14 Days Morocco Tour from Marrakech β€” private Morocco tour departing from Marrakech
Extendedβ˜…β˜…β˜…β˜…β˜… 5.0 TripAdvisor

14 Days Morocco Tour from Marrakech

⏱ 14 Days Β· 13 NightsπŸš— Private TourπŸ“ Marrakech β†’ MarrakechπŸ“… Available Year-round

Tour Overview

A grand 14-day Moroccan circuit starting and ending in Marrakech. Cross mountains, desert, imperial cities, and Atlantic coastline with a balanced pace and immersive local experiences.

Tour Highlights

  • βœ“Marrakech medina
  • βœ“Ait Benhaddou and High Atlas
  • βœ“Merzouga luxury camp
  • βœ“Fez and Chefchaouen
  • βœ“Tangier and Atlantic coast
  • βœ“Essaouira retreat

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day1

Day 1

Arrival in Marrakech

Arrive at Marrakech Menara Airport β€” named after the 12th-century Almoravid garden pavilion visible from the runway β€” for a private welcome transfer to your riad in the heart of the ancient medina. Marrakech is known as the "Red City" for its distinctive rose-pink pisΓ© (rammed earth) walls, built in the 12th century by the Almoravid dynasty as a defensive barrier that still encircles the old city for 19 kilometres, their warm terracotta colour coming from the iron-rich local earth that has been recycled and rebuilt over nine centuries. The transfer through the medina's outer avenues gives a first glimpse of the scale and energy of this extraordinary city: mopeds threading between horse-drawn caleches, market carts stacked with oranges, and the distant call of the Koutoubia minaret drifting over the rooftops. Settle into your riad β€” a traditional Moroccan townhouse arranged inward around a central courtyard fountain, its exterior blank and defensive, its interior an oasis of carved stucco, painted cedarwood ceilings, and citrus trees β€” over a welcome glass of fresh mint tea. Venture out for a first evening on the legendary Jemaa el-Fna: a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage site and thousand-year-old communal gathering space where Gnaoua musicians, traditional storytellers (hlayqiya) who have practised their craft in an unbroken oral tradition for centuries, acrobats, snake charmers, henna artists, and steaming food stalls of harira soup and merguez sausage create a sensory spectacle that has continued every evening for a millennium.

🏨 Riad in Marrakech
ArrivalMarrakechJemaa el-Fna
Day2

Day 2

Full Day in Marrakech

A full guided day in Marrakech's UNESCO-listed medina with a local licensed guide. Begin at the 12th-century Koutoubia Mosque β€” Marrakech's tallest landmark at 70 metres and the architectural model that inspired two of the Islamic world's other great towers: Seville's Giralda (built 1184) and Rabat's Hassan Tower (begun 1195). The minaret's original surface was reportedly covered in glittering copper tiles that caught the desert sun for miles across the Haouz Plain; today its geometric carved stone and ceramic decoration remains among the finest Almohad stonework surviving. Visit the opulent Bahia Palace, built between 1894 and 1900 for Grand Vizier Ahmed ibn Moussa: 160 rooms arranged around eight riyads and two large courtyard gardens of carved cedarwood ceilings, painted stucco muqarnas, and intricately patterned zellige tilework surrounded by orange and lemon trees. The palace's name means "brilliance" and it was designed to be the greatest palace of its era in Morocco β€” a statement of personal power that has outlasted its builder. Explore the Saadian Tombs: a 16th-century royal necropolis of 66 tombs built by the Saadian dynasty and then sealed by Sultan Moulay Ismail after he ousted them, remaining hidden for 300 years until rediscovered in 1917 by aerial photography. The central chamber's 12 Italian Carrara marble columns and golden stalactite stucco vaulting rank among the finest interior spaces in Moroccan art history. Visit the Majorelle Garden β€” 2.5 acres designed in the 1920s by French painter Jacques Majorelle, famous for its cobalt-blue buildings painted in a colour Majorelle mixed from powdered lapis lazuli, restored and owned by Yves Saint Laurent from 1980 until his death in 2008, his ashes scattered in the garden. Navigate Marrakech's specialised souks: the Rahba Kedima spice square where traditional apothecary stalls display dried chameleons, animal skulls, and magical powders alongside saffron and cumin; the copper metalwork quarter where hammers ring from dawn to dusk on geometric lanterns and tagine pots; and the leather dyers' lanes where natural plant dye vats in ochre and terracotta colour the walls.

🏨 Riad in Marrakech
Bahia PalaceSaadian TombsKoutoubiaSouks
Day3

Day 3

Marrakech to Dades via Ait Benhaddou

Depart Marrakech through the Berber villages of the High Atlas foothills and ascend the spectacular Tizi n'Tichka Pass β€” at 2,260 metres Morocco's highest paved mountain road, built by the French Foreign Legion in 1936 through some of the most challenging terrain in North Africa, its sweeping switchbacks offering panoramic views over the Atlas ranges in both directions at the summit. Stop at the atmospheric ruins of Telouet Kasbah β€” the crumbling palace of Pasha T'hami el Glaoui, the most powerful non-royal figure in Moroccan history, who allied with the French Protectorate and controlled all trans-Atlas trade routes until Moroccan independence in 1956. After independence his fortune collapsed overnight; the elaborate carved cedar salons and painted stucco reception rooms he built have been slowly yielding to the elements for seven decades, their extraordinary decorative detail still visible in the half-open ruin. Descend to the UNESCO World Heritage ksar of Ait Benhaddou with a local guide: cross the Oued Mellah on stepping stones to explore the six interconnected mud-brick kasbahs that have served as a film location for Lawrence of Arabia, Gladiator, Game of Thrones, Babel, and Kingdom of Heaven, and learn about the ksar's 1,500 years of history as a waypoint on the Timbuktu-to-Marrakech trans-Saharan caravan route. Climb through the kasbahs to the upper granary tower for panoramic views. Continue east through the Skoura oasis (30 sq km of date palms sheltering the 18th-century Amridil Kasbah), the Rose Valley of Kalaat Mgouna β€” where 4,000 tonnes of damask rose petals are harvested annually for Chanel, Dior, and Lancome, and where rose water distillation cooperatives line the main road each spring β€” and arrive in the Dades Valley as the canyon walls glow ochre-red in the evening light.

🏨 Riad in Boumalne Dades
High AtlasTizi n'TichkaAit BenhaddouRose Valley
Day4

Day 4

Dades to Merzouga via Todra Gorge

Begin the morning with a walk in the Dades Gorges among the extraordinary "Monkey Fingers" rock formations β€” pale limestone towers sculpted by centuries of differential erosion into organic finger-like pillars, some reaching 20 metres above the valley floor, their forms completely unlike any other geological feature in Morocco. The Road of a Thousand Kasbahs runs through this valley, its name reflecting the remarkable density of earthen fortresses that line the ancient trans-Saharan trade corridor; many are still inhabited, their mud-brick walls blending perfectly with the canyon strata. The communal ksar system of shared granaries and water distribution networks that sustained desert communities for centuries is explained by your guide at one of the better-preserved examples. Drive east to Todra Gorge: 300-metre limestone walls rise sheer above a cool, clear river in a canyon so narrow that direct sunlight reaches the canyon floor for only a brief window each day. Walk the full length of the gorge corridor β€” the walls sometimes less than 10 metres apart β€” and understand why Todra has become a premier rock-climbing destination with over 150 established routes attracting European alpinists each season. Continue through Erfoud's fossil marble workshops (Devonian-era trilobites and ammonites embedded in black limestone, 350 million years old, cut and polished into decorative objects) and Rissani β€” ancient capital of the Tafilalt, birthplace of Morocco's Alaouite royal dynasty, and home to the Moulay Ali Sherif mausoleum, the dynasty's founding tomb. Arrive in Merzouga as the afternoon light turns Erg Chebbi copper-gold. Mount your camel for a sunset trek across the towering dunes β€” some reaching 150 metres across a sand sea of 50 square kilometres β€” to your luxury Berber camp for a traditional tagine feast, live drumming around the campfire, and extraordinary stargazing in one of Africa's darkest skies.

🏨 Luxury camp in Merzouga
Monkey FingersTodra GorgeRissaniCamel TrekErg Chebbi
Day5

Day 5

Merzouga Desert Adventure

Rise before dawn to climb a dune crest and witness one of the world's great natural spectacles: the Sahara sunrise, a breathtaking slow transformation as the sky shifts from deep indigo through copper and amber to brilliant gold, the dune shadows stretching across the sand sea as the first light sweeps in from the eastern horizon. Return by camel for a nomad-style breakfast: a Berber omelette cooked over a clay brazier, fresh-baked khobz bread, amlou (roasted almonds ground with argan oil and honey), and three successive pours of mint tea β€” each pour in Berber tradition representing a different stage of life: the first bitter as death, the second strong as love, the third sweet as life. Take a morning 4x4 excursion to Khamlia β€” a village of the Gnaoua people, descendants of sub-Saharan Africans brought to Morocco through the trans-Saharan slave trade over several centuries. Their ritual music β€” played on the guembri (a three-stringed bass lute) and iron hand-castanets called krakebs, with call-and-response chanting β€” is a UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage and remains an active spiritual healing ceremony practised in Morocco's cities and rural communities. Visit a nomadic Berber family in their traditional goat-hair tent: learn about the seasonal desert migrations that follow water and pasture between winter lowlands and summer highland grounds, the oral poetry traditions (tifinagh script, one of the world's oldest writing systems, developed by the ancient Amazigh people), and the community bonds that sustain desert life across generations. Explore remote fossil-rich riverbeds and hidden oases in the afternoon. Optional activities include sandboarding on the steep dune faces, quad biking across the open desert floor, or a second sunset camel ride along the Erg Chebbi crests as the light turns the sand sea golden.

🏨 Camp or riad in Merzouga
Sunrise4x4KhamliaGnaoua MusicNomads
Day6

Day 6

Merzouga to Fez via Middle Atlas

Return by camel from the sunrise dunes and depart Merzouga heading north, entering the spectacular Ziz Valley β€” Morocco's largest and most beautiful palm grove, a 70-kilometre ribbon of thousands of date palms of dozens of varieties following the Ziz River through ochre canyon walls. The underground khettara irrigation channels that feed this extraordinary oasis have functioned without interruption for over 1,000 years, channelling groundwater from the High Atlas through hand-dug tunnels that maintain a constant gentle gradient across the desert floor β€” one of the great hydraulic engineering achievements of the medieval world. The valley narrows dramatically into the Ziz Gorges, where the river has carved a deep canyon through layers of red and ochre limestone, before opening onto the high plains of Errachidia. Ascend into the Middle Atlas through Midelt β€” at 1,488 metres Morocco's apple capital, its mountain cooperatives producing varieties of apple that thrive only at high altitude between the two Atlas ranges, the town also known for mineral crystal workshops and Berber carpet cooperatives where geometric patterns encode generations of tribal identity. Continue to the ancient cedar forest of Azrou, where wild Barbary macaques β€” Africa's only primates indigenous to the continent north of the Sahara, living in social groups of up to 100 individuals β€” roam freely among the Atlas cedars and regularly approach roadside visitors with a disarming confidence that makes an encounter with them one of Morocco's most memorable wildlife experiences. Pass through the pristine alpine town of Ifrane β€” founded by the French Protectorate in 1929 at 1,665 metres, its European-style stone chalets and manicured parks earning it the immediate nickname "Switzerland of Morocco," its famous stone lion sculpture carved by a German prisoner of war during World War II β€” before descending toward Fez for an evening walk through the lantern-lit lanes of the ancient medina.

🏨 Riad in Fez
Ziz ValleyMideltAzrouBarbary MacaquesIfrane
Day7

Day 7

Full Day in Fez Medina

Spend a full day in Fez el-Bali with a local licensed guide navigating the world's largest car-free urban area β€” 9,000 alleys, a UNESCO World Heritage city, and a place where medieval life has remained largely unchanged for 1,200 years. The medina was founded in 789 AD by Idris I and expanded by his son Idris II, who brought settlers from both Kairouan (Tunisia) and Cordoba (Spain), giving Fez its unique character as a synthesis of Arab, Andalusian, Berber, and Jewish cultures layered over a thousand years. Visit Al-Qarawiyyin University β€” founded in 859 AD by Fatima al-Fihri, a woman from a wealthy Kairouan merchant family, recognised by UNESCO and the Guinness World Records as the world's oldest continuously operating university, its mosque still welcoming scholars as it has for 1,165 years. Stand before the extraordinary Bou Inania Madrasa (built 1350-1357): carved cedarwood panels rising to the ceiling, stucco geometric patterns in 47 distinct designs, and zellige tilework below β€” with an ingenious water clock mechanism in the street outside whose exact operation remains debated by scholars. View the Chouara Tanneries from a rooftop terrace: a honeycomb of stone vats filled with vats of saffron yellow (pomegranate), poppy red, indigo blue, and henna brown dye β€” a tanning process unchanged since the 11th century, the workers standing barefoot in the vats using their own body heat to set the colour. Walk past the Royal Palace's extraordinary golden brass gates (seven sets of doors, each cast in polished brass with geometric star patterns), through the Mellah Jewish Quarter established in 1438 (one of the oldest Jewish quarters in North Africa), and to the Nejjarine woodworking museum in a beautifully restored 18th-century funduq (caravanserai). Climb the Borj Nord fortress for a panoramic view that reveals the full extraordinary scale of the 1,200-year-old city below.

🏨 Riad in Fez
Fez MedinaBou InaniaAl-QarawiyyinTanneriesMellah
Day8

Day 8

Fez to Chefchaouen via Volubilis and Meknes

Travel west to Volubilis β€” a UNESCO World Heritage site and the best-preserved Roman city in North Africa, the former western capital of Rome's Mauretania Tingitana province. At its 3rd-century peak, Volubilis housed 20,000 inhabitants and exported olive oil, wheat, and wild animals (for the gladiatorial games) to Rome via Tangier's port. A local guide reveals the stories behind the intact mosaic floors of the Labours of Hercules, Bacchus and the Four Seasons, and Orpheus charming the animals β€” each a masterwork of Roman decorative art produced by North African artisans. The Triumphal Arch of 217 AD, built to honour Emperor Caracalla, still stands 8 metres high; the Capitoline Temple of Jupiter, Juno and Minerva overlooks the olive presses and forum that once powered the city's economy. The site was abandoned in the 11th century when the Almoravid dynasty shifted economic power south; its marble columns were quarried by Moulay Ismail for his new capital at Meknes. Continue to Meknes: Sultan Moulay Ismail (reigned 1672-1727) built his imperial capital as a deliberate rival to Versailles, employing 30,000 Christian slaves and 50,000 Moroccan workers. Stand before the monumental Bab Mansour gateway β€” the finest ceremonial gate in North Africa, completed 1732, its horseshoe arch decorated with zellige tilework and flanked by columns quarried directly from Volubilis β€” and visit the Mausoleum of Moulay Ismail, one of Morocco's most sacred shrines, and the vast royal granaries and stables reportedly built for 12,000 horses. Arrive in Chefchaouen as evening falls over the Rif Mountains, the Blue Pearl's azure and cobalt lanes glowing in the last light β€” a colour tradition established by Jewish Andalusian refugees who settled here in the 15th century after the Spanish Reconquista.

🏨 Riad in Chefchaouen
VolubilisMeknesBab MansourChefchaouen
Day9

Day 9

Chefchaouen to Tangier

Begin the morning in Chefchaouen with a leisurely exploration of its iconic azure and cobalt lanes β€” every surface in the medina painted in shades of blue that range from the palest sky-blue to deep indigo, a tradition established by Jewish Andalusian refugees who settled here in the 15th century after the Spanish Reconquista, the colour symbolising the sky and heaven. Visit the Kasbah ethnographic museum in the central plaza, the 15th-century Uta el-Hammam square with its fountain and ancient mosque, and the artisan workshops producing natural-dyed woollen djellabas and hand-embroidered blankets in the traditional geometric patterns of the Rif Mountains. Climb to the Spanish Mosque on the hillside above the city for panoramic views over the blue rooftops and the surrounding Rif peaks β€” a view that appears in almost every travel image of Chefchaouen and remains, in person, breathtaking at any time of day. Drive north through the dramatic Rif Mountains to Tangier, Morocco's legendary cosmopolitan gateway between two continents. Stop at Cap Spartel β€” the northwesternmost point of the African continent, where the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea converge in a visible line of different-coloured waters, marked by a lighthouse built in 1864 and maintained collectively by European nations to protect merchant shipping. Descend to the Caves of Hercules: a natural sea cave carved over millennia by the combined action of waves and ancient Berber millstone-cutting, its seaward opening shaped unmistakably like the silhouette of the African continent β€” the legendary site where Hercules rested before performing his last labour of stealing the Golden Apples of the Hesperides. Explore Tangier's medina and kasbah β€” once an international zone under joint European control (1923-1956), its freewheeling status attracting Paul Bowles, William Burroughs, Matisse, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, whose legacy lingers in the city's cosmopolitan cafes and literary culture.

🏨 Hotel in Tangier
ChefchaouenTangierCap SpartelCaves of Hercules
Day10

Day 10

Tangier to Casablanca via Rabat

Drive south along Morocco's Atlantic coast, stopping in Asilah β€” a 15th-century Portuguese fortified town whose cobalt-and-white medina walls are covered each August with enormous international murals created during the Festival of Asilah, one of Africa's most celebrated arts festivals. The Portuguese ramparts still encircle the old town intact, the Atlantic crashing against their base on three sides, and the quiet medina lanes inside are lined with art galleries and whitewashed houses spilling bougainvillea over blue window frames. Continue south to Rabat, Morocco's modern capital and an imperial city of striking historical monuments. The Hassan Tower β€” a 12th-century Almohad minaret begun by Sultan Yacoub al-Mansour, intended to be the world's largest mosque but whose construction halted at his death in 1199, leaving only a forest of 360 columns of the intended prayer hall and the unfinished minaret standing at 44 metres (intended height: 86 metres) β€” conveys both the extraordinary ambition and the sudden vulnerability of medieval dynasties. The adjacent Mausoleum of Mohammed V (completed 1971) is the finest example of modern Moroccan royal architecture: Italian Carrara marble, hand-carved cedarwood ceilings, and zellige tilework produced by the last generation of truly traditional Moroccan master craftsmen, guarded by soldiers in traditional dress at the four corners of the open tomb chamber. Explore the 17th-century Oudaya Kasbah β€” its blue-and-white alleys perched dramatically above the Bou Regreg estuary where it meets the Atlantic β€” before continuing to Casablanca, Morocco's economic capital and largest city, for an evening along the illuminated Corniche seafront.

🏨 Hotel in Casablanca
AsilahRabatHassan TowerOudayaCasablanca
Day11

Day 11

Casablanca to Essaouira

Begin with a guided visit inside the Hassan II Mosque β€” completed in 1993 and one of the world's largest mosques, its 210-metre minaret the tallest religious structure on earth, built partially over the Atlantic Ocean on reclaimed land so that worshippers could pray literally above the sea as instructed in the Quran. The retractable glass roof can slide open to reveal the sky during prayer; 10,000 Moroccan artisans worked for five years to complete the interior of Italian marble, hand-carved Atlas cedar, and zellige tilework β€” it holds 25,000 worshippers inside and 80,000 more on the esplanade. Drive south through the argan forests of the Souss-Massa region β€” the Argania spinosa tree grows naturally only in this corner of Morocco, a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, and goats famously climb the branches to reach the bitter fruit that birds and goats digest to expose the nut inside. Stop at a women's cooperative where traditional stone-grinding extracts the argan oil used in both cosmetics and cooking, and taste amlou β€” the Berber paste of roasted almonds, argan oil, and honey. Arrive in Essaouira β€” the "Wind City of Africa" β€” whose UNESCO World Heritage medina was built in 1764 for Sultan Mohammed III to a rational grid plan by French military engineer ThΓ©odore Cornut, giving it an unusually geometric structure quite unlike any other Moroccan medina. Explore the Skala Kasbah sea walls lined with 18th-century Portuguese cannons trained over the Atlantic, the busy fishing port where sardines and sea bream are unloaded every afternoon, and the medina's lanes of art galleries and thuya wood workshops β€” the thuya burr wood, unique to Morocco's Atlantic coast, producing extraordinary grain patterns in decorative boxes and furniture. Orson Welles shot his acclaimed 1949 film Othello in Essaouira's towers and ramparts, and a statue of him now stands near the seafront in acknowledgement.

🏨 Hotel in Essaouira
Hassan II MosqueArgan ForestEssaouiraSkala Kasbah
Day12

Day 12

Leisure Day in Essaouira

A free day to experience Essaouira at your own unhurried pace. Walk the long Atlantic beach β€” stretching south for kilometres with unbroken views of the ancient ramparts to the north and the offshore Purpuraire Islands where Berber kings of Mauretania once produced Tyrian purple dye from Murex sea snails for Roman togas, the most expensive pigment in the ancient world. The beach's consistent AlizΓ© trade winds β€” which blow most afternoons from the northwest β€” make the stretch around Moulay Bouzerktoun to the north one of the world's top ten kitesurfing destinations, holding multiple world records; boards and instruction are available from several beach schools. Browse independent art galleries in the medina β€” Essaouira has attracted painters, sculptors, and musicians for decades, its light, Atlantic air, and relaxed pace creating an artists' colony atmosphere unlike any other Moroccan city. Explore thuya wood marquetry workshops in depth: the thuya burr wood, harvested from the root of the Atlas thuya tree found only on Morocco's Atlantic coast, produces extraordinary natural grain patterns that craftsmen exploit in decorative boxes, chess sets, and furniture β€” a craft tradition that has sustained Essaouira's artisan community for centuries. Choose your fish from the display at the harbour stalls β€” sardines, sea bream, sole, or the day's catch β€” and watch it grilled to order on charcoal beside the boats as the afternoon fishing fleet returns. If visiting in June, the Gnaoua and World Music Festival transforms the entire city into a multi-stage concert venue for four extraordinary days.

🏨 Hotel in Essaouira
Atlantic BeachKitesurfingArt GalleriesSeafood
Day13

Day 13

Essaouira to Marrakech

A final morning stroll through Essaouira's medina before departure β€” the light in Essaouira in the early morning, before the AlizΓ© wind builds, has the crystalline Atlantic clarity that first attracted painters like Delacroix to Morocco in the 19th century. Drive inland through argan forests and the broad Haouz Plain β€” Morocco's most fertile wheat-growing region, stretching flat to the foot of the High Atlas β€” to Marrakech, arriving for a final afternoon and evening in the imperial city. Revisit the Jemaa el-Fna if you wish: the square has operated continuously for a thousand years without ceasing, its nightly assembly of performers, storytellers, musicians, and food vendors surviving even the French Protectorate's attempts to suppress it. The UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage listing in 2001 was in part a recognition of the square's unique role as a living, continuous oral tradition. Choose a farewell dinner that captures the depth of Marrakech's culinary heritage: pastilla β€” the extraordinary flaky warka pastry filled with pigeon, almonds, cinnamon, and icing sugar, a dish with clear medieval Andalusian origins brought to Morocco by Muslim refugees from Cordoba and Seville β€” represents Moroccan cuisine at its most sophisticated. Or try tangia: the Marrakech speciality of lamb or beef slow-cooked overnight in a sealed clay urn buried in the embers of the hammam furnace, developed historically by young unmarried Marrakchi men who could not cook at home and left their urn with the hammam keeper each morning, collecting it in the evening. Each dish is a history of Morocco in a single serving.

🏨 Riad in Marrakech
ReturnJemaa el-FnaFarewell DinnerMarrakech
Day14

Day 14

Departure from Marrakech

Private transfer to Marrakech Menara Airport β€” named after the 12th-century Almoravid garden pavilion whose distinctive pyramid-roofed pavilion is visible from the runway approach, its reflection in the vast ornamental pool below unchanged since it was built to supply the Almoravid palace gardens. As the car crosses the Haouz Plain toward the airport, the High Atlas Mountains rise to the south in their final panoramic display β€” snow-capped peaks in winter and spring, their ridgelines shaping the horizon that has defined Moroccan civilization for millennia, from the Berber tribal confederacies of the ancient Atlas to the trans-Saharan caravan routes that made Morocco one of the medieval world's great trading crossroads. Fourteen days in Morocco offers only a glimpse of the extraordinary layering of Berber, Arab, Andalusian, Jewish, French, and sub-Saharan African cultures that have each left their mark on the country's language, food, music, architecture, and identity β€” a palimpsest of civilisations that takes a lifetime to begin to understand, and that makes even the most experienced traveller want to return. Morocco bids farewell in the only way it knows: with warmth, colour, and the promise of more.

🏨 Tour ends in Marrakech
DepartureAirport Transfer

What's Included

βœ… Included

  • Daily breakfast
  • Selected dinners
  • Camel ride in Sahara
  • Private air-conditioned vehicle
  • Professional English-speaking driver-guide
  • Handpicked riads/hotels

❌ Not Included

  • Entry fees to monuments
  • Most lunches and dinners
  • Beverages
  • International/domestic flights

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this a private tour?+
Yes, all Fez Cultural Tours are 100% private. You will never share your vehicle or guide with strangers. Every tour is exclusively for you and your group, allowing us to tailor the pace and stops to your preferences.
What is included in the 14-day tour?+
This tour includes: Daily breakfast; Selected dinners; Camel ride in Sahara; Private air-conditioned vehicle; Professional English-speaking driver-guide; Handpicked riads/hotels.
What is not included?+
Not included in the tour price: Entry fees to monuments; Most lunches and dinners; Beverages; International/domestic flights.
What is the best time of year for this tour?+
The best times are spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) when temperatures are comfortable. Summer is very hot in the Sahara (40Β°C+), while winter nights can be cold but days remain beautiful.
Can we customise the itinerary?+
Absolutely. Every itinerary can be tailored to your interests, pace, and travel goals. Contact us via WhatsApp (+212 697 540 383) and we will craft a personalised route for you.
How do I book and what is the payment process?+
Contact us via WhatsApp or our enquiry form β€” no commitment needed. Once you approve the itinerary, a 20% deposit secures your dates. The balance is paid in cash (Euros or MAD) to your guide on the first day.
Is this tour suitable for families and seniors?+
Yes. We adapt the pace, accommodation, and activities for families with children and senior travellers. Please mention any special requirements when booking so we can plan accordingly.