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

Traveller question
Member
March 2026
What is Morocco like in March?
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
March 2026
March is when Morocco turns ideal. Cities warm to a comfortable 20–23°C, the countryside is lush green and full of wildflowers, the Sahara is perfect by day with milder nights, and the Atlas keeps its snowy peaks. Mild coast, gentle crowds and shoulder-season prices.
March is the month Morocco starts to feel effortless. The cities settle into the low-20s by day — warm in the sun, fresh in the shade — which is the sweet spot for the kind of all-day medina walking, rooftop lunches and garden visits that make a trip here. Marrakech's Majorelle and Menara gardens are coming alive, Fes is comfortable rather than freezing, and the whole rhythm of travel relaxes. After the winter rains the landscape is at its greenest: barley fields, wildflowers on the hillsides, full rivers in the gorges.
The Sahara is close to its best in March. Daytime temperatures are warm but not yet brutal, the light is clean, and the nights — while still cool — have lost that bone-cold edge of midwinter, which makes camping out on the dunes genuinely comfortable rather than a test of endurance. This is one of the two windows (March–May and September–October) I steer most desert-focused trips toward. Meanwhile the High Atlas still wears its snow on the high summits, so you get this wonderful contrast: green valleys, blossoming almond and cherry, and white peaks above.
On the coast, Essaouira and the Atlantic strip are warming and increasingly pleasant, though the ocean is still cold and the famous Essaouira wind is picking up — great for walks and seafood, not yet for sunbathing. The deep south and Agadir are reliably warm and sunny. Across the country the colours are saturated, the air is clear, and photography is superb; if you care about how Morocco looks, March is hard to beat.
On crowds and cost, March is shoulder season tipping toward high: it's busier and pricier than January–February but still well short of the April–May peak, so you get near-ideal weather without the worst of the surcharges. The one variable to watch is Ramadan, which in some years falls partly in March — daytime can be quieter and some local eateries adjust hours, though tourist restaurants and tours run normally. Pack for warm days and cool evenings, with one warm layer for the desert, and you'll catch Morocco at one of its loveliest.
Helpful links
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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