Where is the best place to surf in Morocco for beginners?

Planning & Itineraries Started May 2026 1 reply

Traveller question

Member

May 2026

Question

Where is the best place to surf in Morocco for beginners?

Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Laila

Travel Designer · Staff

Culinary & Wellness Designer

May 2026

Best answer

The Taghazout–Tamraght area north of Agadir is Morocco’s top beginner surf zone — mellow beach breaks, warm-ish water, year-round schools and a relaxed vibe. Nearby Imsouane has a long, gentle point wave ideal for learning. Best beginner season is roughly autumn to spring.

If you've never surfed and you want to learn in Morocco, point yourself at the coast just north of Agadir — the cluster of Taghazout, Tamraght and their neighbouring beaches. This stretch has become Morocco's surf capital for good reason: it catches consistent Atlantic swell, but it also offers the gentle, forgiving beach breaks that beginners actually need, alongside the world-class reef points that draw the pros. You get the infrastructure too — surf camps, board and wetsuit hire, and instructors on the sand every day — so you can rock up with nothing and be standing up on a foamie by the afternoon.

The specific beginner spots matter, because not every wave here is friendly. Around Taghazout and Tamraght, mellow sandy-bottom beaches like Crocro (Croco), Banana Beach, Devil's Rock and Tamraght's beach are the classic learner zones — soft, rolling whitewater, sandy landings, and lessons run from them constantly. A short drive away, Imsouane is the beginner and longboarder favourite: it has a famously long, slow, gentle point wave (the 'Bay') that peels forever, letting you practise the same green wave for far longer than a quick beach break — many people have their first proper ride there. I steer nervous first-timers to those, and away from the sharper reef breaks like Anchor Point that look glamorous but are for experienced surfers only.

Timing and conditions help the learning curve. The water is Atlantic, so it's cooler than people expect — you'll wear a wetsuit year-round, but it's manageable and warmer than northern Europe. For beginners the sweet spot is broadly autumn through spring (roughly September to April), when the weather's pleasant and the swells are reliable without being huge; mid-winter brings the biggest waves (great for advanced surfers, less ideal for total novices), and summer is smaller and gentler but busier. Mornings are usually cleaner before the wind picks up.

My practical advice: book a lesson or a few days at a surf school rather than going it alone — they put you on the right beach for that day's conditions, supply the soft beginner board and wetsuit, and keep you safe with the rips, which are the real hazard here. Taghazout itself is a laid-back former fishing village turned surf-and-yoga hub, so it's an easy, sociable place to learn, and you can pair surfing with yoga, hammam and chilled café life. For complete beginners, that Taghazout–Tamraght–Imsouane triangle is hard to beat anywhere in Morocco.

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Laila Culinary & Wellness Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered May 2026.

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