Traveller question
Member
January 2026
How do I plan a Morocco trip from Lithuania?
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 Lithuania?
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 Lithuania, connect through a European hub — Warsaw, Frankfurt, Paris, Madrid or Istanbul — to reach Marrakech, Casablanca or Fez; there are no direct flights from Vilnius or Kaunas. Lithuanian passport holders enter Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days. Plan a travel day each way and confirm current flight and entry rules before booking.
Travellers flying from Vilnius or Kaunas always ask me the same thing — what's the fastest way down? — and the honest answer is that there's no nonstop, so you'll route through a European gateway. From Lithuania the natural connections are Warsaw (an easy LOT hop), Frankfurt, Paris and Madrid, with Istanbul on Turkish Airlines a strong one-stop alternative. Madrid and Paris feed the most onward flights into Marrakech and Casablanca; budget carriers from some hubs can make this surprisingly affordable if your dates are flexible. I'd plan a full day of travel each way and not schedule anything ambitious on arrival evening.
For entry, Lithuanian citizens are in the comfortable position of visa-free tourist travel for stays of up to 90 days, so there's nothing to apply for in advance — just a passport with good validity beyond your trip. As always, I add the caveat I give everyone: routes and rules shift, so verify the current entry requirements and your specific airline's connection policy close to departure with an official source. Five minutes of checking beats discovering a changed rule at the airport.
Once you're on the ground, I usually steer first-time Lithuanian visitors toward a loop that shows the range of the country without endless driving. Marrakech makes the most sense as a base to start — it has the best onward connections and throws you straight into the medina, the souks and Jemaa el-Fna. From there the great first journey heads over the Atlas to the desert near Merzouga for a night in a dune camp, then north through Todra Gorge and the Dades Valley up to Fez. Our 7-day itinerary maps this almost exactly and is what I'd hand a Lithuanian couple with a week to spare.
Why make the effort from the Baltics? Because Morocco delivers a concentrated hit of everything you can't get at home: real desert silence, mountain passes, Atlantic surf towns, and ancient cities where the call to prayer drifts over rooftops at dusk. If you have ten days rather than seven, slow it down and add Chefchaouen's blue lanes and a coastal stop at Essaouira — the extra room turns a good trip into a memorable one. My one firm piece of advice: book the Vilnius–hub and hub–Morocco legs on a single ticket where possible, so the airline owns any missed-connection risk, not you.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
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