Can I bring my prescription medication to Morocco?

Safety & Solo Travel Started January 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

January 2026

Question

Can I bring my prescription medication to Morocco?

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

January 2026

Best answer

Yes, for personal use. Keep medicines in their original labelled packaging, carry a doctor's letter listing each drug and dosage, and split supplies between your carry-on and hold luggage. Bring enough for the whole trip plus a few extra days. Strong painkillers and controlled drugs need extra paperwork — check with your doctor and a travel clinic first.

Yes — you can bring the medication you need for your own use, and the vast majority of travellers do so without a second glance from anyone. The trick is simply to look organised and legitimate, because the one thing that creates trouble at any border is unlabelled loose pills of unknown origin. So the cardinal rule I give everyone is: leave everything in its original pharmacy packaging, with the printed label showing your name and the drug name. Those blister packs and labelled boxes are your proof that what you're carrying is prescribed and yours.

Alongside that, carry a letter from your doctor — a simple typed note listing each medication by its generic name, the dosage, and why you take it. I've seen this letter turn a potentially awkward moment into a thirty-second formality, and it doubles as a lifesaver if you ever need a Moroccan pharmacist or doctor to understand your regimen or replace something. If you can, get the generic (chemical) names as well as brand names, since brands differ between countries.

Pack smart for the 'what if'. I always tell travellers to bring enough for the entire trip plus several extra days in case of delays, and to split the supply — half in your carry-on, half in your hold luggage — so a lost bag never leaves you stranded without essential medicine. Keep anything critical (heart medication, insulin, inhalers, an EpiPen) on your person in the cabin, never in the hold where temperatures and loss are a risk.

One genuine caution: strong painkillers, certain sedatives, ADHD stimulants, and other controlled substances face tighter rules, and a few drugs that are routine elsewhere are restricted in Morocco. If any of yours fall into that category, don't guess — ask your own doctor and a travel clinic well before departure, and where advised, carry extra documentation or check with the Moroccan consulate. A little homework beforehand beats any surprise on arrival.

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

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