Are there toilets on Moroccan trains and buses?

Getting Around Started February 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

February 2026

Question

Are there toilets on Moroccan trains and buses?

Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Serenity Morocco Expert Team

Travel Designer · Staff

Travel Designers

February 2026

Best answer

Yes. ONCF trains have toilets at the ends of the carriages — functional, though cleanliness varies by service and time of day, so bring tissues and hand gel. CTM and Supratours coaches usually rely on a scheduled rest stop at a café with toilets every couple of hours rather than an onboard loo. Stations and main bus terminals also have (often paid) facilities.

Toilets are one of those small practicalities that quietly worry people on a long journey, so here's the straight answer. Yes, Moroccan trains have toilets — you'll find them at the ends of the carriages on ONCF inter-city services, including a couple per train you can walk to along the corridor. They're functional and do the job, but I'll be honest that cleanliness varies: early in the journey and on the newer trains they're fine, while late in a long, busy day on an older carriage they can be less appealing. Pack a small pocket of tissues and a bottle of hand sanitiser and you're covered, because soap and paper aren't guaranteed.

Al Boraq, the high-speed train, is the nicest of the lot here as everywhere — modern, cleaner facilities in keeping with the rest of the smart, TGV-style experience. On the conventional network, my habit is simply to go earlier rather than later in the trip when the toilets are freshest, and to keep my own tissues and gel in a daypack. None of this is a reason to hesitate about the trains; it's just the same common-sense kit I'd carry on any rail network in the region.

Coaches work differently, and it surprises some travellers. CTM and Supratours coaches don't always have a usable onboard toilet — instead, on journeys of any length the driver makes a scheduled rest stop, typically every couple of hours, at a roadside café or service area with toilets, drinks and snacks. It's a pleasant rhythm once you're used to it: you stretch your legs, use a (usually paid, a dirham or two) facility, grab a mint tea, and reboard. The thing to know is to use the stop when it comes, because you won't get an on-demand one between them.

At the stations and main bus terminals there are public toilets too, frequently with a small attendant fee and sometimes a tip for paper — again, your own tissues earn their place in the bag. My overall steer: don't let the toilet question put you off public transport here. Trains have them onboard, coaches schedule reliable stops, and a tiny travel kit of tissues, hand gel and a few coins turns the whole issue into a non-event. It's the kind of thing that looms large in the planning and vanishes once you're actually travelling.

toiletstrainsbusesrest stopsctmlogistics

Serenity Morocco Expert Team Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.

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