How much does a Morocco trip cost for a family of four?

Budget & Money Started March 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

March 2026

Question

How much does a Morocco trip cost for a family of four?

Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Hassan

Travel Designer · Staff

Family Travel Designer

March 2026

Best answer

A private 7-day Morocco trip for a family of four (two adults, two children) typically runs $5,500–$9,000 total at mid-range — about $1,400–$2,250 per person — because the car, driver, and guide are shared. A 10-day family trip is roughly $7,500–$13,000 total. Flights are extra.

Family pricing in Morocco works in your favour, and it is the first thing I explain to parents. On a private tour the biggest costs — the vehicle, the driver-guide, and city guides — are charged per trip, not per person. So when two children join two adults, those fixed costs do not double; they simply spread across four heads. That is why a family of four almost always pays less per person than a couple travelling alone.

For a private seven-day family trip — a comfortable minivan with space for everyone, family riads or hotels with a connecting room or a suite, an en-suite desert camp, and a relaxed pace — I budget roughly $5,500–$9,000 in total at the mid-range level, which is about $1,400–$2,250 per person. A ten-day version runs roughly $7,500–$13,000 total. Many riads and camps offer reduced or free rates for younger children sharing the parents' room, which trims the figure further, so always ask about child pricing.

The texture of a family trip shifts the spend, too. We pace days shorter — fewer marathon drives, more stops for a camel ride, a goat-in-an-argan-tree photo, a pool afternoon at the riad. A private cooking class or a pottery session keeps kids engaged and is money far better spent than another monument. Food stays cheap and family-friendly: most children happily live on bread, couscous, chicken skewers, and fresh orange juice, and restaurants are warmly welcoming to little ones.

My honest, parent-to-parent advice: do not over-program. The desert night and one or two hands-on experiences are what your children will actually remember; the third medina in a row is what triggers the meltdown. Build in pool days and downtime — they cost almost nothing and save the trip. And a private driver, while pricier than trains, is worth every dirham with kids: car seats can be arranged in advance, the boot swallows the bags, and nobody is dragging a tired four-year-old onto a platform.

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Hassan Family Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.

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