Traveller question
Member
February 2026
What do Peruvian travellers need to know about 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
What do Peruvian travellers need to know about Morocco?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team
Travel Designer · StaffTravel Designers
February 2026
Peruvian passport holders generally enter Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days, with a passport valid six months beyond arrival — but confirm current rules officially first. There are no direct flights; connect via Madrid, Amsterdam or São Paulo. The currency is the dirham, drawn from ATMs locally; cards work in cities.
For Peruvian travellers, Morocco's entry side is generally easy: holders of a Peruvian passport usually enter visa-free for stays of up to 90 days, provided your passport is valid for at least six months beyond arrival and has blank pages for the stamp. You complete an arrival card on the plane and pass through immigration on landing. Because policies do change, I always ask my Peruvian guests to confirm the current rule with the Moroccan consulate or an official source before they book flights — treat any second-hand information, including this answer, as a prompt to check officially.
Flights from Lima all involve a connection, since there's nothing direct. The most reliable routings cross the Atlantic via a European hub — Madrid is the obvious choice, with Iberia and onward Royal Air Maroc into Casablanca, and Amsterdam, Paris or Istanbul also work — or you can route up through São Paulo and take Royal Air Maroc's nonstop to Casablanca. Door to door it's roughly 18 to 21 hours, so I'd build in a relaxed layover rather than a rushed one. Casablanca is the main gateway; from your European hub you can often fly straight into Marrakech or Fes and skip a domestic hop.
On money, the dirham is a closed currency you can't obtain in Peru, so don't try to buy it before you fly. Land with a small backup of US dollars or euros and then draw dirhams from a bank ATM at the airport or in town, where the rate easily beats the exchange counters. Peruvian Visa and Mastercard cards are accepted in city hotels, restaurants and larger shops; choose one with low foreign-transaction fees and tell your bank you're travelling so it isn't declined. Out in the desert, the mountain routes and the souks, it's cash only — keep a roll of small dirham notes for taxis, tips and stallholders.
Culturally, Peruvians often feel a real kinship with Morocco — both are countries of vivid markets, layered history and warm, family-centred hospitality. Your Spanish is a genuine help, particularly in the north around Tangier and Tetouan, while French covers most other interactions. A few notes: tipping is customary but modest, just a few dirhams; haggling in the souks is the friendly ritual it appears to be, much like markets back home; and dress a touch more modestly away from the resorts, with shoulders and knees covered. Accept the mint tea when offered — it's hospitality first, and the carpet conversation, if it comes, is optional.
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered February 2026.
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