Traveller question
Member
May 2026
Can you do a photography workshop or photo tour 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
May 2026
Can you do a photography workshop or photo tour in 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 · StaffTravel Designers
May 2026
Yes. Morocco is a photographer’s dream and photo tours are widely available — from half-day medina walks with a local photographer in Marrakech or Fes to multi-day workshops covering the Sahara, the Atlas, and the kasbah road. A guide also helps you navigate the etiquette of photographing people, which is sensitive here.
Yes, and Morocco is one of the most photogenic countries on earth, so it's no surprise photography tours flourish here. The options span a wide range. At the simple end, you can book a half-day 'photo walk' with a local photographer in the Marrakech or Fes medina — they know the light, the hidden courtyards, the rooftop angles over the souk, and the dyers' and tanners' quarters that make the best frames. At the ambitious end, multi-day workshops chase the country's greatest hits: the Erg Chebbi dunes at dawn, the blue lanes of Chefchaouen, Aït Benhaddou and the kasbah road, the High Atlas, and the chaos of the Jemaa el-Fnaa at dusk.
A good workshop earns its keep in three ways. First, light and timing — a local pro gets you to Chefchaouen's blue alleys before the crowds, to the dunes for the golden hour, and onto the right rooftop as the call to prayer goes up and the sky turns. Second, access — they have relationships, so you get into workshops, homes, and corners a solo shooter never would. Third, and most underrated, etiquette: photographing people in Morocco is genuinely sensitive, and a guide who can ask permission, smooth the interaction, and tell you when not to shoot is worth their fee several times over.
Let me be candid about that people-photography issue because it trips up a lot of visitors. Many Moroccans dislike being photographed, some for religious reasons, and snapping someone without asking can provoke a real and fair reaction — and in the markets, anyone who poses for you (the water-sellers in their fringed hats, the snake charmers, the henna artists) will expect to be paid, sometimes aggressively. The rule is simple: ask first, accept 'no' gracefully, carry small coins for those who pose professionally, and lean toward architecture, landscapes, and candid scenes where individuals aren't identifiable. A workshop leader handles this dance for you.
Practically, decide what you're after. If you mostly want better photos and local knowledge for a day, a medina photo walk is cheap and high-value. If photography is the reason for the trip, a multi-day workshop built around the desert and the south is the move — these often run as small groups, include the pre-dawn and post-sunset shoots casual travellers skip, and put you in the landscapes at exactly the right hour. Either way, bring more memory cards than you think you need; Morocco fills them fast.
Helpful links
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered May 2026.
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