A 7-day Morocco itinerary based in Marrakech gives you enough time to experience the country’s most extraordinary range of landscapes, cultures and adventures without exhausting yourself in the process.
Seven days is the sweet spot for Morocco. It’s enough to explore Marrakech’s medina properly, take a full Atlas Mountains day, escape to the Agafay Desert for a sunset and starlit dinner, make the Atlantic coast journey to Essaouira, and still have days for genuine rest, spontaneous wandering and the unplanned encounters that define the best travel memories.
This complete Morocco itinerary for 7 days is designed for travelers flying into and out of Marrakech — the most common gateway for European visitors. It covers both the essential “must-see” experiences and the less obvious choices that separate a good trip from an extraordinary one. It includes two distinct versions: a Marrakech-centered week for those who prefer one base, and an extended circuit for travelers comfortable with multiple stops.
| This itinerary is designed for: travelers with 7 nights based primarily in Marrakech, comfortable with day trips of 2–3 hours. It covers: Marrakech medina, Agafay Desert, Atlas Mountains, Essaouira Atlantic coast, and includes the Sahara as an optional extension. Budget guide included for each option. |
Morocco 7-Day Itinerary at a Glance
| Day | Location | Main Experience | Distance from Marrakech |
| Day 1 | Marrakech | Arrival, riad, Jemaa el-Fna first night | — |
| Day 2 | Marrakech medina | Guided souk tour, Ben Youssef, Bahia Palace | In city |
| Day 3 | Agafay Desert | Sunset camel + quad biking + Berber dinner | 30 km / 45 min |
| Day 4 | Atlas Mountains | Imlil or Ourika Valley full day hike | 60–65 km / 1h15 |
| Day 5 | Essaouira | Atlantic coast day trip, harbour fish lunch | 190 km / 2h30 |
| Day 6 | Marrakech | Free day, Majorelle Garden, hammam, rooftop | In city |
| Day 7 | Marrakech | Final souk, late lunch, departure | In city |
| Day 1 — Arrival and First Impressions | Marrakech |
Afternoon — Arrive, check in, decompress
Most European flights to Marrakech Menara Airport arrive in the early afternoon. Allow 45 minutes from landing to riad — airport exit, licensed taxi negotiation (70–120 MAD to the medina), medina navigation to your specific riad address. Don’t rush this. The first afternoon is for adjustment: shower, mint tea in the courtyard, a slow walk around the immediate neighborhood to orient yourself before the city’s full intensity.
Evening — First encounter with Jemaa el-Fna (6:00–10:00 PM)
Wait until early evening for your first Jemaa el-Fna experience. At 6:00 PM the square is transitioning from afternoon to evening energy — juice vendors polishing their pyramids of oranges, storytellers gathering circles, the first food stall smoke rising. By 8:00 PM it reaches full power. Walk through multiple times. Eat something from the stalls (harira soup at 10 MAD, fresh orange juice at 5 MAD, grilled kefta at 40–60 MAD). Don’t overthink it. Just absorb.
- Accommodation budget: 600–1,500 MAD/night for a good boutique riad in the medina
- Day 1 budget estimate: 300–600 MAD (transfer + dinner + drinks)
| Day 2 — Marrakech Medina Deep Dive | Marrakech |

Morning (9:00 AM–1:00 PM) — Licensed guide tour of the souks and Ben Youssef
Day 2 is for structured medina exploration. Hire a licensed guide (300–500 MAD for 3 hours, book through your riad) for the morning souk tour. A good guide covers the souk corridor from Jemaa el-Fna to the Ben Youssef Madrasa — the lamp makers, the dyers, the spice market, the Kissaria fabric souk — with historical context that transforms the experience from shopping chaos to meaningful cultural immersion. Spend 60 minutes inside the Ben Youssef Madrasa (70 MAD entry — the most beautiful Islamic interior open to visitors in Morocco).
Afternoon (3:00–6:00 PM) — Bahia Palace and the Saadian Tombs
After a midday rest (essential in summer), the southern medina in the afternoon. The Bahia Palace (70 MAD, 45 minutes) and the Saadian Tombs (70 MAD, 30 minutes) are 10 minutes walk apart and together cover the most important historical architecture in the southern medina. The Mellah (Jewish Quarter) between them adds cultural depth — the wrought-iron balconies and covered market reveal a completely different facet of Marrakech’s history.
Evening — Rooftop dinner reservation (8:30 PM)
Tonight is the rooftop dinner. Pre-book a table at a rooftop restaurant near Jemaa el-Fna with a Koutoubia view. A proper 3-course Moroccan dinner — bastilla, tajine, pastilla dessert, mint tea — costs 250–500 MAD per person in a quality establishment. This is the medina at its most beautiful.
- Day 2 budget estimate: 800–1,500 MAD per person (guide + entries + lunch + dinner)
| Day 3 — Agafay Desert Sunset Experience | Agafay Desert — 30 km from Marrakech |
Morning (free) — Majorelle Garden and the Palmeraie
With a 4:30 PM desert transfer, the morning is free. The Majorelle Garden in Gueliz (150 MAD, 45–75 minutes) is best visited early (8:30–10:00 AM) before crowds arrive. The extraordinary cobalt-blue architecture, the cactus garden and the YSL Museum adjacent make it one of Marrakech’s most visited sites for good reason. Return to your riad for a pool afternoon before the desert transfer.
Afternoon/Evening (4:30–10:30 PM) — The Agafay Desert
The heart of this Morocco itinerary. Transfer at 4:30 PM (40–50 minutes to the Agafay plateau). Arrival with 75–90 minutes before sunset. The sequence: quad biking circuit or camel ride at golden hour, the Atlas Mountains turning gold and purple behind you, the absolute silence of the plateau, then the Berber tent dinner with live music as the sky fills with stars.
This is the experience that most 7-day Morocco itinerary travelers rate as the single best evening of their trip. No restaurant in Marrakech, no medina view, no riad rooftop comes close to this combination of landscape, food, music and night sky.
- Recommended: combo package (quad + camel + dinner) — 800–1,200 MAD per person including transfer
- Return to Marrakech: 10:00–10:30 PM
- Day 3 budget estimate: 1,000–1,500 MAD per person
| Day 4 — Atlas Mountains Full Day | Imlil or Ourika Valley — 60–65 km |
Full day (8:00 AM–6:00 PM) — Choose your Atlas adventure level
Day 4 takes you into the High Atlas. The choice of destination depends on your fitness and priorities:
- Ourika Valley (65 km, 1h10): most accessible, family-friendly, waterfalls at Setti Fatma (45-minute hike), Berber village lunch on the river — ideal for mixed groups and first-time Atlas visitors
- Imlil (60 km, 1h15): more mountainous, higher altitude (1,740m), better views of Toubkal massif, 3–4 hour moderate hike to Aroumd village with panoramic Atlas views — ideal for active travelers who want genuine mountain experience
Whichever destination, the formula is similar: private driver pickup at 8:00 AM, morning drive through the Atlas foothills, arrival by 9:30 AM, 3–4 hours of hiking or valley exploration, traditional Berber family lunch (80–150 MAD, extraordinary), afternoon drive back, return to Marrakech by 6:00 PM.
Evening — Low-key medina dinner after the mountains
After a full day in the mountains, keep the evening simple. A neighborhood restaurant one street back from the main tourist routes — 50–80 MAD for a tajine, fresh bread and mint tea — followed by a final walk through the Mouassine quarter. The medina at 9:00 PM, when you’re physically relaxed from hiking and not trying to see anything in particular, often produces the best spontaneous encounters.
- Day 4 budget estimate: 700–1,200 MAD per person (private driver + lunch + dinner)
| Day 5 — Essaouira Atlantic Coast Day | Essaouira — 190 km from Marrakech |
Full day (8:00 AM–8:00 PM) — The Atlantic coast escape
The longest day trip of the itinerary but the one that creates the most dramatic contrast with Marrakech. Depart by 8:00 AM — the 2.5-hour drive to Essaouira passes through argan forest landscape that is itself worth the journey. Arrive in Essaouira by 10:30 AM.
The day’s essential sequence:
- 10:30 AM: Walk the Skala sea ramparts — the cannon row above the Atlantic (free, 30 minutes)
- 11:00 AM: Medina exploration — artisan quarter, thuya wood workshops, argan cooperative visit
- 12:30 PM: Harbour fish lunch — the non-negotiable highlight (choose your fish from the grill, 90–150 MAD per person)
- 2:00 PM: Beach walk — the 15-km Atlantic crescent, even 30 minutes gives you the scale
- 3:00 PM: Port and blue fishing boats — photography’s golden hour on the quayside
- 4:00 PM: Final medina wander, buy argan oil from a certified women’s cooperative
- 5:00 PM: Departure for Marrakech, arrive by 7:30–8:00 PM
- Day 5 budget estimate: 600–1,000 MAD per person (transfer + lunch + shopping)
| Day 6 — Slow Marrakech Day — Your City, Your Pace | Marrakech |
The day without a plan — the most important day in the itinerary
Day 6 has no schedule. This is deliberately the recovery day — but recovery in Marrakech takes a very specific form. Not lying in bed, but moving slowly through the city with no agenda and nowhere to be.
Morning: return to a souk section you walked through quickly on Day 2 and actually look at the craft you found interesting. Buy something from the artisan whose workshop you peeked into on the first tour. Have breakfast at a neighborhood bakery rather than your riad.
Afternoon: private couples hammam or solo hammam session (pre-booked for 3:00 PM) — the most physically restorative experience Morocco offers and the perfect Day 6 activity after five days of active exploration.
Evening: the cooking class dinner option. Several Marrakech culinary schools offer an evening format (6:00–10:00 PM) that combines a night market walk with hands-on tagine and pastilla cooking, ending with eating what you made. 400–700 MAD per person, booking required.
- Day 6 budget estimate: 500–1,000 MAD per person (hammam + dinner activity)
| Day 7 — Final Morning and Departure | Marrakech → Airport |
Final morning — the medina at its most honest

Your last morning in Marrakech belongs to the medina at its most local. Most European flights depart in the afternoon or evening — you have until midday. The souks before 10:00 AM are a different world from the tourist-hour morning: craftsmen arriving to open workshops, bread being delivered to neighborhood ovens, the first round of mint tea being prepared. Walk slowly. Buy what you didn’t buy earlier. Sit in a neighborhood cafe with no view, order coffee and watch the street.
Final lunch and airport transfer
A final Moroccan lunch at a non-tourist-facing restaurant — 60–100 MAD per person for a genuine tajine with Moroccan bread. Allow 45 minutes before your transfer to pack and check out. Licensed taxi to the airport: 70–120 MAD (20–30 minutes).
- Day 7 budget estimate: 200–400 MAD per person
Complete Budget Guide for a 7-Day Morocco Itinerary
| Budget Category | Mid-Range (MAD) | Mid-Range (EUR) |
| Accommodation (7 nights, boutique riad) | 5,600 – 8,400 MAD | 520 – 780 € |
| Agafay Desert evening (combo) | 800 – 1,200 MAD | 74 – 111 € |
| Atlas Mountains full day (private driver) | 600 – 1,000 MAD | 56 – 93 € |
| Essaouira day trip (transfer + lunch) | 500 – 800 MAD | 46 – 74 € |
| Medina entries (madrasa, palace, tombs) | 280 – 350 MAD | 26 – 32 € |
| Licensed guide (Day 2, 3 hours) | 300 – 500 MAD | 28 – 46 € |
| Hammam (private couples session) | 600 – 1,500 MAD | 55 – 139 € |
| Meals (7 days, all meals) | 2,100 – 4,200 MAD | 194 – 389 € |
| Shopping and incidentals | 500 – 2,000 MAD | 46 – 185 € |
| TOTAL (per person, 7 days) | 11,280 – 19,950 MAD | 1,045 – 1,847 € |
| Not included in the budget above: international flights (typically 80–300 € from Europe depending on origin and season), travel insurance, any alcoholic beverages (premium in Morocco), and optional upgrades (hot air balloon: +1,500–2,000 MAD; luxury glamping instead of camp dinner: +2,000–5,000 MAD). |
Alternative 7-Day Morocco Itinerary Versions
Version B: For travelers who want to include the Sahara
Including Merzouga’s Sahara dunes in a 7-day Morocco itinerary requires replacing the Essaouira day trip (Day 5) with a 2-day Sahara circuit — departing on Day 4 evening after the Atlas day, spending one night in a Sahara desert camp, and returning to Marrakech on Day 6. This format sacrifices Essaouira but adds the bucket-list experience of Saharan dunes. The drive from Marrakech to Merzouga takes 9–10 hours or 1 hour by flight to Errachidia.
| Day | Location | Experience | Notes |
| 1–3 | Marrakech | Same as main itinerary | — |
| 4 | Marrakech → Merzouga | Drive via Draa Valley, arrive evening | 9–10h drive or fly |
| 5 | Sahara / Merzouga | Camel sunrise, dune quad, overnight camp | 1 night camp |
| 6 | Return to Marrakech | Drive back via different route | 9–10h return |
| 7 | Marrakech | Final medina morning, departure | — |
Version C: Active adventure focus (for hikers and outdoor enthusiasts)
Replace the Essaouira day trip with a second Atlas day — specifically the Toubkal approach trek (Imlil to Toubkal Refuge and back, 8–10 hours, strenuous). This gives serious hikers a genuine High Atlas experience at altitude while keeping the Agafay Desert evening and the medina exploration. Not recommended for casual walkers — the Toubkal approach involves 1,500m of elevation gain on rocky terrain.
Version D: Slow travel (for travelers who want depth over breadth)
Remove the Essaouira trip entirely and replace with a second slow medina day — specifically the Mellah, the Saadian area, the Menara Gardens and a cooking class evening. This version prioritizes depth of Marrakech experience over geographical variety. Ideal for travelers who find day trips to multiple cities exhausting and prefer to really inhabit one place.
Practical Tips for Making This Morocco Itinerary Work
Book these in advance — don’t leave them to chance
- Your riad accommodation: quality boutique riads (5–10 rooms) in the medina fill up 4–8 weeks ahead in spring and autumn peak seasons
- Hot air balloon (if included): books up weeks ahead in March–May and October–November
- Private hammam session: book through your riad 24–48 hours ahead
- Evening cooking class: popular classes fill 2–3 days ahead
- Agafay Desert combo package: 24–48 hours ahead is generally sufficient, but weekends in peak season fill faster
What to pack for this specific itinerary
- Walking shoes appropriate for both medina cobblestones and Atlas mountain trails
- A windproof layer for Essaouira’s Atlantic wind
- A warm jacket for Agafay desert evenings and Atlas Mountains
- Sunscreen SPF 50+ — used every day of this itinerary
- Cash in MAD for street food, souks, taxis and rural stops — withdraw in Marrakech before day trips
- A small daypack for excursion days
The single most common itinerary mistake — and how to avoid it
The most common error in a 7-day Morocco itinerary is packing too many activities into the first two days and arriving at Day 3 exhausted. The medina is intense. The sensory overload is real. Travelers who rush through Day 1 and Day 2 trying to see everything often find themselves ill, overstimulated or simply too tired to enjoy the Agafay Desert evening — the highlight — with full presence. Build rest into the first two days. Let the medina reveal itself gradually. The souks will still be there tomorrow.
Final Thoughts: Seven Days Is Exactly Enough — and Never Quite Enough
A 7-day Morocco itinerary based in Marrakech gives you the country’s full range in miniature: the ancient medina, the high mountains, the volcanic desert plateau, the Atlantic coast, the Saharan periphery. Each landscape is completely different. Each experience changes how you see the next one. The traveler who spends a week in Morocco this way returns home with a richer understanding of what the country is than most people accumulate in a lifetime of reading about it.
The seven days also leaves you wanting more — which is exactly the right outcome. The Sahara remains beckoning. The Draa Valley hasn’t been seen. The coastal road to Agadir hasn’t been driven. A 7-day Morocco itinerary is the best possible introduction to a country that rewards return visits indefinitely.
Key reminders for the week:
- Day 3 Agafay Desert evening is the non-negotiable highlight — protect it from schedule creep
- Hire a licensed guide for Day 2 medina — it transforms the entire remaining medina experience
- Build an unscheduled afternoon into Day 6 — the best Marrakech moments are unplanned
- Depart Marrakech by 8:00 AM for both the Atlas and Essaouira to maximize time there
- Visit in March–May or October–November for the best weather and atmosphere
Ready to plan your Agafay Desert evening — the centerpiece of any great Marrakech week? Our sunset packages include quad biking, camel rides and traditional Berber dinner with door-to-door transfer. Book in advance for peak season availability.

FAQ: Morocco Itinerary 7 Days
Is 7 days enough for Morocco?
Seven days is the ideal minimum for a first Morocco visit based in Marrakech. It allows a proper medina experience (2 days), the Agafay Desert evening, a full Atlas Mountains day, the Essaouira day trip and still leaves time for the unscheduled wandering that produces Morocco’s best travel memories. It is not enough for the Sahara, the coastal road to Agadir, the Draa Valley or the imperial cities circuit — these require 10–14 days. Think of a 7-day Marrakech-based itinerary as the definitive introduction, not the complete Morocco experience.
Should I stay in one place or move around in 7 days?
For a first Morocco visit, staying in one base (Marrakech) with day trips is strongly recommended over moving between multiple cities. The overhead of packing, transferring, checking in and reorienting yourself at each stop consumes 2–4 hours per move — hours that, spread over 7 days, represent a significant portion of your total time. Marrakech as a single base with day trips to the Agafay, Atlas, and Essaouira gives you geographic variety without logistical exhaustion. Reserve the multi-city circuit (Marrakech–Fes–Chefchaouen–Rabat) for a 12–14 day itinerary.
What is the best time of year for a 7-day Morocco itinerary?
March through May and October through November are the best months for this specific itinerary. All activities — Agafay Desert evenings, Atlas Mountain hiking, Essaouira beach walking, medina exploration — operate under ideal conditions in these windows. Spring has the advantage of wildflowers in the Atlas and Agafay, snowy mountain peaks, and long warm evenings. Autumn has the clearest light of the year and the harvest season atmosphere. Summer (June–August) is manageable but requires heat management discipline and strict scheduling around the 38–42°C afternoon temperatures.
How much does a 7-day Morocco trip cost from Europe?
A well-planned 7-day Morocco trip from Europe costs approximately 1,200–2,200 € per person all-in (excluding international flights). This includes 7 nights in a good boutique riad (520–780 €), the Agafay Desert evening (74–111 €), Atlas Mountains day trip (56–93 €), Essaouira transfer (46–74 €), medina entries and guide (54–78 €), all meals (194–389 €), hammam session, and incidentals. Flights from Europe typically add 80–300 € per person depending on origin city and season. Total trip cost: 1,300–2,500 € per person.








