How much does a Morocco trip cost from Canada?

Budget & Money Started May 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

May 2026

Question

How much does a Morocco trip cost from Canada?

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

Flights from Canada typically run CAD $900–1,800 return depending on season and city. On the ground, Morocco is excellent value: a comfortable mid-range trip runs roughly CAD $150–300 per person per day including a riad, private driver, meals and activities. Two weeks, mid-range, often lands around CAD $4,000–6,000 per person all-in.

Let me break it into the two parts that actually drive the budget: getting there and being there. Flights are the big variable for Canadians — return fares typically land somewhere between CAD $900 and $1,800 depending on your city, the season and how far ahead you book. Eastern Canada and shoulder-season travel sit at the lower end; Western Canada in peak spring or autumn pushes higher. Setting a fare alert a few months out genuinely saves hundreds.

Once you're on the ground, here's the good news that surprises a lot of Canadian clients: Morocco is outstanding value. Your Canadian dollars stretch a long way. A comfortable mid-range trip — a lovely riad, a private driver for the touring and desert legs, good meals and the key experiences — runs roughly CAD $150–300 per person per day. You can do it for less as a budget traveller using shared transport and simpler guesthouses, or a great deal more at the luxury end with five-star riads and high-end desert camps. The spread is enormous, which is what makes Morocco work for almost any budget.

To put a real number on it: a typical two-week, mid-range trip for one person, including international flights, often lands somewhere around CAD $4,000–6,000 all-in. The single biggest swing factor after flights is your accommodation and transport style — a private driver and boutique riads cost more than buses and hostels but, for a once-in-a-while big trip from Canada, most clients decide the comfort and the time saved are worth it. Food, meanwhile, is a bargain: you can eat brilliantly for very little, and even a special dinner won't break the bank.

A few money-handling notes for Canadians. The dirham is a closed currency, so you draw cash from ATMs on arrival rather than buying it at home — bring a card with low foreign-transaction fees and carry small bills for tips, the medina and the camp. Budget separately for the things that make the trip: a guided medina tour, a hammam, the desert overnight, entrance fees. And don't skip travel insurance — provincial health plans don't cover Morocco, and it's a small cost against a big trip. Plan the flights well and Morocco rewards you with a lot of experience per dollar.

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

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