How do I plan a Morocco trip from Denmark?

Planning & Itineraries Started February 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

February 2026

Question

How do I plan a Morocco trip from Denmark?

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

From Copenhagen there are seasonal direct flights to Marrakech and Agadir, otherwise you connect via Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid or Istanbul in about 6–9 hours. Danish passport holders enter Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days. Spring, autumn and winter sun are popular; a week runs roughly €1,500–2,200 per person.

Denmark is well placed for Morocco, and Copenhagen travellers sometimes have the luxury of a seasonal direct flight. Carriers run non-stop service from Copenhagen to Marrakech and to Agadir at certain times of year (Agadir is a classic Scandinavian winter-sun destination), turning the journey into a single four-and-a-half to five-hour hop. When direct flights aren't scheduled, you connect once through Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid or Istanbul, with a total travel time of roughly six to nine hours. I always tell Danish guests to check the seasonal non-stops first, as they're both quicker and often well-priced.

On entry, Danish citizens travel to Morocco visa-free for tourist stays of up to 90 days, needing only a valid passport. That's plenty for any Danish holiday. As ever, verify the current visa rules before booking in case anything has changed, but at present a Danish passport and the in-flight arrival form are all you need.

Danes have a long love affair with Moroccan winter sun, and for good reason: when Copenhagen is dark and cold, Agadir and Marrakech are mild and bright, making December to February a genuinely popular season for Danish travellers despite the cool desert nights. That said, spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) are the most universally comfortable times for touring the cities, mountains and Sahara. Coming from a famously design-conscious culture, many of my Danish guests fall hard for Moroccan craft — the riads, the zellige tilework, the lanterns and rugs.

On budget, a mid-range week from Denmark — flight, riads, a guided desert overnight, transfers and good food — typically comes in around €1,500–2,200 per person, reflecting Scandinavian flight costs, though Moroccan on-the-ground prices feel very affordable to Danish wallets and pull the daily spend right down. A 7-day route covers Marrakech, the Atlas and a Sahara night; ten days adds Fes and Chefchaouen at a calmer pace. Winter-sun travellers often prefer a relaxed Agadir-plus-Marrakech split.

My honest tip for Denmark: if you're travelling in the winter-sun window, grab a seasonal direct flight to Agadir or Marrakech the moment schedules open; otherwise connect through Paris or Amsterdam and land in Marrakech. Either way, we'll build the ground itinerary around your arrival, so all you manage from Copenhagen is the flight.

denmarkcopenhagenplanningflightsvisawinter sun

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

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