Traveller question
Member
March 2026
What are the best GoPro and action-cam spots in Morocco?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
March 2026
What are the best GoPro and action-cam spots in Morocco?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Youssef
Travel Designer · StaffDesert & Sahara Specialist
March 2026
Mount it for the camel trek and 4x4 dune-bashing at Erg Chebbi, quad biking and sandboarding in the desert, the hairpins of the Tizi n'Tichka Atlas pass, surfing at Taghazout, the blue alleys of Chefchaouen, and walking the Fes tanneries and souks. A chest or helmet mount frees your hands; bring extra batteries and sand protection for the dunes.
Action cams shine in Morocco because so much of the trip is movement through dramatic, hands-busy environments. My top desert sequences: chest-mounted for the camel trek out to camp at sunset (the swaying point-of-view over the dunes is hypnotic), helmet- or roll-bar-mounted for 4x4 dune-bashing and the Iriki or Erg Chebbi off-road runs, and handlebar-mounted for quad biking. Sandboarding down a big dune with the cam facing back at you is a guaranteed clip. The one hazard is sand and grit, so use a protective housing and keep spare batteries warm and dust-free.
On the road, the Atlas passes are made for it. Mount the GoPro on the windscreen or dashboard for the endless hairpins of the Tizi n'Tichka between Marrakech and Ouarzazate, or the Tizi n'Test — time-lapse or hyperlapse mode turns the switchbacks and shifting mountain light into a stunning sequence. The drive down through the Dades and Todra gorges, with their towering red walls, is another classic windscreen run.
For water and coast, Taghazout and the Atlantic beaches near Essaouira and Agadir are surf and bodyboard country — a waterproof action cam is perfect there, and the same goes for any kayaking or river moments. In the cities, the action cam earns its keep in the tight, crowded places where a big camera feels intrusive: a chest-mounted walk-through of the blue staircases of Chefchaouen, the labyrinth of the Fes medina, the chaos and colour of Jemaa el-Fnaa at night, or a slow pan across the Fes tanneries from the leather-shop terraces.
Practical tips that save shoots: carry at least two or three batteries (cold desert nights and constant recording drain them fast), bring a small lens cloth for sand and sea spray, and use the chest mount more than the helmet for natural-feeling walking footage. And remember the action cam does not exempt you from the people rule — if you are filming individuals up close in the souk, the courtesy of asking still applies. Drones remain banned, so the GoPro on a pole or a high terrace is your "aerial" substitute.
Youssef — Desert & Sahara Specialist, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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