Traveller question
Member
April 2026
What's the ultimate 2-week (14-day) Morocco itinerary?
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's the ultimate 2-week (14-day) Morocco itinerary?
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
April 2026
Two weeks is enough to see Morocco properly end to end: Marrakech, the Atlantic coast, the High Atlas, the full Sahara, Fes, Chefchaouen and the northern cities — at a relaxed pace with time for treks, cooking classes and rest. The definitive grand tour without the rush.
Fourteen days is the dream length — long enough to weave together every signature region of Morocco into a single grand tour, yet not so long that you ever feel you're padding the trip. With two weeks I stop thinking about what to cut and start thinking about how to pace it well, because the real luxury here is time to sit still in the places you love rather than just passing through.
The ultimate arc runs roughly like this. Begin with three days in Marrakech to truly settle in — medina, palaces, gardens, food, a hammam, maybe a day trip to the Ourika Valley. Then west to Essaouira for a couple of relaxed coastal nights. Back inland for the High Atlas — a real night or two around Imlil, even a short trek — before the great desert journey: Aït Benhaddou, Ouarzazate, the Dades and Todra gorges, the palm oases, and two unhurried nights in the Merzouga dunes for camels, camps, stargazing and a sunrise you'll never forget.
From the Sahara you cross the cedar-clad Middle Atlas (Barbary apes near Azrou) up to Fes for two or three days in the great medieval medina, going deep into the tanneries, the artisan workshops and the endless lanes. Then north to blue Chefchaouen for a dreamy day or two in the Rif mountains, and a finish along the north — Tangier and Asilah, or a swing through the capital Rabat and Casablanca's grand mosque — before flying home. You've crossed the country coast to desert to mountains to city, with no frantic days.
What two weeks really buys you is the chance to layer in experiences, not just destinations: a cooking class in Fes, a proper Atlas trek, a slow coastal afternoon, a second desert night, time to simply read on a riad rooftop. My advice for fourteen days is to resist the urge to add yet more places and instead build in rest and depth — a trip this length should feel rich and rounded, not like a marathon. Done right, it's the definitive Morocco journey, and most people who do it leave feeling they've genuinely understood the country rather than skimmed it.
Amina — Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered April 2026.
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