Traveller question
Member
February 2026
How to plan a Morocco trip from Argentina?
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
How to plan a Morocco trip from Argentina?
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
February 2026
Allow at least 12–16 days for this very long journey. Fly Buenos Aires to Casablanca via Madrid, São Paulo, or a European hub — roughly 16–22 hours with one or two stops. Argentine passport holders have enjoyed 90-day visa-free entry, but always verify the current rule before booking.
Argentine travellers are coming about as far as anyone, so my honest first counsel is about commitment of time. There's no direct flight from Argentina to Morocco — you're looking at one or two connections and roughly 16 to 22 hours of total travel from Buenos Aires, with a time difference of around four to five hours. Coming this distance for a week makes no sense to me; I steer Argentine guests toward at least twelve days and ideally a fortnight or more, so the trip earns the journey and you see Marrakech, the Sahara, the Atlas, Fes and the coast properly.
For routing, the natural bridge is through Spain: Iberia and Air Europa connect Buenos Aires (EZE) to Madrid, and from Madrid it's a short, frequent hop to Casablanca or Marrakech — a logical, comfortable path that also makes a Madrid stopover tempting. Alternatively, you can route through São Paulo and onward, or via other European hubs like Paris or Lisbon. I land most Argentine guests at Casablanca (CMN) as the gateway and build a loop south so there's no backtracking, though a fare into Marrakech (RAK) is a fine place to begin if it appears.
On the visa, this is good news: Argentine passport holders have long enjoyed visa-free entry to Morocco for tourist stays of up to 90 days, needing only a passport valid six months beyond travel — which keeps the planning simple. As ever, though, I ask guests to confirm the current requirement with the Moroccan embassy in Buenos Aires or official channels before booking, since entry rules can be updated and the immigration desk is not the place to discover a change.
A few Argentina-specific thoughts. Because the journey is so long, a deliberate stopover — a night or two in Madrid on the way — turns a gruelling trip into two civilised halves and lets you arrive ready to enjoy Morocco rather than jet-lagged. Many of my Argentine guests are drawn by how different Morocco feels from home yet how the warmth, the café culture and the love of long lingering meals echo something familiar. The peso's volatility means I'd advise budgeting in a stable currency and bringing cash to change into dirham. Tell me your dates and how long you can spare, and I'll design something worth the distance.
Amina — Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.
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