Traveller question
Member
February 2026
Can you do a zipline or via ferrata 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
February 2026
Can you do a zipline or via ferrata 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
February 2026
Yes. The standout is Terres d'Amanar near Marrakech (in the Atlas foothills), which has ziplines, a via ferrata, and an adventure park. The Ourika and Asni valleys and the Ouzoud Falls area also offer ziplines. Via ferrata and canyoning routes exist in the Atlas. Standards are decent but check the operator's safety gear and guiding before you commit.
Yes, and this is exactly the kind of question I wish more active travellers asked, because Morocco's adventure-park side is genuinely underrated. The headline spot is Terres d'Amanar, an adventure resort about forty-five minutes from Marrakech in the Atlas foothills near Tahanaout. It's purpose-built for this: a proper network of ziplines flying you across the valley, a via ferrata route bolted into the rock with cables and rungs, a high-ropes course, archery, and more — all set against a beautiful mountain backdrop. For families and groups wanting a high-adrenaline day without leaving the Marrakech orbit, it's my first call.
Beyond Amanar, there are scattered options worth knowing. The Ourika and Asni valleys, both easy day trips into the Atlas from Marrakech, have ziplines and adventure activities tucked among the river gorges and villages. Up at the Ouzoud Falls — those gorgeous tiered cascades a few hours from Marrakech — there's a zipline that sends you across the gorge, which is a thrilling way to take in the falls. And for the via ferrata and canyoning crowd, the wider Atlas has developing routes, with operators running guided descents through water-carved gorges in the warmer months.
I do want to add a measured word on safety, because adventure tourism in Morocco is less tightly regulated than in, say, the Alps. The established operators — Amanar especially — run to good standards with proper harnesses, helmets, and trained guides, and I'm comfortable sending travellers there. But the smaller, informal setups vary, and I've seen kit at the budget end I wouldn't clip into myself. So my rule is simple: use reputable operators, look at the condition of the equipment, confirm there's real guiding and briefing, and don't be shy about walking away if something feels slapdash.
Practically, these activities run best from spring through autumn, and they pair beautifully with an Atlas day or a Marrakech base — I often build a Terres d'Amanar day into a trip for travellers with energetic kids or teenagers, or for couples who want a shot of adrenaline between the medinas and the desert. It's a great change of pace, and the mountain scenery from the end of a zipline is something you won't forget.
Youssef — Desert & Sahara Specialist, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.
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