Traveler planning a trip to Morocco with a map, notebook and mint tea

Morocco in 2026: Start Here (From a Local Guide)

If you’re planning Morocco in 2026 and feeling a bit overwhelmed – don’t worry. I’m Youness, a licensed guide based in Marrakech and owner of Morkosh Tours. I’ve pulled together the essential pages you actually need to plan a safe, realistic trip without getting lost in 100 tabs.

Use this page as your starting point and open each guide in a new tab to build your route shwiya b’shwiya.

Table of Contents

1. First: Understand Morocco in 2026

Collage of Marrakech medina, Atlas Mountains and Sahara desert dunes
Most good Morocco itineraries mix cities, mountains and desert rather than chasing everything.

Start with my main travel hub:

This covers:

  • When to visit (seasons, Ramadan, heat, rain)
  • Visa basics and entry requirements
  • Overview of cities, mountains, Sahara and coast
  • Example 7–10–14 day itineraries

If you only read one long page before you book flights, make it this one.


2. Money, ATMs, SIM & eSIM: Set Up Your “Life Support”

Before you land, you want two things sorted: money and data.

Money & SIM (Pillar)

Covers:

  • How the Dirham works, ATM tips, card vs cash
  • Wise vs Revolut vs home bank cards
  • Big picture of SIM vs eSIM in Morocco

SIM Card – Avoid Airport Traps

Very practical:

  • Where to buy SIM (airport vs city)
  • What it should cost in 2026
  • How to set it up shwiya b’shwiya

ESIM Morocco 2026

Good if you want to:

  • Land already connected
  • Avoid language issues at SIM shops
  • Compare the best eSIMs for Morocco and see how much data you really need

3. Is Morocco Safe? (Especially for Americans & Solo Travellers)

Honest safety info, not fearmongering.

These cover:

  • How safe Morocco feels in real life
  • City‑by‑city notes (Marrakech, Fes, Casablanca, Chefchaouen, Tangier)
  • Solo female tips
  • Scams and annoyances to expect (so they don’t shock you)

Travel Insurance for Morocco

Important if you plan:

  • Sahara desert tours, camel rides, quads
  • Atlas trekking
  • Bringing cameras, laptops and phones you’d cry over

4. Getting Around Morocco: Trains, Buses, Taxis & Drivers

Illustrated map of Morocco with main travel bases highlighted
From this hub you can jump to guides on each major region and base in Morocco.

Once your flights are set, the next question is: how do I move between cities?

Explains:

  • When to use ONCF trains (and the Al Boraq high‑speed line)
  • When CTM / Supratours buses are better
  • How petit and grand taxis really work
  • When rental cars and private drivers (like Morkosh Tours) are worth it

If you’re landing in Casablanca and heading straight to Marrakech:


5. Where to Stay in Morocco: Best Bases, Not Just Pretty Rooms

Instead of booking random hotels, think in bases by route.

Shows:

  • Best areas in Marrakech, Fes, Chefchaouen, Tangier, Casablanca
  • Where to stay in the Atlas Mountains, Sahara and coast
  • How to choose a mix of riads, hotels, desert camps and mountain lodges

For deeper city‑level detail:


6. Key Day Trips & Tours (High‑Value Days)

These are the days many guests remember most, and they’re also where bad choices hurt the most.

From Marrakech

And the overview:

From Fes


7. Final Step: Plug Into a Real Itinerary

Once you understand:

…you’re ready to plug everything into a real route:

You’ll find 3, 7, 10 and 14‑day examples that show exactly how long to spend in each place, and where the Sahara, Atlas, Chefchaouen and Essaouira actually fit.

If you want a second pair of eyes on your plan – or you’d like me to help with private transfers, day trips or a full tour – you can always reach out through Morkosh Tours. I’m happy to tell you what I’d honestly do with your dates and budget, not just what looks good on Instagram.