Traveller question
Member
January 2026
What is Morocco like at Easter?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
January 2026
What is Morocco like at Easter?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Amina
Travel Designer · StaffCultural Travel Designer
January 2026
Easter falls in Morocco's glorious spring — arguably the best weather of the year, with warm sunny days (20–26°C), wildflowers and green valleys. It's a busy school-holiday period with higher prices and full riads, since European families travel, but it's not a local holiday so everything stays open. Book ahead and you'll get Morocco at its most beautiful.
Easter is one of my favourite times to send people to Morocco, because it lands squarely in the country's most beautiful season. Spring here — roughly March into May — gives you the best weather of the whole year: warm, sunny days that sit comfortably in the low-to-mid 20s°C in Marrakech and the imperial cities, with the harsh summer heat still weeks away and the cold of winter behind you. The Atlas foothills and the valleys are green and dotted with wildflowers, the almond and later the rose blossoms are out, and the desert is at its most forgiving — warm by day, cool but not freezing at night. For comfortable sightseeing, this is as good as Morocco gets.
The trade-off is crowds and price, because Easter coincides with school holidays across Europe and the UK, so it's a genuinely busy travel window. European families pour in, the best riads fill, and rates climb toward their spring peak — not Christmas-and-New-Year levels, but noticeably above a random week in, say, late January. I always advise booking your riads, desert camp and any cooking classes or guided days a couple of months ahead for the Easter fortnight, because the standout places go early and you don't want to be left with the leftovers in such a popular slot.
One thing that reassures people: Easter is a Christian festival, and Morocco is a Muslim country, so it carries no local significance whatsoever. There are no Easter closures, no public-holiday shutdowns, no disruption — the souks, monuments, museums and restaurants all run completely as normal. (The one date worth checking against is Ramadan, whose timing shifts each year and sometimes overlaps the Easter period — that does change the daytime rhythm, and I cover it separately.) Absent a Ramadan overlap, you simply get Morocco operating at full tilt in its prettiest weather.
My verdict: Easter is one of the very best times to visit, full stop — the weather is close to perfect, the landscapes are at their greenest, and there's a holiday buzz in the air. You pay for that with higher prices and busier headline sights, and you must book early. But if you want to see Morocco looking its absolute best and you have the school-holiday window anyway, I'd send you happily, with only the advice to lock in your accommodation well in advance.
Amina — Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered January 2026.
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