How do I plan a Morocco trip from Rosario?

Getting Around Started March 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

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March 2026

Question

How do I plan a Morocco trip from Rosario?

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

March 2026

Best answer

From Rosario (ROS) you connect via Buenos Aires, fly the Atlantic to São Paulo, Madrid or Lisbon, then onward to Casablanca — São Paulo–Casablanca on Royal Air Maroc is the cleanest single crossing. Expect 22–28 hours and two or three stops. Argentine passports are visa-free for Morocco (short stays). Plan 10–12 days.

Rosario has limited long-haul reach of its own, so the first leg for any rosarino is the short hop to Buenos Aires (usually Ezeiza, EZE), where the real options open up. From there I steer Argentine clients toward one of two clean crossings: the São Paulo–Casablanca service that Royal Air Maroc operates, which is the single most efficient way to get from South America to Morocco, or the well-worn Buenos Aires–Madrid/Lisbon route with a short onward flight into Casablanca (CMN) or Marrakech (RAK). The São Paulo routing is my quiet favourite because it puts you on a direct line to Morocco's main hub.

Be realistic: from Rosario you're looking at 22 to 28 hours door to door once you stack the domestic hop, the transatlantic leg and any onward connection. I always build a generous layover — 3 hours minimum — at whichever hub you cross through, because that's where delays bite. If you go via São Paulo (GRU), the Royal Air Maroc flight to Casablanca lands you exactly where you want to be; if you go via Spain or Portugal, the onward Morocco shuttle is so frequent that timing is forgiving. For a lot of Rosario travellers I suggest an outbound overnight in Madrid or São Paulo to soften the haul.

Here's the good news I love giving Argentine clients: holders of an ordinary Argentine passport do not need a visa for tourist stays in Morocco within the permitted period — you're visa-exempt for short visits. That's a genuine advantage over your Mexican and Colombian neighbours and it simplifies planning enormously. That said, entry rules everywhere can change, so I still tell every traveller to confirm the current Argentine-passport requirement and the permitted stay length on official Moroccan consular channels before departure, and to verify the live flight schedules at the same time, since the São Paulo–Casablanca and Buenos Aires–Europe options both shift by season.

Because the journey is so long from Rosario, I nudge clients toward 10 to 12 days so the trip rewards the effort. A route that flows well: arrive Casablanca, train to Fes for two nights in the medina, cross to the Sahara for an overnight at Merzouga, traverse the High Atlas to Marrakech, and if you've taken the full 12 days, add the blue town of Chefchaouen or the coast at Essaouira. With only a week I'd keep it to Marrakech, Fes and one desert excursion. Start from our 10-day itinerary and we'll wrap the connections around your ROS departure.

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

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