How do I plan a Morocco trip from Bogotá?

Getting Around Started February 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

February 2026

Question

How do I plan a Morocco trip from Bogotá?

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

February 2026

Best answer

Bogotá has no direct Morocco flight. Connect through Europe (Madrid, Paris, Lisbon) — usually the fastest at around 16 to 19 hours — or via São Paulo for Royal Air Maroc direct to Casablanca. Land in Casablanca, then transfer to Marrakech or Fes.

Bogotá travellers always ask me the same first question — is there a direct flight? — and the answer, for now, is no. You will connect at least once, and the cleanest options are through Europe or via Brazil. The European routing through Madrid is the one I recommend most often: Avianca and Iberia both serve that corridor heavily, and from Madrid the onward hop to Casablanca is short and frequent. Paris and Lisbon work too. Total travel time tends to land around sixteen to nineteen hours depending on your layover, and it is usually quicker than detouring south. The São Paulo option — connecting onto Royal Air Maroc's direct Atlantic service — is worth pricing if the timings suit, but verify every leg before committing.

My standard advice to Colombian clients is to favour Madrid for the depth of its schedule. If a flight slips, there is another departure to Morocco the same day, which is exactly the safety net you want after flying across an ocean. Build a two-hour minimum buffer at the connecting hub, keep your bags checked through on a single ticket where possible, and seriously consider an open-jaw — flying home from Fes or Tangier rather than backtracking to Casablanca saves a wasted travel day at the end of the loop.

The good news for Bogotá is the modest time difference: Morocco runs roughly six hours ahead, and because you typically cross the Atlantic overnight, you land in Casablanca around the middle of the day. I plan a relaxed first afternoon — riad check-in, a gentle first wander through the nearest medina, an early dinner — and reserve the desert drive and any long transfers for the next morning when everyone has slept. For a trip from this far, I usually build ten days so Marrakech, the Sahara, Fes and the north all get their due without a rushed pace.

On formalities, Colombian passport holders currently enter Morocco visa-free for tourism, but I always tell clients to confirm with the Moroccan consulate before booking, since entry policies are reviewed from time to time. Practical kit is the same as for any Morocco trip: draw dirhams from ATMs after arrival rather than buying them in Colombia, bring a backup payment card, and pack warm layers for cold Saharan nights and crisp Atlas mornings. Spring and autumn are the seasons I steer people toward for the most comfortable weather across the whole route.

bogotacolombiamorocco from colombiaconnecting flightsmadridlogistics

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

Add your reply

Travelled here yourself, or have a follow-up question? Share your own experience — our travel designers read every reply and add transparent, expert answers.

0/500

We review every question and publish honest, expert answers — usually within a few days.

Ready to turn answers into a trip?

Tell us your dates and what matters most. A travel designer replies within 24 hours with a tailored, no-obligation proposal.