Is Morocco good for a babymoon?

Planning & Itineraries Started January 2026 1 reply

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January 2026

Question

Is Morocco good for a babymoon?

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

Sofia

Travel Designer · Staff

Luxury & Honeymoon Designer

January 2026

Best answer

Yes, with the right pacing. Morocco is a beautiful, hospitable babymoon if you base in relaxed riads with spas and pools, stick to short transfers, and travel in spring or autumn to dodge the heat. Skip the long Sahara drives and the bumpy gorges; favour Marrakech, Fes and the breezy coast at Essaouira instead.

I design a fair number of babymoons, and Morocco can be a lovely one — but it is a "choose your version carefully" destination rather than an automatic yes. The country I steer expectant couples towards is the slow, sensory, cocooning one: a calm riad with a plunge pool and a hammam, long lazy breakfasts on a sun-dappled rooftop, gentle wanders through a souk in the cool of the morning, and afternoons with feet up over mint tea. That Morocco is genuinely wonderful for a babymoon. The version with eleven hours in a 4x4 to reach the dunes is not.

My standard babymoon shape is a single relaxed base, or at most two, with short hops between them. Marrakech is the easiest entry point — direct flights from much of Europe, world-class riads, and a Palmeraie full of quiet garden retreats fifteen minutes from the medina if the city itself feels too much. I often pair it with three nights in Essaouira on the Atlantic coast, where the sea breeze keeps temperatures gentle, the pace drops, and a pregnant traveller can stroll the ramparts and eat grilled fish without ever feeling overheated. The drive between the two is under three hours on a good road, which is about my comfort ceiling for an expectant mum.

Two honest cautions. First, heat: the inland cities and the desert are punishing from June to September, and dehydration is the last thing you want when pregnant, so I push babymoons firmly into March-to-May or October-to-November. Second, roads: the long mountain and gorge routes to Merzouga involve hours of switchbacks that can trigger nausea and leave you far from a hospital, so I leave the deep Sahara for a future trip and, if a couple is set on dunes, route them to nearer, smoother Agafay desert instead — a forty-five-minute drive from Marrakech with the same star-filled silence and none of the marathon transfer.

On the practical side, I always check with the couple's doctor about how far along is sensible to fly, build in genuine rest days rather than a packed schedule, and brief the riad in advance so they can arrange softer pillows, fridge space, decaf, and pregnancy-safe spa treatments — most good hammams will adapt happily. Moroccan hospitality leans into caring for a guest, and an expectant mother is treated with real warmth. Plan it as a gentle, grounded trip rather than an adventure, and Morocco gives you exactly the kind of restorative, beautiful pause a babymoon is supposed to be.

babymoonpregnancyrelaxedplanningcouples

Sofia Luxury & Honeymoon Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.

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