Traveller question
Member
February 2026
Is sport fishing in Dakhla or Agadir good in Morocco?
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 sport fishing in Dakhla or Agadir good in Morocco?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Youssef
Travel Designer · StaffDesert & Sahara Specialist
February 2026
Yes — Morocco's Atlantic coast is excellent for sport fishing. Dakhla is world-class for big game (the cold, rich Canary Current brings tuna, dentex, and big sea bass) and is also a famous surfcasting destination. Agadir offers accessible charters for tuna, bonito, and bottom fishing. Both run half- and full-day trips; Dakhla is more remote and serious.
Sport fishing in Morocco is genuinely good, and it's one of those activities the country under-markets, so anglers are often pleasantly shocked. The reason it works is oceanographic: the cold, nutrient-rich Canary Current sweeps down the Atlantic coast and creates an extraordinarily productive fishery. Dakhla, far down in the south, is the crown jewel. It's developed a serious reputation among dedicated anglers, both for boat-based big-game fishing and for surfcasting from the beaches, where people pull in remarkable fish straight off the sand. You're looking at tuna, dentex, big sea bass (the local 'loup' can be enormous here), meagre, and more.
Dakhla's catch is that it's remote — a long way south, reached by flight or a serious drive — and the scene there is geared toward people who are genuinely keen, often combining fishing with kitesurfing on the famous flat lagoon. The upside of that remoteness is uncrowded water and a sense of frontier wildness; the downside is that it's not a casual add-on to a standard Marrakech-and-desert trip. If fishing is a primary motivation for your visit, though, Dakhla rewards the effort more than anywhere else in the country.
Agadir is the practical alternative for most travellers, and it's no slouch. As a developed resort city with a proper marina, it has an established sport-fishing scene with charters that are easy to book for a half or full day. You'll target tuna, bonito, mackerel, and bottom species depending on the season and the boat, and the operators are used to mixed-ability groups, so it's far more accessible if you just fancy a day out rather than a dedicated angling expedition. Essaouira too has fishing trips, though it's smaller-scale and weather-dependent given the wind.
A few honest notes from arranging these for travellers: seasons matter — pelagic species like tuna run at particular times, so tell your operator what you're after and let them advise on timing; the Atlantic is cold and can be rough, so the comfortable-day fantasy isn't guaranteed; and licensing and conservation rules apply, which good charters handle for you. I'd happily build a Dakhla trip around serious fishing, or slot an Agadir charter into a coastal itinerary as a fun day. Either way, the fish are genuinely there.
Youssef — Desert & Sahara Specialist, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.
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