Marrakech.
All your senses, at once.
Rose-pink walls. Souks that smell of spice, leather, and cedar. Djemaa el-Fna square turning from a market into a carnival at dusk. The Atlas Mountains white above the city on clear winter mornings.
A thousand years old and still completely overwhelming on arrival.
Marrakech hits harder than almost anywhere else. The medina — the old walled city — is a UNESCO World Heritage site and a genuinely functioning urban organism of narrow alleys, craftsmen's workshops, mosques, and souks that have operated continuously for a thousand years. Getting lost in it is not a metaphor. It is what happens.
The city divides neatly into the medina and the Ville Nouvelle (new city), built by the French during the protectorate. Most visitors spend the majority of their time in the medina, which is correct: the Ville Nouvelle is fine but unremarkable. The medina around Djemaa el-Fna is where the city reveals itself — slowly, on foot, when you stop trying to navigate and start paying attention.
What the guidebooks undersell: the food is extraordinary across all price points. The riad hotel category — riads being traditional courtyard houses converted to guesthouses — offers some of the most atmospheric accommodation in Africa at prices well below equivalent boutique hotels in Europe. And the day trips from Marrakech, to the Atlas Mountains and the desert edge, are among the most dramatic in the world.
Medina or Ville Nouvelle — almost everyone chooses the medina.
Marrakech's geography is straightforward: the ancient walled medina to the east, the French-built Ville Nouvelle (Gueliz and Hivernage) to the west. For most visitors the choice is clear — stay in the medina, explore the medina, eat in the medina. The Ville Nouvelle is useful for upmarket restaurants and the train station.
The heart of the medina around Djemaa el-Fna is where most riads are concentrated and where the Marrakech experience actually happens. Labyrinthine alleys, the call to prayer from a dozen minarets, the souks in every direction. Disorienting for the first day and addictive thereafter. No cars inside the old alleys — everything on foot or by donkey.
The northwestern quarter of the medina, slightly away from the main tourist crush. Where the most design-forward riads are concentrated, along with independent boutiques and good restaurants. Quieter than the Djemaa el-Fna area but still walkable to everything.
The French-built new city west of the medina. Wide avenues, international restaurants, galleries, and the main shopping street of Mohammed V Avenue. Less atmospheric but more comfortable for those who find the medina overwhelming. Good option for longer stays or second visits.
The upmarket hotel district immediately south of the medina walls. Large luxury hotels with pools, close enough to walk into the medina but removed from the noise and intensity. Best for those who want five-star comfort with easy medina access.
The ancient palm grove north of the city, now dotted with ultra-luxury resort hotels. Completely removed from the urban Marrakech experience. Best for a few nights of genuine luxury before or after exploring the city. Requires a taxi for every trip into town.
The riad is the whole point. Stay in one even if it costs slightly more.
A riad is a traditional Moroccan courtyard house — blank walls to the street, life organised around an interior garden or fountain. Hundreds have been converted into guesthouses ranging from basic to extraordinary. Waking up in a tiled courtyard with mint tea arriving at 7am is the defining Marrakech accommodation experience and should not be skipped for a generic hotel room.
Built by King Mohammed VI and opened in 2010. A city within the city — 53 private riads connected by underground passages, each with a private pool. Three Michelin-starred restaurants. The most extraordinary hotel in Africa and priced accordingly.
Check availability →Operating since 1923, La Mamounia is one of the world's great hotels. Churchill painted here. Winston Churchill painted the Atlas Mountains from its garden. Art deco interiors, sprawling gardens, and an atmosphere of studied grandeur that the renovation has preserved perfectly.
Check availability →The famously Instagrammed green pool riad. Beautiful zellige tilework, excellent breakfast on the rooftop, and helpful staff who provide a hand-drawn map of the neighbourhood. One of the best value design riads in the medina.
Check availability →An 18th-century riad with one of the finest antique collections in Marrakech. The owner is a renowned antique dealer and the house is effectively a museum you sleep in. Exceptional food, attentive service, and a genuine sense of Marrakech history.
Check availability →A hostel in a converted riad — pool, rooftop terrace, social atmosphere, and the medina experience at budget prices. One of the best-rated hostels in Africa. Location is genuinely central. Sells out fast in peak season.
Check availability →A sprawling garden resort in Hivernage with multiple pools, excellent restaurants, and a casino. The best option for anyone who wants genuine resort facilities alongside easy medina access. A 10-minute walk or short taxi to Djemaa el-Fna.
Check availability →Find and compare riads and hotels across Marrakech.
Tagine, couscous, pastilla. Morocco has one of the great cuisines and Marrakech knows it.
Moroccan food is built on patience — slow-cooked tagines, hand-rolled couscous, pastilla that takes hours to assemble. The spice profile is warm rather than hot: cumin, coriander, ginger, cinnamon, saffron, ras el hanout. The best food in Marrakech is not in tourist restaurants. It is in the small local places around the souks and in the food stalls of Djemaa el-Fna after dark.
The conical clay pot and the slow-cooked stew it produces. Lamb with prunes and almonds, chicken with preserved lemon and olives, kefta (spiced meatballs) with egg in tomato sauce. Cooked for hours over charcoal, served in the vessel with bread for dipping. The version at Djemaa el-Fna stalls at night is basic but authentic and cheap.
Hand-rolled semolina steamed three times over a broth of seven vegetables, topped with lamb or chicken and a sweet onion-raisin tfaya. The definitive Friday lunch dish in Morocco — families gather, the couscous takes most of the morning to prepare. Find it in local restaurants on Fridays from noon. Never order it from a tourist menu on other days.
One of the great dishes of the world. Shredded pigeon or chicken with almonds, eggs, and spices wrapped in wafer-thin warka pastry, baked until golden, dusted with cinnamon and icing sugar. Sweet and savoury simultaneously. The seafood version (pastilla de poisson) in Marrakech is also outstanding. Not a street food — order in a proper restaurant.
Morocco's national soup. Tomato, lentils, chickpeas, vermicelli, coriander, ginger, and lemon — thick, warming, and genuinely filling. Eaten at breakfast, lunch, and during Ramadan to break the fast at sunset. The cheapest and most honest meal in Marrakech. Served with chebakia (sesame honey pastry) as a traditional pairing.
Gunpowder green tea with fresh mint and a significant quantity of sugar, poured from a height to create a foam. Called Moroccan whisky by locals. Refusing mint tea is rude; accepting it while shopping does not obligate you to buy anything regardless of what a shopkeeper implies. Drink it slowly in a rooftop cafe — this is the correct pace for Marrakech.
Souks, palaces, gardens, and one genuinely transformative hammam.
Marrakech rewards wandering more than any structured itinerary. The best day in the city is the one where you get thoroughly lost in the souks, stumble into a 14th-century medersa, find a rooftop cafe by accident, and eat tagine at a stall you cannot name. That said, a few things need booking or early arrival.
The great square of Marrakech transforms from a daytime market of orange juice sellers and henna artists into an evening carnival of food stalls, Gnawa musicians, acrobats, and storytellers. UNESCO declared it an Intangible Cultural Heritage. Watch from a rooftop cafe at 6pm as the stalls light up, then descend into it. The best free show in Africa.
Guided evening tours →The cobalt-blue garden created by French painter Jacques Majorelle and later owned by Yves Saint Laurent. Cacti, bamboo, fountains, and the famous Majorelle Blue buildings. Genuinely beautiful and always crowded. Book online and go at 8am. The adjacent Berber Museum is underrated and included in the ticket.
Book tickets →The traditional steam bath and scrub is a fundamental part of Moroccan culture. A proper hammam — not a tourist spa, a real neighbourhood one like Hammam Bab Doukkala — involves progressive hot rooms, a kessa (exfoliating mitt) scrub, black soap, and a clay mask. Leave time to sit afterwards. You will need it.
Book a hammam →The largest Islamic theological college in North Africa, built in the 14th century. The courtyard of carved cedar, stucco, and zellige tilework is one of the finest examples of Moroccan architecture anywhere. Less visited than Djemaa el-Fna because it requires walking deeper into the medina to find. This is exactly why you should go.
Guided tours →The souks are organised by craft: the dyers' souk (Souk Sabbaghin), the leather souk, the spice souk, the lantern makers, the carpet sellers. Each quarter has a distinct smell and sound. A guided first walk helps orientate you. After that, wandering alone is better. Bargain everywhere — starting price is typically 3–4 times the fair price.
Guided souk walk →Most classes start at the spice market, selecting ingredients before cooking tagine, pastilla, or couscous in a traditional kitchen. La Maison Arabe and Souk Cuisine both run excellent half-day classes. The market component is often the most educational part — learning to identify the 30-ingredient ras el hanout mix is genuinely useful.
Book a class →The medina is on foot. Everything else is petit taxi.
Inside the medina, almost all transport is on foot. The alleys are too narrow for cars and there is no public transport network within the old city walls. Between the medina and the Ville Nouvelle, petit taxis are cheap and widely available. Agree a price before getting in or insist on the meter.
Small red metered taxis that operate within Marrakech. Cheap and widely available. Drivers sometimes claim the meter is broken to negotiate a higher flat fare. Insist on the meter or use Careem (Uber equivalent). Never share with strangers.
15–40 MAD most journeysRide-hailing works in Marrakech via Careem (owned by Uber). Fixed prices, no negotiation, English app. The most stress-free option for getting between the medina and Gueliz or the airport.
25–60 MAD most journeysHorse-drawn carriages operate around the medina walls and Djemaa el-Fna. A tourist experience more than practical transport. Negotiate the price firmly before departing — starting offers are inflated. Useful for the circuit of the ramparts.
100–200 MAD per hour (negotiated)Menara Airport is 6km from the medina. Petit taxi costs 80–100 MAD (agree before getting in). Bus 19 runs to Djemaa el-Fna for 20 MAD but is slow. Pre-booking a transfer through your riad is often the easiest first-arrival option.
80–100 MAD (taxi)ONCF trains connect Marrakech to Casablanca (3h), Rabat (4h), and Fez (7h) from Marrakech Ville station in Gueliz. Reliable, comfortable, and the best way to travel between Moroccan cities. Book seats in advance for weekends.
90–200 MAD to CasablancaAn Airalo eSIM for Morocco is the simplest option for data. Local SIMs from Maroc Telecom, Orange Maroc, or Inwi are available at the airport and throughout the city. Good 4G coverage in Marrakech and the Atlas road.
SIM from 30 MAD / eSIM from €5Good value overall. Tourist prices and local prices are very different.
Marrakech has a dual pricing reality. Tourist-facing restaurants, souvenir shops, and guided tours charge European-adjacent prices. Local restaurants, market stalls, and neighbourhood hammams charge a fraction of that. The gap is larger here than almost anywhere in Europe. Eating where locals eat and navigating the souks independently saves significant money.
| Category | Budget (€30–50/day) | Mid-range (€80–150/day) | Comfortable (€200+/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | €12–25 Hostel riad or basic guesthouse |
€60–130 Mid-range riad with pool |
€200+ La Mamounia or Palmeraie resort |
| Food | €8–15 Local restaurants, harira, stalls |
€25–50 Riad dinner, restaurant tagine |
€80+ Royal Mansour dining, cooking class |
| Transport | €3–8 Petit taxi + walking |
€10–20 Careem + day trip transport |
€50+ Private driver, Atlas day trip |
| Activities | €5–15 Medersa, Djemaa el-Fna |
€30–60 Majorelle, hammam, souk tour |
€100+ Atlas day trip, hot air balloon |
Spring and autumn are perfect. Winter has its own magic.
Marrakech sits at the edge of the Saharan climate zone. Spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) offer the best balance of warmth, manageable crowds, and extraordinary light. Summer is genuinely hot and should not be underestimated. Winter is mild by day but can be cold at night — the Atlas Mountains are snowcapped from December to March and the light is extraordinary.
Safe city, persistent hassle. Know the difference.
Overall safety score — Low to Medium Risk
Violent crime against tourists is rare. The main issues are persistent touting, fake guides, commission scams, and harassment that can be wearing. Awareness and a firm manner resolve most situations.
The most common experience. Men offering to show you the way to somewhere you did not ask to go, leading to a shop or tannery where they earn commission. Decline firmly and keep walking. Saying you have a guide already works. The tanneries viewing platform scam — being led to a leather shop for the "free" view — is the most common version.
Snake charmers, monkey handlers, and henna women around Djemaa el-Fna will place their animal or begin applying henna without asking and then demand payment. Only engage if you have agreed a price in advance. Do not touch or photograph anything without explicit prior agreement.
The medina is generally safe at night. Djemaa el-Fna is busy and well-lit until midnight. The narrow alleys of the medina at 2am are quiet but not dangerous. Standard urban awareness applies. Harassment reduces significantly after dark.
Marrakech is manageable but not always comfortable for solo female travellers. Verbal harassment (catcalling, unsolicited following) occurs more frequently than in most European cities. Walking with purpose, dressing modestly (covered shoulders and knees in the medina), and ignoring rather than engaging with harassers are the most effective responses. The situation improves significantly away from the main tourist areas.
What the tour groups pay to miss.
The Atlas Mountains are an hour away. The Sahara is further but worth every minute.
Marrakech's position at the foot of the High Atlas makes it one of the best-positioned cities in Africa for dramatic day trips. Within two hours you can be in a Berber village at 2,000 metres. Within four hours you can be at the edge of the Sahara.
A Berber valley in the High Atlas foothills with a river, waterfalls at Setti Fatma, traditional villages, and argan cooperatives. The closest and easiest Atlas day trip from Marrakech. Best done with a local guide who can take you off the main tourist route.
Trekking in the High Atlas around Jebel Toubkal (4,167m, highest peak in North Africa). Day hikes to mountain villages and panoramic ridges are accessible without the multi-day summit attempt. Imlil village is the main trailhead.
The most filmed ksar (fortified village) in Morocco — Gladiator, Lawrence of Arabia, Game of Thrones. A UNESCO World Heritage mud-brick citadel on the edge of the pre-Saharan landscape. Usually combined with a visit to Ouarzazate ("the door of the desert") as a full day.
The orange sand dunes of Erg Chebbi near Merzouga. Technically too far for a day trip — the standard route takes two nights minimum, crossing the Atlas via the Draa Valley. One of the great road trips in Africa. Camel ride at sunrise over the dunes is the defining image. Book as an organised tour from Marrakech.
