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Marrakech

Marrakech

Home Morocco DestinationsMarrakech
Gate8 Global Team

Marrakech deserves 3-4 nights, not a rushed overnight. Stay in a riad (a traditional courtyard house) inside the medina for atmosphere, or in Gueliz for a more modern, easier-to-navigate base. Spend a day in the souks and Jemaa el-Fnaa square, a morning at Jardin Majorelle, and use Marrakech as the launchpad for the Atlas Mountains and Sahara desert. Budget roughly $30-60/day per person before splurging on a nicer riad.

Marrakech is Morocco's big, beautiful headline act — a walled red city where a 900-year-old medina backs straight onto rooftop cocktail bars and design-forward riads. It's also the city most likely to overwhelm a first-time visitor in the first hour, in a way that's either thrilling or exhausting depending on your mood that day. Here's how to do it right.

How many days do you need in Marrakech?

Three to four nights is the sweet spot — long enough for the medina, the gardens, and one proper day trip, without feeling like you're sprinting through a maze (you sort of are, but at a comfortable pace). Less than three nights and you'll only see the highlights reel; Marrakech genuinely gets better the longer you let it slow you down.

Marrakech riad courtyard
A quiet Marrakech courtyard — the riad style at the heart of the medina

Where to stay: medina riad or Gueliz?

AreaBest forVibe
Medina (Jemaa el-Fnaa / Souks)First-timers who want atmosphereMaze-like alleys, rooftop terraces, a two-minute walk from everything — and easy to get lost in, on purpose or not
Gueliz (Ville Nouvelle)Easier navigation, modern comfortsWide boulevards, restaurants, cafes — a 15-20 minute walk or short taxi from the medina
HivernageResort-style comfortLarger hotels with pools, close to Gueliz's nightlife, less character than a riad
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Book a riad, at least for a couple of nights — a traditional courtyard house with a fountain, mosaic tile, and a rooftop terrace is a genuinely different (and better) way to experience Marrakech than a standard hotel room. Most riads include a homemade breakfast and can arrange airport pickup, which is worth it the first time — the medina's alleys aren't taxi-friendly, and someone will meet you at the gate to walk you in.

What's actually worth seeing

  1. Jemaa el-Fnaa square — chaotic by day (snake charmers, orange-juice stalls, a genuine UNESCO-listed public space), completely transformed by night into an open-air food market. Go for dinner, not lunch.
  2. The souks — a genuine maze north of the square, organized loosely by trade (leather, lanterns, spices, textiles). Getting lost is part of the experience; just keep some cash and your patience handy.
  3. Jardin Majorelle — the cobalt-blue garden once owned by Yves Saint Laurent. Go right at opening (8am) to beat both the heat and the tour groups.
  4. Bahia Palace — a genuinely stunning 19th-century palace with carved cedar ceilings and painted tiles, usually far less crowded than the square.
Jemaa el-Fnaa square in Marrakech
Jemaa el-Fnaa square, Marrakech's main plaza — calm by day, a food market by night

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Following anyone who offers to 'show you the way' to a market stall or riad unprompted — it's almost always a commission-paying detour, and they'll expect a tip for the unsolicited help.
  • Photographing snake charmers, henna artists, or performers in the square without agreeing on a price first — they will ask for money afterward, sometimes insistently, so it's easier to just ask up front.
  • Wandering into the souks with nothing but a credit card — most stalls are cash-only, and having exact smaller bills helps avoid haggling over your only large note.

Day trips from Marrakech

Marrakech is the natural base for two of Morocco's best experiences: a day trip into the High Atlas Mountains (waterfalls, Berber villages, and — outside summer — snow-capped peaks visible from the city itself), and the multi-day Sahara desert route through Ait Benhaddou and the Draa Valley. See our full Sahara desert tours guide for the details.

Book a riad in the medina for the full experience

Compare Marrakech riads and hotels

Where to stay in Marrakech — our picks

Luxury

La Mamounia

★★★★★ · 9.4/10 · from $650/night

The legendary Marrakech palace-hotel, with gardens dating back to the 1700s — the classic once-in-a-lifetime splurge.

Check availability on Booking.com ←
Mid-range

Riad Yasmine

★★★★ · 9.5/10 · from $110/night

A beautifully restored medina riad with a small plunge pool and a genuinely warm host family — routinely one of the highest-rated stays in the city.

Check availability on Booking.com ←
Mid-range

Riad Kalaa

★★★ · 8.9/10 · from $60/night

A classic courtyard riad a short walk from Jemaa el-Fnaa, with a rooftop terrace and home-cooked breakfast included.

Check availability on Booking.com ←
Backpacker

Equity Point Marrakech Hostel

★★ · 8.4/10 · from $18/night

A social, well-run hostel in a converted riad, a few minutes' walk from the medina's main sights.

Check availability on Booking.com ←

Links go to Booking.com. We may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you.

Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Marrakech?
Three to four nights is ideal — one day for the souks and Jemaa el-Fnaa, a morning at Jardin Majorelle, and at least one full day for an Atlas Mountains or Sahara day/overnight trip. Two nights works if you're purely passing through.
Should I stay in a riad or a hotel in Marrakech?
A riad, at least for part of your trip — it's a genuinely different, more atmospheric way to experience the city than a standard hotel room, and most include a home-cooked breakfast. Book one with good reviews on being easy to find; medina alleys aren't marked the way a Western city's streets are.
Is Marrakech safe for tourists?
Yes, overall — violent crime against tourists is rare. The real day-to-day friction is persistent touts and unsolicited 'guides' in the souks and around the square; a polite, firm decline works better than engaging.

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