. Flags appeared from windows, draped over bonnets, pulled from nowhere. The noise carried late into the night, joyous, relentless, impossible to ignore. It echoed the same charged celebrations I’d witnessed previously in Rabat, the city moving as one, pride loud and unapologetic. Next up is the final. I’ll be watching that one from Marrakech.  Notes from the Road: Casablanca First impression: Big, modern, and confident. Palm-lined boulevards, wide roads, constant motion.  Neighbourhood life: Lived-in streets beat landmarks. Cafes on corners, food markets on repeat, the same faces appearing day after day. That’s where the city clicks. Style watch: Independent fashion boutiques quietly set the tone, clean tailoring, European silhouettes, nothing trying too hard. Casablanca knows how to dress. Food rhythm: Long lunches turn into late afternoons. Tapas, sushi, pastries, wine shops you’ll revisit without planning to. Eating here is casual but deliberate. Coastline energy: Urban beach culture. Lunch slides into sunset, horses and camels crossing the frame like it’s normal. Overall: Casablanca is modern, functional, and cosmopolitan, a city best experienced by moving without agenda and letting the days stack naturally. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides. Now, it’s time for the next route. Next stop: Marrakech
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Rabat, Morocco: Daily Life in the Capital
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Rabat, Morocco: Daily Life in the Capital
The Drive South: Asilah to Rabat Leaving Asilah behind, I headed south towards Rabat. The drive took a little over two hours and felt straightforward. The kind of road that lets your mind wander while the kilometres quietly pass.   Fishing towns dotted the route, appearing and disappearing just off the main road. About an hour in, I pulled over at Moulay Bousselham for lunch. I stopped at La Terrasse, right on the beachfront. The area felt relaxed and functional rather than polished. Lunch was seafood, with a clear view of the water. It broke up the drive perfectly. Back on the road, things gradually began to shift. The closer I got to Rabat, the more structured everything felt. Roads widened, traffic increased, and the pace subtly changed. You could feel the transition from coastal towns to capital city without needing a sign to tell you. Driving into Rabat, the difference was immediate. One of the first landmarks you pass is the royal residence, with guards stationed outside and staff tending carefully kept grounds. After the softness of Asilah, Rabat felt composed and deliberate. Not loud, not chaotic, just purposeful. A clear shift into the next chapter.  Arriving in Rabat: A Central Base I checked into my Airbnb in the centre of Rabat, firmly rooted in the city’s everyday rhythm. Rabat is more spread out than Asilah, less about drifting and more about moving with intention. The beach wasn’t on the doorstep, it was around a 30-minute walk away. What was close was the city itself. Shops, bakeries, cafes, and practical errands were all within easy walking distance, giving the area a lived-in, functional feel rather than anything curated for visitors. Geographically, it felt like a midpoint. A place to return to, reset, and head back out again. Match Night in Rabat That evening, Rabat came alive. Morocco was playing in the quarter-final of the Africa Cup of Nations, Africa’s equivalent of the Euros. When Morocco won, the reaction was instant and unstoppable. Car horns echoed through the streets in constant waves. People spilled outside, cheering, singing, waving flags, celebrating together. The noise rolled on well into the early hours of the morning. It was impossible not to feel how much it meant. This wasn’t just a football match; it was pride, unity, and shared identity playing out in real time. Standing there, watching it all unfold, I found myself completely swept up in it. From that point on, I followed the rest of the tournament closely, and of course, I was rooting for Morocco all the way. First Impressions: Rules, Rain & Resetting Expectations My first day in Rabat was spent wandering the neighbourhood, getting a feel for the city. Almost immediately, one thing became clear: Rabat is not dog-friendly. Not in shops, not in cafes, not in restaurants, and not even on terraces. It was a stark contrast to places like Asilah and Europe, and honestly, my biggest shock so far in Morocco. Being the capital, it makes sense; rules feel more present here, more firmly observed, and that naturally shapes how you move through the city. It definitely limited my options. With Roly in tow, spontaneous cafe stops or lingering lunches weren’t possible. Add to that it was a cold, wet day, damp pavements and the start felt a little tougher than I’d hoped. Luckily, I found a solution nearby: Tangier’s Bocadillos, just a ten-minute walk from the apartment. Fresh wraps made to order, quick, warm, and exactly what I needed. I took lunch back to the Airbnb, sheltered from the rain, and reset. It wasn’t the most cinematic first day, but that’s travel too. We were only here for a couple of days, and despite the slower, more restricted start, I was still determined to make the most of Rabat, even if it meant adjusting expectations and pace. Rabat, Between the Plans The next few days in Rabat were actually some of my most productive. With Roly being a hard no in most attractions, I naturally slowed down. Instead of fighting it, I leaned in. I stayed in, put my head down, powered through client work, updated this blog, and cooked proper meals again. All hail Glovo for making that part easy. The Airbnb helped. It was spacious, had a balcony, and didn’t feel claustrophobic, a decent setup for a few low-key days after months of near-constant movement on the road. It felt grounding in a way I didn’t realise I needed. Around that time, I’d also befriended a Moroccan guy, Simo. He lives in Rabat, works as a surf instructor, and suggested we meet later in the week when the weather improved. The plan was: harbour, medina, souk, beach to see the city, with someone who knows it well. When Rabat Opened Up When the sun came back later in the week, Rabat shifted again. I met Simo and we headed out properly, starting along the Bouregreg Corniche. This is where the city breathes a bit. The river is wide, restaurants line the edge with people walking, talking and passing time. It felt social, but not showy. Rabat at ease. From there, we walked up into the Kasbah of the Udayas, a 12th-century fortress built to defend Rabat’s coastline, now one of the city’s most recognisable historic quarters. The shift is immediate with heavy stone walls, palm-lined steps, then a sudden wash of white and blue. Narrow lanes, weathered doors, cats stretched out in the sun. Inside the kasbah, the city noise drops away. It feels enclosed, almost self-contained, perched between river and ocean. We stopped for traditional Moroccan mint tea overlooking the water, the Atlantic stretching out beyond the walls, one of those pauses that lands exactly where it should. Down at the Beach We walked down from the kasbah onto the sand, where Rabat feels stripped back. The beach sits right where the river empties into the Atlantic, so the water is darker and restless, constantly shifting. It’s not the kind of place you come to sunbathe. People were walking, standing, watching the tide, letting dogs run, kicking a ball around. Above us, the kasbah walls stayed fixed and heavy, like the city was still keeping an eye on the ocean. Into the Medina From the beach, we headed back inland and slipped into the Rabat medina. Shops bled into each other: baskets stacked high, trays of nuts and sweets, snacks and household goods packed tightly behind glass counters. People moved with purpose, shopping, chatting, stopping mid-walk to greet someone. There was no hard sell, no pressure to buy. Just stalls open to the street, food sizzling, and the quiet chaos of a place that functions first and entertains second. We wandered without a plan, cutting down side alleys, stopping to look, moving on again. It felt real, unfiltered and exactly the kind of place that rewards curiosity instead of rushing you through it. At the Hassan Tower We ended at the Hassan Tower and the Mausoleum of Mohammed V, one of Rabat’s most symbolic sites. The 12th-century minaret rises from an open square of stone columns. Beside it, the Mausoleum of Mohammed V feels pristine and ceremonial. Guards watch while visitors move slowly around the space, instinctively lowering their voices. Pigeons lift off and resettle against the ancient walls. It's a place where Rabat’s political, religious, and historical layers meet in one wide, open breath. Notes from the Road: Rabat Rabat asked for adjustment. It wasn’t instantly easy, especially travelling with a dog, and it didn’t offer the same softness or spontaneity as Asilah. It’s a city shaped by rules, structure, and function, and you feel that quickly. But once I stopped expecting it to behave like a coastal town and let it be what it is, Rabat made more sense. It’s a capital first. Purposeful. Grounded. Lived in. A place where daily life runs alongside history rather than being built around it. What stayed with me most was the contrast. Quiet working days followed by streets erupting in celebration for football. Administrative order balanced by moments of warmth, generosity, and connection. Ancient sites woven directly into modern routines. Nothing polished for show, but plenty to notice if you paid attention. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides. Now, it’s time for the next route. Next stop: Casablanca. 
Article author: Shnai Johnson
Crossing Into Morocco: Ferry to Tangier & First Days in Asilah
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Crossing Into Morocco: Ferry to Tangier & First Days in Asilah
Early Morning Crossing to Morocco The alarm went off early. Bags packed, car loaded, Tarifa still quiet. I drove north along the coast to Algeciras as the sky started to lighten, ports silhouetted against soft colour. Check-in was straightforward, and before long we were boarding the ferry with Balearia. Roly settled quickly, watching the activity from the deck as the harbour pulled away behind us. The crossing itself took just under an hour and a half. Spain faded into the distance, and slowly the outline of Morocco came into view. A passport stamp, a change in weather, a sense of crossing into somewhere new.  By late morning, we were pulling into Tangier Med. Africa, officially reached. The Drive: Tangier Med to Asilah Once off the ferry at Tangier Med, the road south towards Asilah takes just over an hour. The drive quickly became less about getting somewhere and more about taking it in. Goats and cows wandered across the road, people walked the verges, and the landscape stretched out in greens and soft hills. It felt like crossing into a completely different pace of life. That pace carried straight into Asilah. You can read more in the Morocco 10 Day Itinerary: The Ultimate Road Trip Route guide. Arrival in Asilah I stayed at a guesthouse called Maison d'hotes Berbari just beyond the town edge, off the beaten path and firmly part of everyday Morocco. Local homes nearby, animals moving through the land and life unfolding around you. Peacocks wandered the grounds. Roosters cut through the mornings. Dogs slept wherever the shade landed. From the nearby mosque, the call to prayer drifted in at regular intervals. Breakfast was communal and generous. A full spread, and a mix of guests who naturally ended up talking from French and Spanish families, young couples, travellers passing through, and the owners’ dogs drifting between chairs. No forced interaction, just shared space done well. Evenings revolved around home-cooked Moroccan food. Tagines, slow-cooked meats, dishes made to be eaten together. We gathered in the main living and dining room with log wood and fire going, records playing, the room lively without being performative. It wasn’t a stay built around activities or “must-dos.” It worked because it felt honest, shaped by the people running it, the land it sat on, and the everyday routines unfolding around it. New Year’s Eve New Year’s Eve was spent at the guesthouse, gathered with the other guests and, inevitably, the dogs in an easy, celebratory mood. Dinner was a proper home-cooked beef tagine, rich and comforting, shared around the table. Later, I caught up with friends and family on the phone back in England, slipping between conversations and the room around me. It felt balanced and grounded. No rush, no excess, just good food, familiar voices, and a calm sense of closing one chapter and opening another. A solid way to see in the New Year, and the right lead-in to a full day of exploring Asilah the next day.  New Year’s Day: Exploring Asilah  New Year’s Day was spent on foot, getting a feel for Asilah. Blue doors against white walls, cats stretched across doorsteps and car bonnets, unbothered and unmoved. Each turn revealed something different, small details stacking into a strong sense of place. Asilah Medina I wandered into the medina. This isn’t a hectic souk like Marrakech or Fez. It’s residential, artistic, and distinctly Asilah. The lanes are lined with whitewashed buildings edged in blue, a colour code that’s become part of the town’s identity. Small stalls sit open selling snacks, scarves, ceramics, paintings, and clothing. Nothing is stacked on top of itself. It’s spaced out, easy to browse, easy to move through. Art shows up everywhere, but casually. Painted doors. Murals on corners. Framed pieces leaning against walls as if they’ve always been there. It’s woven into the fabric of the place. Creativity feels lived in. I wandered without a plan, doubling back, cutting down side streets, letting the medina open and close around me. Asilah’s Murals & Painted Streets The murals appear without warning. One street looks ordinary, the next opens onto a wall painted with fish, birds, faces, geometric shapes, coastal scenes. Much of this comes from Asilah’s long-running International Cultural Festival, where artists are invited to paint directly onto the medina walls. What makes it different is what happens after. The art stays. It fades. It peels. It gets painted over, reworked, replaced. Some pieces look fresh. Others clearly carry years of weather. A painted wall might belong to someone’s home. A doorway becomes part of the artwork. A mural wraps around a corner and disappears into everyday life. You turn down one lane and catch something new. Walk the same route later and notice what you missed before. The medina doesn’t stay still, it shifts through layers. Above the Medina From the medina, I climbed a set of stone steps that led up to the ramparts. The view opened suddenly. The Atlantic stretched out below, the beach running along the base of the old walls. Asilah stacked up in white and blue. Down to the Water I walked out of the medina and followed the path down to the Plage d’Asilah. A group of locals were gathered on the sand playing steel pan drums, the sound carrying across the beach. Nearby, kids were mid–football game, running barefoot, shouting, laughing, stopping only when the ball rolled too close to the water. There was movement everywhere. It felt open, social, alive. Roly immediately was in full joy mode, sprinting the length of the beach, charging into the waves, then racing back out again before repeating the whole thing. He didn’t hesitate once. Wet paws, sandy fur, completely in his element. A young Moroccan boy came over and started throwing a stick for him. We got chatting. He spoke four languages, very impressive. It was one of those easy, unforced exchanges that just happens. That’s something that kept standing out in Asilah. The friendliness felt genuine. From people on the beach, to locals in the streets, to the guesthouse owners, conversations started easily and kindness felt baked in. The town felt open, welcoming, and comfortable to be in. Just along the edge of the beach is Port d’Asilah, the town’s fishing harbour, where rows of small blue fishing boats are moored along the water. We strolled past it for a while, then headed back into town to find somewhere for lunch. Late Lunch at Dar Al Maghrebia I headed back into town for a late lunch at Dar Al Maghrebia, tucked into a small lane just off the medina and grabbed a table on the terrace. I ordered a seafood tagine, rich and tomato-based, served with fresh bread and lemon. Around us, tables filled and emptied on repeat. It had that mid-afternoon energy, lively and felt like a fitting end to a day spent wandering before heading back to the guest lodge.  Working Days & Wandering Further The rest of my time in Asilah settled into a steady pattern. Mornings working from the guesthouse, afternoons drifting back out into town or along the coast. It’s an easy place to balance both. One morning I stepped outside and there was a donkey tied up beside my car, calmly grazing. Not something you see often in the UK. Back in town, lunches stretched long. I stopped in at Port XIV Restaurant, and watched the harbour activity drift past. Other days were spent on the beach watching the surfers, kids running football matches across the sand, and sunsets. One day, I drove further along the coast towards La plage de Sidi Mghait, just outside town. A line of beach restaurants, including Chiringuito Morchid, sat facing the sea, all shuttered for winter. With no crowds and no soundtrack beyond the waves and wind, it felt like seeing the coast in its in-between state; stripped back, unfiltered, and entirely itself. Why Asilah Stuck With Me  💌 Asilah stayed with me because nothing felt curated for show. Life unfolded in front of you on the streets, along the coast, inside the medina without needing to be explained or packaged. It’s a place where daily life and visitors overlap naturally. You’re not separated from it. You’re walking through it. People stop to talk. Kids play football on the beach. Fishermen move in and out of the harbour. Artists paint directly onto walls. Conversations happen easily and kindness shows up without effort. From the women running the guesthouse to strangers stopping to chat as you pass, there’s a sense of ease that’s hard to manufacture. For full city guides, itineraries and supporting travel advice, explore all our Morocco Travel Guides. Now, it’s time for the next route. Next route: Rabat
Article author: Shnai Johnson