Traveller question
Member
January 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Greece?
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 Greece?
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
From Athens or Thessaloniki you connect through a European hub — usually Rome, Madrid, Paris or Istanbul — reaching Marrakech, Casablanca or Fes in roughly 6–9 hours total. Greek passport holders enter Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days. Spring and autumn are best. A week runs about €1,400–2,000 per person.
Greece doesn't have direct flights to Morocco, so planning a trip from Athens or Thessaloniki means a single connection through a European gateway — and the good news is there are plenty of comfortable options. The cleanest routings go via Rome, Madrid, Paris, Frankfurt or Istanbul, any of which links onward to Marrakech, Casablanca or Fes. Total journey time is typically six to nine hours including the layover, so it's a half-day of travel rather than a marathon. I usually recommend Greek travellers book the whole journey on one ticket so a missed connection is the airline's responsibility, not yours.
Entry is straightforward: Greek citizens, like other EU nationals, can visit Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days for tourism, needing only a valid passport. That covers any holiday you'd realistically plan from Greece. Do verify the current visa rules before you book, as requirements can shift, but at present a Greek passport gets you in with nothing more than the arrival form filled out on the flight.
Greeks will find Morocco both familiar and exotic, and that's part of the charm — another sun-drenched, café-loving, hospitable Mediterranean-adjacent culture, but with the souks, the Sahara and the Atlas adding a wholly different flavour. The seasons mirror what Greeks already know: spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) are the sweet spots, summer is hot inland but glorious on the Atlantic coast, and winter is mild in the cities. Coming from a country of islands and ancient ruins, many of my Greek guests especially love Morocco's Roman site at Volubilis and the dramatic coastline around Essaouira.
On budget, a week in Morocco from Greece — including the connecting flight — generally falls around €1,400–2,000 per person for a well-organised mid-range trip with riads, a desert excursion and private transfers, and you can flex up or down from there. Once you're in the country, prices for food, taxis and crafts feel very reasonable to Greek wallets. A 7-day itinerary covers Marrakech, the Atlas and a Sahara night comfortably; ten days lets you fold in Fes and the blue town of Chefchaouen without rushing.
My honest advice for Greek travellers: shop the connecting flights early (via Rome or Istanbul tends to be both quick and competitively priced), then let us handle everything once you land. Fly into Marrakech or Casablanca, and we'll build the in-country journey — desert, mountains, imperial cities — around your arrival. It turns a two-leg flight into a seamless, single, well-planned adventure.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
Travelled here yourself, or have a follow-up question? Share your own experience — our travel designers read every reply and add transparent, expert answers.
Tell us your dates and what matters most. A travel designer replies within 24 hours with a tailored, no-obligation proposal.