Traveller question
Member
April 2026
What about travelling to Morocco with a chronic condition like diabetes?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
April 2026
What about travelling to Morocco with a chronic condition like diabetes?
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
April 2026
Very doable with planning. Bring more medication and supplies than you need in original packaging plus a doctor's letter, keep insulin and devices in your carry-on, and pace for heat and irregular meals. City private clinics are well equipped. Carry a card explaining your condition in French or Arabic. Discuss the trip with your specialist beforehand.
I've helped many travellers with diabetes, heart conditions, asthma, and other ongoing health needs enjoy Morocco fully, and the honest message is: it's very doable, it just rewards planning. Take diabetes as the worked example, since it's the one I'm asked about most. The foundation is supplies — bring more insulin, test strips, sensors, needles, and snacks than you think you'll need, ideally enough for the trip plus a generous buffer, all in original packaging with your doctor's letter naming everything. Local resupply of specialist items is not something to count on.
Keep the critical kit on your body. Insulin and electronic devices go in your carry-on, never the hold, both because checked bags get lost and because hold temperatures can wreck temperature-sensitive medication. Morocco's heat is a genuine factor for insulin specifically — it degrades when it cooks — so I tell travellers to carry a small insulated pouch or a Frio-style cooling wallet and to be mindful in the desert and in summer. Hotel fridges and riad staff are usually happy to help store things safely if you ask.
Rhythm is the other thing to manage. Moroccan meals can run late, portions and carbohydrate content vary, long drives interrupt routines, and active days in the heat change how your body uses energy — all of which can unsettle blood-sugar control or any condition that depends on regular timing. I build in predictable meal stops, always have the traveller carry fast sugar and snacks, and keep the pace humane. Heat plus exertion also matters for heart and respiratory conditions, so afternoons are for shade and rest, not exertion.
Two practical safeguards make a real difference: carry a card (and ideally a phone note) that explains your condition, your medications, and what to do in an emergency, written in French and Arabic so a Moroccan responder understands instantly; and know where the nearest good private clinic is at each stop, since city clinics handle chronic-condition emergencies competently. Above all, sit down with your specialist before you book — they can adjust dosing for time zones and activity and tell you what to watch for. With that groundwork, a chronic condition is a thing to manage, not a reason to stay home.
Helpful links
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered April 2026.
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