Traveller question
Member
January 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Buenos Aires?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
January 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Buenos Aires?
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 · StaffTravel Designers
January 2026
Buenos Aires has no direct Morocco flight. The two best routings are via São Paulo to catch Royal Air Maroc direct to Casablanca, or via Europe (Madrid, Rome, Paris). Expect 17 to 21 hours total. Land in Casablanca, then continue to Marrakech or Fes.
From Buenos Aires there are two sensible ways into Morocco, and which one I recommend depends on the day's schedules. The first is to hop up to São Paulo and connect onto Royal Air Maroc's direct Guarulhos-to-Casablanca service — a tidy routing that keeps you in the Southern Hemisphere's flight network and avoids a long European wait, though it does hinge on the timings lining up, so verify both legs carefully. The second is the classic European path: Iberia or Aerolíneas to Madrid, or carriers through Rome, Paris or Frankfurt, then a short onward flight to Casablanca. Total travel time runs roughly seventeen to twenty-one hours depending on layovers.
For most Porteño travellers I lean toward the Madrid routing for reliability and frequency — there are simply more flights from Buenos Aires to Madrid and more onward departures to Morocco if anything slips. But if the São Paulo connection times are clean, that Royal Air Maroc direct over the Atlantic is genuinely lovely and shaves out the European terminal change. Whichever you pick, give yourself a comfortable buffer at the connecting hub and look hard at an open-jaw ticket so you can finish your Moroccan loop in the north and fly home from there rather than doubling back to Casablanca.
Time-zone-wise Buenos Aires is forgiving: Morocco is around four to five hours ahead, so the body clock adjusts faster than you might fear after such a long journey. The fatigue you feel on arrival is more about the sheer hours in transit than deep jet lag. I always plan a gentle landing day — a riad, a slow first wander, an early dinner — and push the Sahara drive or long train transfers to the following morning. Ten days is the itinerary I most often build for Argentine travellers coming this far: Marrakech, a night in the desert, Fes, and time in the north.
Two admin points I flag for every Argentine client. First, visas — Argentine passport holders currently enter Morocco visa-free for tourism, but confirm with the Moroccan consulate before you book, as rules are periodically updated. Second, money and packing: draw dirhams from ATMs once you arrive rather than sourcing them at home, carry a backup card, and pack layers, because a Saharan night or an Atlas dawn can be genuinely cold even when Marrakech is warm. Get the routing and these basics right and the trip from Buenos Aires comes together cleanly.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
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