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

Traveller question
Member
March 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Detroit?
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
March 2026
There are no direct flights from Detroit to Morocco. You connect once or twice — via a European hub (Amsterdam, Paris, London, Frankfurt) or via New York onto the Royal Air Maroc non-stop to Casablanca — for a total travel time of roughly 14–19 hours. With a 6–7 hour time difference, plan a 10-day-plus trip to make the journey worthwhile.
From Detroit the plan starts with choosing a one-stop routing, since non-stop service to Morocco is not available. The two good options are to connect through a European hub — Amsterdam, Paris, London or Frankfurt — onward into Marrakech or Casablanca, or to fly via New York and pick up the Royal Air Maroc non-stop to Casablanca. The Amsterdam connection is a natural one given the long-standing transatlantic link from Detroit. Total travel time runs roughly fourteen to nineteen hours depending on the connection, so it is a long day but a clean single-stop trip rather than a multi-leg ordeal. Casablanca is the natural arrival point either way, and it feeds straight onto the train network.
The time difference from Detroit is about six to seven hours ahead, a real but manageable adjustment. An overnight connection that lands you in Casablanca or Marrakech in the morning is the kindest shape, letting you sleep en route and wake roughly on Morocco time. I always advise a relaxed first day on arrival: a courtyard riad, a slow start, an easy wander through the medina rather than diving straight into a heavy itinerary, so the jet lag fades before you head out for the real exploring.
Because this is a transatlantic trip with a long travel day each way, length matters. I steer Michigan travellers toward ten days or more, with twelve to fourteen the comfortable sweet spot — once you have invested the flight time and the jet-lag adjustment, you want enough days for the imperial cities, the Atlas, the Sahara and perhaps the coast, ideally as a one-way loop so you are not backtracking. Land in Casablanca, head inland by train or with a private driver for the scenic legs, and end somewhere you can fly home from without a long return drive to the start.
My honest advice from Detroit: book early and compare the via-Europe and via-New-York options on both price and total elapsed time, since the cheapest is not always the shortest. Pick a routing that lets you fly open-jaw if you can, plan a soft first day for the six-to-seven-hour jet lag, and build a ten-to-fourteen-day itinerary that earns the journey. Leave comfortable connection times after the transatlantic leg, and verify all segments are operating in your travel month, as these connections shift seasonally.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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