Traveller question
Member
May 2026
Will I be bored after seeing the cities in Morocco?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
May 2026
Will I be bored after seeing the cities in Morocco?
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
May 2026
Almost certainly not — the cities are barely the beginning. Beyond Marrakech and Fes lie the Sahara, the High Atlas, the Atlantic coast, blue Chefchaouen, waterfalls, gorges, Roman ruins and Berber villages. The risk in Morocco is too much to see, never too little.
I find this worry almost endearing, because it reveals a picture of Morocco as a couple of cities and not much else — and the reality could not be more opposite. The honest truth is that Morocco's problem is never running out of things to do; it is fitting in even a fraction of what the country offers. The imperial cities are magnificent, but they are the overture, not the symphony. If anything, travellers who see only Marrakech and Fes leave feeling they missed Morocco, not that they exhausted it.
Consider what sits beyond the medina walls. The Sahara — riding camels over the Erg Chebbi dunes, sleeping in a desert camp under a sky thick with stars, watching the sun rise over an ocean of sand — is for many people the single most moving experience of their lives, and it is nothing like a city. The High Atlas mountains offer trekking, Berber villages, the dramatic Tizi n'Tichka pass, and the green Ourika and Ouirgane valleys. The Atlantic coast gives you windswept Essaouira with its ramparts and seafood, surf towns, and the white-and-blue port of Asilah. None of these resemble each other, let alone the cities.
And the list keeps unfolding. Chefchaouen, the blue town tumbling down a mountainside, is a world of its own. The Dades and Todra gorges carve red canyons out of the south. Ait Benhaddou's earthen kasbah looks like a film set because it literally is one. Ouzoud's waterfalls thunder down in stages with monkeys in the trees. Volubilis is a sprawling, beautifully preserved Roman city with mosaics open to the sky. There are hammams and cooking classes and artisan workshops and weekly rural souks. The cuisine alone — different in every region — could anchor a trip. Boredom is genuinely not on the menu.
So my real advice flips the worry on its head. The danger in planning a Morocco trip is not too little to do — it is cramming too much in and exhausting yourself trying to see it all. The art is choosing: pick a region or two, build a route that pairs city culture with desert wonder and mountain or coast, and leave room to linger. People routinely come home from Morocco already planning the return trip for everything they did not have time for. That, far more than boredom, is the authentic Morocco experience — the country gives you more than one visit can hold.
Helpful links
Serenity Morocco Expert Team — Travel Designers, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered May 2026.
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