Can you combine Morocco and Egypt in one trip?

Planning & Itineraries Started May 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

May 2026

Question

Can you combine Morocco and Egypt in one trip?

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

May 2026

Best answer

Yes, though they're far apart — opposite ends of North Africa, with no land route, so you connect by a 4–5 hour flight (often via Casablanca, Cairo, or a European hub). It works best as a longer two-or-three-week trip combining Morocco's medinas and Sahara with Egypt's Nile and pyramids. Two distinct journeys, not a quick hop.

You can absolutely combine Morocco and Egypt, and it makes for a magnificent grand tour of the Arab and North African world — but I want to set the geography straight first, because people sometimes picture them as neighbours and they really aren't. Morocco is at the far northwest corner of Africa; Egypt is at the northeast, with the whole width of Algeria and Libya between them. There's no practical or advisable land route across, so you connect the two by flying, and that flight is a proper journey of around four to five hours, often routed via Casablanca, Cairo, or a European hub rather than always direct.

Because of that distance, this isn't a casual pairing like Morocco and Spain — it's two substantial trips joined into one big itinerary, and it deserves the time to match. I'd really only recommend it if you have at least two weeks, and ideally closer to three, so that neither half feels cheated. A typical shape might be a week-plus in Morocco — Marrakech, Fes, the Sahara — then the flight east, then a week-plus in Egypt — Cairo and the pyramids of Giza, then a Nile cruise between Luxor and Aswan. Each country alone justifies a week or more, so squeezing both into ten days would leave you exhausted and shortchanged on both.

What makes the combination so satisfying is the contrast and the conversation between them. Both are Arabic-speaking, Muslim-majority, deeply historic and richly textured, yet they feel quite distinct: Morocco is medinas, mountains, Berber culture, riads, and the living souk; Egypt is pharaonic antiquity, the Nile, the desert temples, a civilisation thousands of years deep. Doing them together gives you the western and eastern bookends of the Arab world in a single sweep, and the way they echo and differ from each other is genuinely illuminating.

On logistics, plan the connecting flight carefully and build in a buffer, since you may transit through a third city. Visa requirements differ — many nationalities get easy entry to Morocco, while Egypt typically requires a visa or e-visa, so check both for your passport. We design the Morocco half of these grand combinations regularly and coordinate it to hand off cleanly to your Egyptian arrangements — you tell us your overall window and which country comes first, and we'll shape a Moroccan leg that fits the larger journey without feeling rushed.

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

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