Traveller question
Member
January 2026
Is Morocco doable for elderly travellers or those who tire easily?
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
Is Morocco doable for elderly travellers or those who tire easily?
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
January 2026
Yes, very much so — and it's one of my favourite kinds of trip to design. The secret is a private car and driver, a gentler pace with fewer destinations, comfortable centrally located riads, and choosing the smoother experiences. Skip the rushed coach circuits; a slow, well-planned Morocco is a joy at any age.
I design trips for older travellers all the time, including guests in their seventies and eighties, and they consistently come home glowing. The thing to understand is that Morocco can be experienced at completely different intensities. The exhausting version — long days, packed coaches, marathon medina walks, a new hotel every night — is a choice, not a requirement. The graceful version is just as authentic and far kinder on the body.
My first recommendation is always a private car and driver. This single decision removes the most tiring parts of travel: no dragging luggage, no waiting at stations, no figuring out logistics. Your driver drops you at the door, carries your bags, knows where to park, and adjusts the day to your energy. If you want to stop for tea and a rest, you stop. If a morning was a lot, the afternoon becomes a gentle drive through beautiful scenery instead of another hike.
Pace is everything. I urge older guests to do fewer places for longer — three nights in Marrakech rather than one, a proper rest day in a tranquil riad, the Atlas or coast rather than a brutal dash to the deep desert and back. We build mornings for the big sights when energy and temperatures are best, and keep afternoons soft. Riads with courtyards offer shaded, flat, peaceful spots to recharge in the middle of the day without going far.
Be honest with yourself about the physical bits and we'll plan around them. Medinas are uneven underfoot, so good supportive shoes and a walking stick if you use one are wise, and we keep medina walks short and sit-down breaks frequent. The desert is doable without the camel — a 4x4 to a comfortable camp is wonderful, and many luxury camps are reached by vehicle. We avoid the steepest sites or arrange them at a relaxed pace, and there's no shame in admiring a kasbah from a lovely terrace rather than climbing every level.
Add good travel insurance, a small medication kit, and central, comfortable accommodation, and you have a trip that's as rich as anyone's but never punishing. Some of my most heartfelt thank-you notes have come from older couples who were nervous beforehand and found Morocco entirely manageable and deeply moving. Tell us your pace and we'll honour it.
Hassan — Family Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
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