How to plan a Morocco trip from South Korea?

Planning & Itineraries Started February 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

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February 2026

Question

How to plan a Morocco trip from South Korea?

Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Amina

Travel Designer · Staff

Cultural Travel Designer

February 2026

Best answer

Allow 10–14 days for the distance. Fly Seoul (Incheon) to Casablanca via a Gulf hub — Doha, Dubai, Abu Dhabi — or Istanbul, roughly 17–21 hours with one stop. South Korean passport holders have enjoyed 90-day visa-free entry, but always verify the current rule before booking.

Korean travellers writing in from Seoul are coming a long way, and my first advice is always about time. There's no nonstop flight from South Korea to Morocco, so you're looking at roughly 17 to 21 hours door-to-door with one connection, plus an 8 to 9 hour time difference. Coming that far for a short trip doesn't sit right with me, so I steer Korean guests toward a minimum of ten days, with fourteen being the genuine sweet spot — enough to experience Marrakech, the Sahara, the Atlas, Fes and the coast without it feeling like you flew across the planet to spend the time in airports.

For routing, the Gulf carriers are the backbone: Qatar Airways via Doha, Emirates via Dubai and Etihad via Abu Dhabi all link Seoul Incheon to Casablanca with comfortable, well-timed connections through hubs built for exactly this kind of transfer. Turkish Airlines via Istanbul is often the shortest total elapsed time, since Istanbul sits conveniently between Asia and North Africa. I land most Korean guests at Casablanca (CMN) as the main gateway, then build a loop south so you never retrace your steps. If a good fare into Marrakech (RAK) appears, take it — it drops you straight into the magic.

On visas, South Korean passport holders have long enjoyed visa-free entry to Morocco for tourist stays of up to 90 days, needing only a passport valid six months beyond travel — which keeps the paperwork blissfully simple. As always, though, I ask guests to confirm the current requirement with the Moroccan embassy in Seoul or official channels before booking, because entry rules can be updated and I never want you relying on last year's information at the immigration desk.

The thing Korean guests thank me for most is pacing the arrival. After a near full-day journey and a big time shift, I build a gentle first 48 hours — a tranquil riad, an easy evening, perhaps a restorative hammam rather than a packed schedule. Then we build momentum. Because you've travelled so far, I always fold the desert in rather than saving it for a 'next time' that may be years away; a night under the Saharan stars is exactly the kind of memory that earns its place on a once-in-a-while long-haul trip. A local eSIM and some cash in dirham round out the practical prep.

south koreaseoulplanninglong-haulflightsvisa

Amina Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.

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