2 WEEKS MOROCCO ITINERARY FROM CASABLANCA

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CASABLANCA PRIVATE DESERT TOUR



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    2 WEEKS MOROCCO ITINERARY FROM CASABLANCA

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    PRIVATE TOUR — 2 WEEKS MOROCCO ITINERARY FROM CASABLANCA

    OVERVIEW

    Two weeks is the length where Morocco stops feeling like a highlights reel and starts feeling like a proper trip. This itinerary adds Tangier, Asilah, and an extra day in Chefchaouen to the standard loop, then runs the full route south to the Sahara, across the Atlas, into Marrakech, and west to Essaouira before closing back in Casablanca.

    You’ll have seen both coasts (Mediterranean and Atlantic), three imperial cities (Rabat, Fes, Meknes), Roman ruins, a UNESCO-listed kasbah, two mountain ranges, a night in the desert with a full off-road exploration day, and two UNESCO-listed medinas by the time it’s over. It’s a lot of country, but paced across 14 days it’s manageable rather than exhausting.

    Every itinerary is fully customisable to suit your preferences and pace.

    DURATION: 14 DAYS / 13 NIGHTS
    START: CASABLANCA
    END: CASABLANCA
    TOUR STYLE: PRIVATE

    HIGHLIGHTS

    – The Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca
    – Rabat — Hassan Tower and Kasbah of the Udayas
    – The Mediterranean coast — Tangier, Cape Spartel, Caves of Hercules
    – Asilah — a fortified seaside town with Andalusian roots
    – Chefchaouen, Morocco’s blue city, with a full day to explore
    – The Roman ruins of Volubilis
    – Imperial Meknes — Bab el Mansour and the Mausoleum of Moulay Ismail
    – A full guided day in the Fes medina
    – Camel trekking across the Erg Chebbi dunes
    – Sunset and sunrise over the Sahara
    – A night under the stars in a luxury desert camp
    – A full day exploring the Merzouga desert by 4×4
    – Visiting a Berber nomad family in their tent
    – Hearing live Gnawa music in the village of Khamlia
    – The abandoned galena mines at M’Fis
    – A walk through the Todra Gorge
    – The “monkey fingers” rock formations of the Dades Valley
    – The UNESCO-listed Kasbah of Ait Ben Haddou
    – A full guided day in Marrakech
    – Two days in Essaouira on the Atlantic
    – Crossing the High Atlas via the Tizi n’Tichka pass

    ITINERARY

    DAY 1: CASABLANCA → RABAT

    Your tour starts with a pick-up at Mohammed V International Airport. First stop is the Hassan II Mosque — one of the largest mosques in the world, built partly out over the Atlantic, with one of the tallest minarets anywhere.

    From Casablanca we drive to Rabat, Morocco’s capital, for a quick tour: the Hassan Tower (the unfinished 12th-century minaret) and the Kasbah of the Udayas, a small fortified neighbourhood overlooking the river mouth. End of the day at your Rabat accommodation.

    If your flight arrives at night, we’ll take you directly to a Casablanca hotel instead and start the tour properly the following morning.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 128 km / 2 hours 10 minutes

    DAY 2: RABAT → ASILAH → TANGIER

    After breakfast, the drive north along the Atlantic coast to Tangier, where the Mediterranean and the Atlantic meet. Tangier has a long, multicultural history — at various points run by Phoenicians, Romans, Portuguese, Spanish, and as an international zone before independence — and it shows in the city’s architecture and feel.

    On the way, we stop at Asilah, a small fortified seaside town on the Atlantic coast. Asilah has strong Andalusian influences in its whitewashed walls and painted murals — a quiet, photogenic place to break up the drive.

    You’ll arrive in Tangier in the afternoon, check in, and have time to explore. Cape Spartel (the headland where the Mediterranean meets the Atlantic) and the Caves of Hercules nearby are both worth the short drive out from town. Overnight in Tangier.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 258 km / 2 hours 54 minutes

    DAY 3: TANGIER → CHEFCHAOUEN

    After breakfast, a relatively short drive south through the Rif Mountains to Chefchaouen — only about two hours, with mountain views most of the way.

    You’ll arrive in time for lunch and have the afternoon to settle in at your hotel or riad and start exploring the medina at your own pace. The blue alleys, small souks, and old kasbah at the centre of the town are all within easy walking distance. Overnight in Chefchaouen.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 112 km / 2 hours 15 minutes

    DAY 4: FULL DAY IN CHEFCHAOUEN

    A full day to explore Chefchaouen at your own pace. The 15th-century kasbah at the heart of the old town has a small museum and gardens worth a visit. For the best view, hike up to the Spanish Mosque on the hill east of town in the late afternoon — the climb takes about 30 minutes and the panorama over the blue town at sunset is the photo most people come for.

    The rest of the day is up to you: cafés, photographs, the small souks, lunch on a rooftop somewhere. The town is small enough that you won’t run out of things to see, and quiet enough that you can take it slowly.

    DAY 5: CHEFCHAOUEN → VOLUBILIS → MEKNES → FES

    After breakfast, we leave Chefchaouen and drive south through the Rif villages and central Moroccan farmland. First stop is Volubilis, the best-preserved Roman site in Morocco — large mosaics still in situ, alongside the basilica, triumphal arch, and public baths dating to around the 3rd century.

    From Volubilis we continue to Meknes, the 17th-century imperial capital under Sultan Moulay Ismail. After lunch in town, we walk through the medina to see Bab el Mansour — one of the most decorated city gates in Morocco — and the Mausoleum of Moulay Ismail.

    The day ends in Fes, where you’ll sleep in a riad inside the old medina.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 260 km / 4 hours 30 minutes

    DAY 6: GUIDED TOUR OF FES

    Full day in Fes with a local guide. Fes is one of Morocco’s four imperial cities and arguably its cultural and religious heart — the medina is UNESCO-listed and one of the largest car-free urban areas in the world. Trying to navigate it without a guide usually means seeing maybe a third of what’s worth seeing and getting lost for the rest.

    The day starts at the golden gate of the Royal Palace, then moves into the medina proper. You’ll see Al-Qarawiyyin University (founded in 859 AD, often cited as the oldest continuously operating university in the world), the Al-Attarine Madrasa, the Nejjarine fountain, and the Chouara tanneries — the famous open-air dye pits, best viewed from the leather shops on the surrounding terraces.

    The afternoon takes you through the Mellah, the old Jewish quarter, before climbing up to an old fortress on the hills above the city for a panoramic view over the medina. Back to your riad for the night.

    DAY 7: FES → IFRANE → MIDDLE ATLAS → ZIZ VALLEY → MERZOUGA

    The long desert day. After breakfast we head south, with a first stop in Ifrane — a small mountain town with chalet-style houses and pine trees, often called the Switzerland of Morocco for its incongruous alpine look.

    From Ifrane the road climbs across the Middle Atlas, with a stop in a cedar forest where Barbary macaques often appear at the roadside. Lunch is at a restaurant along the way. The route then drops down through the Ziz Valley — a long ribbon of palm groves and small Berber villages — before continuing across the rocky pre-desert to Merzouga.

    By late afternoon you’ll meet your camels and ride across the Erg Chebbi dunes to your luxury camp, pausing on a high ridge for sunset. After settling into your private tent and a generous dinner, the evening ends around a campfire with Berber drumming and music — stars overhead, and quieter than you’d expect.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 500 km / 7 hours 30 minutes

    DAY 8: EXPLORATION DAY OF THE MERZOUGA DESERT

    Sunrise over the dunes is worth the early wake-up. After breakfast you’ll return to Merzouga by camel or 4×4, where your driver will be waiting.

    The first stop is Khamlia, a small village a short drive south of Merzouga, famous for its Gnawa music. The tradition traces back to Sub-Saharan communities — people whose ancestors came from Mali, Sudan, and Niger generations ago and settled in this area. You’ll hear live music and a dance performance in the village’s small community hall.

    From Khamlia we head off-road to M’Fis, an abandoned village with old galena mines (galena was once mined here and used to make kohl, the eye makeup). You can walk around the ruins of the village and the entrance of the mine.

    Next stop is a Berber nomad family living near the Erg Chebbi dunes. They’ve stuck with a traditional nomadic lifestyle, moving with the seasons. You’ll share tea with them in their tent and learn how they live.

    After lunch, we transfer you to a riad in Merzouga with a swimming pool — useful in the afternoon heat. In the late afternoon you can either add on a quad bike or buggy ride for sunset (extra cost), or just walk out to the dunes from the riad. Dinner and overnight at the riad.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 57 km / 1 hour 15 minutes

    DAY 9: MERZOUGA → RISSANI → TODRA GORGE → DADES GORGE

    After breakfast at your riad, we head west toward the Dades Gorge.

    If the day falls on a Sunday, Tuesday, or Thursday, we can stop at the Rissani souk — Rissani was historically the capital of the Tafilalet region and is still one of the more authentic markets in this part of the country, with everything from spices and dates to livestock changing hands.

    From Rissani the road climbs to Tinghir, then into the Todra Gorge — a deep slot canyon where the Todra river runs between cliffs that rise around 300 metres. You’ll have time for a walk through the gorge.

    The afternoon drive takes you through the Dades Valley, with a stop to look at the famous “monkey fingers” rock formations — limestone columns weathered into shapes that look like… well, monkey fingers. Overnight at your hotel in Dades.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 310 km / 5 hours

    DAY 10: DADES → OUARZAZATE → AIT BEN HADDOU → HIGH ATLAS → MARRAKECH

    After breakfast we head west to Ouarzazate, sometimes called the Hollywood of Africa for its film industry. There’s an optional stop at Atlas Studios, one of the largest film studios in the world by area.

    From Ouarzazate we continue to Ait Ben Haddou — a UNESCO-listed fortified earthen village on a hillside above a riverbed. It’s been used as a film set for Prince of Persia, The Mummy, and Game of Thrones, among others. You’ll have time to walk up through the kasbah to the granary at the top, and back down across the riverbed.

    After lunch at a local restaurant, the road climbs into the High Atlas and over the Tizi n’Tichka pass at 2260 metres before descending into the plain around Marrakech. You’ll arrive in the late afternoon and check in at a riad in the medina. A walk through Jemaa El Fna in the evening is the right way to start in the city.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 353 km / 6 hours 30 minutes

    DAY 11: GUIDED TOUR OF MARRAKECH

    Full day in Marrakech with a local guide. The morning covers the main historical sights — Jemaa El-Fna Square, Bahia Palace (a 19th-century palace with painted ceilings and detailed plasterwork), the Saadian Tombs (a 16th-century royal necropolis), Ben Youssef Madrasa (a former Quranic school), and the Koutoubia Mosque (the city’s main minaret).

    After lunch, you can either head to the modern part of the city to visit the Majorelle Garden (the cobalt-blue garden originally created by Jacques Majorelle and later restored by Yves Saint Laurent) or head back to your riad for some downtime.

    Late afternoon is best spent at Jemaa El-Fna itself. A drink at one of the rooftop restaurants overlooking the square is the right way to watch sunset, then dinner from one of the food stalls or a sit-down restaurant nearby before heading back to your riad.

    DAY 12: MARRAKECH → ESSAOUIRA

    After breakfast, we drive west to the Atlantic coast. Essaouira is a small fishing town inside 15th-century Portuguese fortifications, with a UNESCO-listed medina, artist and woodcarving workshops, good seafood, and a wide windswept beach.

    The medina is small and easy to navigate — blue doors, blue window frames, and the sound of the surf in the background. Cafés with terraces are scattered throughout, useful for breaks. The old port at one end of the medina is good for watching the fishing boats come in.

    You’ll arrive in time for lunch and have the afternoon and evening free. Overnight in Essaouira.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 177 km / 2 hours 51 minutes

    DAY 13: ESSAOUIRA → CASABLANCA

    A last morning in Essaouira — beach or medina, your call. There are good woodcarving workshops to wander through, fresh fish at the port restaurants, and the ramparts to walk along if you want one more view of the Atlantic.

    After lunch, the drive north up the coast to Casablanca takes about four and a half hours. Check in at your hotel for the last night of the tour.

    Approximate driving distance/time: 377 km / 4 hours 31 minutes

    DAY 14: CONCLUSION OF YOUR TWO WEEKS IN MOROCCO

    Transfer from your hotel to Casablanca Mohammed V International Airport (CMN) for your outbound flight, timed to your schedule. End of the tour.

    Price Includes

    • Pick-up from Casablanca airport or your accommodation
    • Private air-conditioned 4×4 SUV, van, or minibus
    • English or Spanish-speaking driver/guide (other languages on request)
    • 13 nights accommodation with breakfast
    • Dinner at the desert camp, your riad in Merzouga, and your hotel in Dades
    • - Camel ride experience (one camel per person)
    • Sandboards available at the camp
    • Drop-off at your accommodation

    Price Excludes

    • Lunches & dinners       
    • Entrance fees to monuments
    • Tips (optional but appreciated)

    IMPORTANT NOTES

    – Driving times don’t include stops for lunch and sightseeing.
    – This itinerary can also be started from Marrakech, Fes, or any other city instead of Casablanca.
    – Dietary preferences (vegetarian, vegan, allergies) can be accommodated — please mention this when booking.
    – Optional add-ons: professional photographer, romantic desert dinner, desert proposal setup, quad/buggy activity, hot air balloon in Marrakech, cooking class, hammam, day trip to Ouzoud Waterfalls, day trip to Ourika Valley.
    – Prefer not to ride a camel? A 4×4 will take you into and out of the camp at no extra cost.
    – Three accommodation categories are available — standard riads, mid-range, or luxury (Sofitel, Hilton, Palais Faraj, La Maison Arabe, Hotel Le Medina, etc.).
    – Shorter versions (5-12 day) available if two weeks is more than you have.

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    FAQ

    How do I book a tour, and what are the payment terms?

    To secure your reservation, we require a percentage deposit (payable via PayPal or Credit Card) at the time of booking. The remaining balance can be paid in cash (Euros, US Dollars, or Moroccan Dirhams) to your driver upon pick-up at the start of your tour. You may also choose to pay the full amount in advance via card or PayPal, though a standard transaction fee may apply.

    What is your cancellation policy?

    We understand that travel plans can change. Generally, if you cancel well in advance (two months or more), you will receive a full refund. Cancellations made closer to the departure date may be subject to partial refunds or fees, while last-minute cancellations within a week of the tour are typically non-refundable. Please contact us as soon as possible if you need to adjust your dates.

    Can I change or modify my private itinerary?

    Absolutely. Our private tours are fully flexible. We want your trip to be perfect, so if you wish to adjust your itinerary, simply let us know. We kindly request that any significant changes be communicated at least two weeks before your tour begins so we can make the necessary arrangements with hotels and guides.

    Is Morocco a safe destination for tourists?

    Yes, Morocco is considered a very safe destination for travelers. The country has a low crime rate, and Moroccan people are globally renowned for their warmth and generous hospitality.

    Are there physical restrictions for certain activities?

    Our tours are designed to be enjoyed by everyone, but certain activities require a basic level of fitness. For example, we advise against camel trekking for pregnant women, individuals who have recently undergone surgery, those with severe back issues, or travelers over the age of 70. We can always arrange comfortable 4×4 transportation to the desert camps as a great alternative!

    What essential items should I pack?

    We recommend packing comfortable, sturdy walking shoes for exploring medinas and ancient ruins. Bring a hat, high-SPF sunscreen, a reusable water bottle, and your camera. If your tour includes a desert overnight stay, it is crucial to pack warm layers (like a fleece or jacket), as temperatures drop significantly in the Sahara at night.

    Tour Customizations & Logistics

    Are your tours suitable for families and children? Yes! Morocco is a fantastic family destination. Our guided city tours, desert camps, and activities are highly family-friendly and can be adapted to suit the pace and interests of travelers of all ages.

    Can you accommodate special dietary needs? Certainly. Moroccan cuisine is diverse and adaptable. Whether you are vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, or have specific food allergies, simply inform us at the time of booking, and we will ensure your dietary needs are fully met throughout your journey.

    Can we add optional activities to our tour? Yes, adventure awaits! We can easily add optional excursions to your itinerary, such as ATV quad biking, sandboarding down the dunes, or buggy tours in the desert. Just let us know what you are interested in.

    Can we do a day trip to the Sahara Desert? Because the true Sahara Desert (like Merzouga or Zagora) is located quite far from major cities—for example, it is over 600 kilometers from Casablanca and involves a long drive over the Atlas Mountains from Marrakech—it cannot be done in a single day. To truly experience the magic of the dunes, we highly recommend a multi-day tour of at least 3 to 4 days.