Traveller question
Member
January 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Denver?
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 Denver?
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
There are no direct flights from Denver to Morocco. You connect once or twice — via a European hub (London, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam) or via New York onto the Royal Air Maroc non-stop to Casablanca — for a total travel time of roughly 15–20 hours. With a 7–8 hour time difference, plan a 12-day-plus trip so the long haul and jet lag are worth it.
Denver is a long haul to Morocco, and being honest about that shapes the whole plan. There is no non-stop, so you will connect at least once: the cleanest routings are eastbound via a European hub — London, Paris, Frankfurt or Amsterdam — onward into Marrakech or Casablanca, or via New York to pick up the Royal Air Maroc non-stop to Casablanca. Either way, budget roughly fifteen to twenty hours door to airport-exit including the layover, and treat the travel itself as a full day in each direction. Casablanca is the natural arrival point and feeds straight onto the train network, so you can ride the comfortable rail line inland the same day.
The time difference is the other reality to plan around: Morocco runs about seven to eight hours ahead of the Mountain time zone, a substantial shift. I always counsel travellers from Colorado that the first day on the ground is for recovery, not sightseeing — book a comfortable riad with a courtyard, ease in with a hammam and a slow dinner, and let your body catch up before you tackle a busy medina or a long desert drive. Pushing hard on day one after that journey is how people burn out early.
Given the investment of getting there, length matters from Denver. I genuinely discourage anyone from attempting Morocco from here in under ten days, and twelve to sixteen is the honest sweet spot. Once you have spent two long travel days and absorbed a seven-to-eight-hour jet-lag swing, you want a trip with enough breadth to justify it: the imperial cities, the High Atlas, the Sahara, and time to slow down rather than race. A two-week loop that lands and departs from Casablanca, using the train and a private driver for the scenic legs, makes the whole undertaking feel worthwhile.
My honest advice from Denver: book early and compare the via-Europe and via-New-York options on both price and total elapsed time, because the cheapest fare is not always the shortest day. Choose a routing that lets you fly open-jaw where possible so you are not backtracking at the end, plan a deliberately soft first day for the jet lag, and build a longer itinerary that earns the flight. Confirm connection times carefully — a tight layover after a transatlantic leg is a real risk — and verify all segments are operating in your travel month.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
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