How do I plan a Morocco trip from Colombia?

Planning & Itineraries Started March 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

March 2026

Question

How do I plan a Morocco trip from Colombia?

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

March 2026

Best answer

From Bogotá you connect once or twice — typically via Madrid, Lisbon, Paris or Istanbul — to Casablanca or Marrakech, around 14–18 hours total. Colombian passport holders should verify entry rules before booking, as a visa may be required. Autumn and spring are best; a week runs roughly €1,800–2,800 per person plus any visa.

Colombia reaches Morocco most naturally through Europe. From Bogotá (or Medellín and Cartagena via Bogotá) the cleanest path is a transatlantic flight to a European gateway — Madrid and Lisbon are the most logical, given the strong Iberian links to Morocco, with Paris and Istanbul also working well — and then a short onward hop into Casablanca or Marrakech. Total journey time runs roughly fourteen to eighteen hours including connections. I advise Colombian guests to book the whole trip on one ticket where possible, and Madrid is often the smoothest single-connection option, with frequent quick flights down to Morocco.

On entry, this is the first thing to settle: Colombian passport holders should verify the current visa rules before booking, because a visa may be required for Morocco — do not assume visa-free entry. Check with the Moroccan embassy or an official source for the latest requirements and apply in good time if needed, as processing can take a few weeks. I always have my Colombian guests confirm their entry position at the very start of planning, so any visa is secured long before departure and there are no surprises.

For timing, autumn (September–November) and spring (March–May) are the most comfortable seasons across Morocco's cities, mountains and Sahara. Colombian travellers, coming from a country of vibrant markets, warm hospitality and dramatic landscapes, tend to feel an immediate kinship with Morocco — the bustle of the souks, the love of food and music, and the friendliness all resonate, while the desert and the Atlas offer scenery quite unlike home. Given the distance, I encourage a stay of ten days or more to make the long journey worthwhile.

On budget, a comfortable mid-range week from Colombia — flights, riads, a guided desert overnight and transfers — typically lands around €1,800–2,800 per person before any visa fee, with Morocco's on-the-ground prices feeling very fair to Colombian travellers and keeping daily costs gentle. Because the flight is the main expense, it pays to maximise your time: a 10-day route covers Marrakech, the Atlas, the Sahara and Fes well, and two weeks adds the coast and Chefchaouen at a relaxed pace.

My honest advice for Colombia: confirm whether you need a visa and, if so, apply early; then book a one-stop flight via Madrid (or Lisbon, Paris or Istanbul) into Casablanca or Marrakech and plan a longer trip to reward the distance. Land, transfer to Marrakech, and let us run the full journey across the country. With the paperwork sorted ahead of time, Morocco is a spectacular and very rewarding trip from Colombia.

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

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