Traveller question
Member
March 2026
What's a good solo-traveller itinerary?
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's a good solo-traveller itinerary?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Amina
Travel Designer · StaffCultural Travel Designer
March 2026
Stay social and safe: Marrakech and Fes with sociable riads and group cooking classes, blue Chefchaouen for easy walking, and a small-group shared desert tour to Merzouga where you meet fellow travellers around the fire. About 10 days that balance independence with company.
Travelling Morocco solo is hugely rewarding, and I plan it to keep you safe, social, and never stuck eating dinner alone unless you want to. I start solo travellers in Marrakech in a friendly riad with a communal rooftop, and book a half-day guided medina walk on day one — having a guide demystify the souks early kills the intimidation factor and means you'll happily wander on your own afterwards. A group cooking class that first evening is the classic way to meet other travellers over a shared meal.
From Marrakech I love sending solo travellers north to Chefchaouen, because the blue city is small, gentle, and made for solo wandering. The lanes are easy to navigate, the pace is slow, the cafés invite you to linger over a book, and it's the kind of place where you fall into conversation with other independent travellers without effort. Two nights here is a low-key, low-pressure breather that builds your confidence for the bigger cities.
Fes is the deep cultural plunge, and again I anchor it with a guide for the first day so the vast medina feels navigable rather than overwhelming. A solo traveller with a local guide gets pulled into workshops, homes, and conversations that a group on a coach never sees. I recommend staying in a riad where the hosts know your name and can advise on safe evening walks, and being mindful of the usual sensible solo habits — modest dress, confident body language, and heading home before the alleys empty late at night.
The desert is where solo travel really shines, so rather than an isolating private trip I book solo travellers onto a small-group shared tour to Merzouga. You drive through the gorges with a handful of fellow travellers, share the camel trek and the camp, and end up swapping stories around the fire under the stars — solo travellers routinely make their best trip friends on exactly this leg. Across ten days you keep your freedom and solitude when you want it, and easy company whenever you don't.
Helpful links
Amina — Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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