Morocco stitches Atlantic surf towns, imperial medinas, High Atlas Berber valleys, and Sahara camp circuits into one country. Casablanca handles big jet volume while Marrakech, Fès, Chefchaouen, and the desert gateways each feel distinct—French and Darija bounce off each other in cities, and mountain hospitality differs from coastal pace. Ramadan, Friday rhythms, and seasonal heat shape how restaurants and services run.
Culture & etiquette
Dress a notch more modest than European beach defaults when walking medinas or villages—shoulders and knees covered reads as respect, not fear. Learn a few Darija pleasantries alongside French; haggling in souks is expected but keep humor and fairness. Photography of shopkeepers and artisans should be negotiated; never shoot people at prayer. Alcohol exists in tourist zones but disappears in conservative pockets—read the room.
Safety & situational awareness
Most visitors move safely with normal urban sense—pickpocketing and scams in dense medinas are the common annoyances. Remote border zones and parts of the desert south appear in some government advisories; do not improvise off-piste routes without local intel. Taxi disputes happen—use registered cabs or pre-booked transfers; ride-hailing works in larger cities where licensed.
Money, transport & connectivity
ATMs exist in cities; carry cash for medinas, taxis, and village markets. ONCF trains link major hubs; domestic flights save time to the deep south. Maroc Telecom/Inwi/Orange SIMs are straightforward—passport registration may be required at purchase.
Health & documents
Heat and dehydration are the everyday risks; diarrhoea happens—carry rehydration salts. Discuss hepatitis A/B and typhoid with your clinician. Some onward African itineraries still discuss yellow fever certificate rules—verify the latest map, not forum gossip.
Traveling respectfully
Buy crafts where artisans are paid fairly; ask about cooperatives. Desert camps should treat camel handlers and staff ethically—ask operators how wages and water use are managed.
Verify with official advisories
Check granular advisories for southern desert routes and border provinces before self-driving long legs.
What to do
- Carry small dirham notes for tips, taxis, and mint tea in cafés.
- Book riads and desert camps through reputable operators with clear inclusions.
- Confirm Atlas pass road status in winter—snow can surprise drivers.
- Keep a scarf for sun, dust, and entering religious sites.
- Download offline maps—medina alleys confuse even good GPS.
- Respect "no photo" signs in artisan workshops and some palaces.
- Tip guides, drivers, and porters in line with posted norms where shown.
- Hydrate on desert legs; carry electrolytes in summer.
- Pair city nights with buffer recovery days—medina sensory load is real.
- Verify hammam etiquette (gender hours, what to bring) before arrival.
What to avoid
- Don't photograph military or royal installations.
- Don't accept "free" guiding in souks without agreeing a price first.
- Don't drink tap water outside hotels that explicitly treat it.
- Don't discuss Western Sahara politics loudly with strangers.
- Don't assume every vendor's first price is insulting—negotiate politely.
- Don't drive mountain passes at night without experience.
- Don't skip travel insurance covering medical evacuation from remote lodges.
- Don't wear shoes into carpeted prayer spaces unless invited.
- Don't litter trails—mountain communities notice.
- Don't promise donations to children you won't follow through on.