Traveller question
Member
February 2026
Is Morocco good for a family with a baby?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
February 2026
Is Morocco good for a family with a baby?
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
February 2026
Yes — Moroccans adore babies and you'll be warmly welcomed everywhere. The practicalities just need planning: bring your own car seat, pack formula/nappies (brands vary), choose a private driver and short drives, skip strollers in the medina for a carrier, base in a pool-and-family-room riad or hotel, and keep babies shaded, hydrated and out of the midday heat.
Morocco is a wonderfully warm place to travel with a baby, and the first thing to know is cultural: this is a deeply family-oriented, child-loving society, and a baby is met with genuine delight everywhere you go. Shopkeepers, waiters, riad staff and fellow travellers will coo over your little one, offer to help, and generally make you feel welcome rather than a nuisance. That hospitality alone smooths a lot of the journey. The honest part is purely practical — a few things take more planning than they would at home, and once you've sorted them, a baby trip here is lovely.
Start with the logistics that matter most. Bring your own infant car seat (they're rarely provided and quality varies — airlines usually carry them free) and travel by pre-arranged private driver rather than taxis, keeping each drive short and broken up, since Morocco's distances are real. Forget the stroller in the medinas — the rough, crowded, stepped lanes defeat wheels — and use a good baby carrier instead, which is far more practical everywhere. Pack what you can't guarantee finding: your preferred formula, baby food, and a stock of nappies, as brands and availability differ from home (cities have pharmacies and supermarkets, but don't count on a specific brand mid-trip).
Accommodation choice does a lot of the work. Pick a base with a pool, a family or ground-floor room, and request a cot in advance — and if you're drawn to a riad, vet it for an enclosed pool and solid railings, since the open courtyards and steep stairs are real hazards for the smallest (a regular family hotel with lifts and a fenced pool is the easy option for babies). Many places will happily do laundry and prepare simple food, which is a genuine help. Build your days gently around the cool morning and evening, with a long midday break back at the pool or in the shaded courtyard for naps.
Health and comfort basics: the Moroccan sun is strong, so keep a baby well shaded, in a hat, and hydrated, and avoid the midday heat — spring and autumn are far kinder seasons for a baby than high summer or the cold desert winter nights. Stick to bottled water (including for making up feeds), be a little cautious with food hygiene as you would anywhere, and pack a small medical kit with rehydration salts, infant paracetamol and anything prescribed. Pharmacies are good and widespread in towns, and private clinics in the cities are reassuringly capable if you ever need them.
My honest verdict: yes, Morocco is good with a baby — arguably easier than many places, thanks to the warmth toward children — provided you plan the practicalities: your own car seat, a private driver, a carrier not a stroller, a baby-safe pool-equipped base, your own supplies, and a gentle, heat-aware pace. Keep the itinerary short and slow, lean on the famously kind hospitality, and you'll have a relaxed, memorable trip. Our family team handles exactly these baby-friendly details when planning.
Hassan — Family Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.
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