Traveller question
Member
June 2026
Is a multigenerational family trip to Morocco doable?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
June 2026
Is a multigenerational family trip to Morocco doable?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Hassan
Travel Designer · StaffFamily Travel Designer
June 2026
Very — Morocco is one of the best multigenerational destinations we design. A private vehicle (or two), a riad villa everyone shares, and activities that flex by age keep grandparents, parents and kids all happy. The shared experiences — a desert camp, a cooking class — bond every generation.
Multigenerational trips are a specialty of mine, and Morocco handles them better than almost anywhere, because it offers something for every age in close proximity. The challenge with three generations is always the spread of energy and interests — toddlers, teenagers, parents, and grandparents rarely want the same thing — and Morocco's mix of gentle culture, hands-on activities, and genuine adventure means I can build a trip where everyone has their moment.
Logistically, the private driver-guide setup is what makes it work, and for larger groups I'll arrange a minibus or a small convoy of vehicles with child seats up front and comfortable seats for grandparents. The family travels together but at its own pace, with the flexibility to split occasionally — the grandparents take a slower morning at the riad while the parents and teens go quad-biking, then everyone reunites for lunch. That ability to flex is the secret to keeping a big group happy.
Accommodation is where I create the heart of the trip. Rather than scattered hotel rooms, I book a riad you take over entirely, or a villa with a pool — a shared base where the family gathers for breakfast on the terrace and dinner under the stars, with a private chef so nobody's cooking or negotiating restaurants for ten people. Having your own courtyard and pool gives the kids a safe place to play and the grown-ups a place to relax, which matters enormously on a longer trip.
The magic, though, is the shared experiences that cut across every generation. A night in a Sahara camp — grandparents and grandchildren stargazing together — is the kind of memory families talk about for years. A hands-on cooking class, a pottery session, a camel ride at sunset, bread-baking in a village: these work for ages 5 to 85. My honest guidance is to keep the pace relaxed, build in rest days, choose 4x4 desert transfers over long camel treks for the older members, and let me tailor each day so the energetic and the easygoing both get their trip. It's one of the most rewarding briefs I take on.
Helpful links
Hassan — Family Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered June 2026.
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