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Morocco Travel Costs & Budget

Planning · Money

Morocco Travel Costs & Budget

Morocco can be done on almost any budget. Mid-range travellers spend roughly US$80–150 per person per day; private, riad-based trips with a driver-guide typically run US$200–400+ per day depending on season and style.

Updated June 20262 min readPlanning

Morocco can be done on almost any budget. Mid-range travellers spend roughly US$80–150 per person per day; private, riad-based trips with a driver-guide typically run US$200–400+ per day depending on season and style.

In this guide
  1. 01Currency and payments
  2. 02What things cost
  3. 03Where the money goes — and how to save
  4. 04Frequently asked

Currency and payments

The currency is the Moroccan dirham (MAD), a closed currency you can't easily get before you arrive — withdraw from ATMs or exchange on arrival. Cards are accepted in hotels, riads and larger restaurants, but the souks, taxis, tips and rural stops run on cash. Carry small notes.

What things cost

Rough, real-world ranges to set expectations (they vary by city and season):

  • Mint tea or coffee: 15–30 MAD; a casual tagine lunch: 60–120 MAD.
  • A good riad room: US$60–200+ per night; luxury riads and desert camps far higher.
  • A licensed half-day private city guide: roughly US$60–120.
  • Private intercity transfer (e.g. Marrakech–Fes): from around US$200+ per car.
  • A luxury Sahara camp night: US$150–400+ per person, all-in.

Where the money goes — and how to save

The biggest line items on a private trip are accommodation and the driver-guide; both scale with season and standard. Travelling in the shoulder months, mixing a few self-guided city days with guided excursions, and keeping group sizes efficient (a private car costs the same for two as for four) all stretch the budget without cutting the experience.

Frequently asked

How much does a week in Morocco cost?

A comfortable mid-range week runs roughly US$600–1,100 per person excluding international flights. A fully private, riad-and-driver trip with a Sahara night typically lands between US$1,400 and US$3,000+ per person for the week, depending on season and standard.

Should I bring cash or use cards in Morocco?

Both. Use cards for riads and bigger restaurants, but carry dirham cash for souks, taxis, tips, rural stops and the desert, where cards aren't accepted.

Is Morocco expensive?

It can be as cheap or as luxurious as you like. Street food and guesthouses make it very affordable; private guiding, top riads and desert camps push it firmly into premium territory.

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