Morocco 10 Days Tour from Casablanca
10 Days Morocco Tour from Casablanca
Don’t miss joining the 10 days tour from Casablanca to Marrakech today.

10 day Morocco itinerary from Casablanca Highlights
- Hassan II mosque
- Enjoy the blue city of Chefchaouen
- Visit Meknes (imperial city)
- Visit Volubilis
- Enjoy the High Atlas Mountains
- Panoramic view of Tizi N'Tichka
- Berber villages along the way
- Moroccan culture
- Medina of Marrakech
- Ait Ben Haddou Kasbah
- Walk through the canyon in Dades
- Rif Mountains
- Sahara Desert of Merzouga
- Drive along the palm grove of Skoura
- Camel trekking desert experience
- Sunset & sunrise over Erg Chebbi dunes
- Night in the desert at Berber tent
- Berber drums around camp fire
- Taourirt kasbah in Ouarzazate
- Enjoy the panoramic view of Ziz valley
- Visit Todra gorges
- Fes city tour
Morocco 10 Days Tour from Casablanca
10 Days - 9 Nights
Casablanca
Casablanca or Marrakech
Everyday
Everyday at about 7/8 AM
Our drivers are expert who speaks English/Spanish/French
Hyundai H1, Minivan, Mercedes Vito minivan, Prado TX 4×4, Mitsubishi Sport…etc!
The price depends on how many people are on your tour group.
Summary Itinerary: Morocco itinerary 10 days from Casablanca
- Day 1: Casablanca » Rabat (87Km)
- Day 2: Rabat » Asillah » Chefchaouen (361Km)
- Day 3: Chefchaouen » Volubilis » Fes (233Km)
- Day 4: Fes Visit (Day in Fes)
- Day 5: Fes » Ifrane » Cedar Forest » Merzouga » Camel ridding (465Km)
- Day 6: Merzouga Desert » Todra Gorges » Tinghir » Dades Gorges (273Km)
- Day 7: Dades Valley » Kasbah Amridil » Skoura » Ouarzazate » Marrakech (328Km)
- Day 8: Marrakech Visit (Day in Marrakech)
- Day 9: Marrakech » El jadida » Casablanca (309Km)
- Day 10: Transfer to the Airport
10 days desert tour from Casablanca to Marrakech: Details
Overview: 10 Days Tour from Casablanca to Marrakech
With this 10 days tour from Casablanca, you are going to enjoy the Sahara desert of Merzouga, and visit the Atlas studios in Ouarzazate, enjoy the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Ait Ben Haddou Kasbah…etc!
10 days Morocco tour from Casablanca Detailed Itinerary:
Day 1: Casablanca » Rabat (87Km)
On the first day of 10 days tour from Casablanca, we will pick you up from Casablanca airport. In Casablanca, you will see the Hassan II Mosque, the largest one outside of Mecca, and experience the coastal Cornish seaside.
Afterward, we will leave for Rabat. Here you will see the Hassan Tower and the Oudaya Kasbah before you check in to your riad in the Medina. Overnight at riad/hotel in Rabat.
Day 2: Rabat » Asillah » Chefchaouen (361Km)
Asilah is a fortified town on the northwest tip of the Atlantic coast of Morocco, about 50km from Tangier. Its ramparts and gate works remain fully intact. Asilah’s largely residential medina is surrounded by sturdy stone fortifications built by the Portuguese in the 15th century.
Within the walls are tranquil narrow streets lined by white houses with blue or green decorative touches; many of these have been purchased and painstakingly restored by foreigners.
Although this restoration work has left the medina much sanitized, its winding lanes, and jalousies (wooden, trellis-like window shutters) have. Then we finish our way to Chefchaouen. Overnight in a nice riad/hotel in Chefchaouen.
Day 3: Chefchaouen » Volubilis » Fes (233Km)
After breakfast and after having an idea of the Moroccan way of life, depart to Fes including a visit to the ancient roman ruins of Volubilis, the most remote former territory of the Roman Empire.
Then we continue our way via one of the greenest landscapes of Morocco, to stop for a panoramic view of Sidi Chahed lake. Then hit the road to the cultural capital of Fes. Overnight in Fes.
Day 4: Fes Visit (Day in Fes)
After breakfast you will be joined by an official local guide, who will show you the city and its historical monuments “Fes El Bali the old medina”, “Al Qraouine University” and “Jewish Quarter”…etc. Fes is the fourth largest city in Morocco and also used to serve as one of its former capitals during the reign ship of the Idriss.
You will enjoy walking its narrow streets and its huge ancient gates. The Medina of Fes, Fes El-Bali is believed to be the largest car-free urban area in the world as the people of the Medina use only mules or small motorcycles to get merchandise inside the medina.
Day 5: Fes » Ifrane » Cedar Forest » Merzouga » Camel ridding (465Km)
After breakfast, a journey will take us along the beautiful southeast road, where we will experience a dramatic change in the landscapes, from the green fields of Fes to the Cedar and cool weather of Ifrane, the most beautiful city in Morocco.
We continue the way to a more desert-like landscape as we approach the town of Midelt the Apple Capital of Morocco, then we hit the road further south to join the pearl of the south, the town of Merzouga then will change the traction of 4×4 for the animal traction.
The dromedaries us into the desert dunes to watch a sunset to remember. Tonight will be special, we sleep in the dunes in nomadic tents (James), as do the Berbers. Here Berber enjoy dinner, music and a starry night you will never forget. Dinner and night in a Berber tent. Night at a desert camp of Erg Chebbi.
Day 6: Merzouga Desert » Todra Gorges » Palm Groves of Tinghir » Dades Gorges (273Km)
Early in the morning, your camel guide will wake you up to watch what well may be the best sunrise of your life. After sunrise, you will trek back to the village of Merzouga. En route, you couldn’t fail to appreciate the unique beauty of the spectacular Erg Chebbi sand dunes – changing with the light as the day progresses.
After breakfast in your riad, you’ll leave for Rissani, Tinghir, and Todra gorges – the highest, narrowest gorges in Morocco.
After lunch in the heart of the gorge, we’ll drive through the Dades Valley, where you’ll see the majestic sand castles and the amazing rock formations known as “monkey toes”. Overnight accommodation will be in a fancy hotel/riad overlooking the Dades valley.
Day 7: Dades Valley » Kasbah Amridil » Palm Groves of Skoura » Ouarzazate » Marrakech (328Km)
After breakfast in the hotel/riad, we’ll drive through the Dades Valley towards Kalaat Mgouna and Ouarzazat. The route through Dades Valley is the way of the thousand Kasbahs – providing numerous opportunities to take some of your best photographic shots of the trip.
We’ll stop at Kalaat Mgouna, “the rose city”, to purchase the rosewater, which will make your linen smell good a long time after your trip is over. Continue to Ouarzazate via the Amridil Kasbah, one of the last Berber chieftains during the 18th century, now the Kasbah is a house of many Glaoui people.
Then we will finish our way to Ouarzazate where we will visit the Ksar (fortified village) of Ait Ben Haddou (declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1986).
Famous films have been shot on this spectacular stage, including Gladiator, Obelix, The Mummy, The Jewel of the Nile, Sahara with Penélope Cruz…etc. After visiting the kasbah we’ll go to Marrakech, we’ll see Tizi N’tichka port, which with 2.260m is the highest point in our country.
We’ll enjoy beautiful landscapes from the viewpoints on the way and make some stops to take pictures of the Berber villages, at the end of the afternoon and check in to your riad/hotel within the Medina. Overnight at hotel/riad in marrakech.
Day 8: Marrakech Visit (Day in Marrakech)
After breakfast, you will be joined by a local guide who is going to take you on one of your lifetime experiences as you will visit the old Medina, Saadian Tombs, Bahia Palace, Majorelle Gardens, and the famous El Fna Square where you can find storytellers and snakes charmers, monkey charmers, Henna Women, also other famous historical sites are to be visited along the visit.
Day 9: Marrakech » El Jadida » Casablanca (309Km)
After breakfast, we start our trip to Casablanca via el Jadida. El Jadida, also known as Mazagan, is a coastal town in Morocco, 96 km from Casablanca, the prefecture of the province of El Jadida. A fortified city, built by the Portuguese at the beginning of the sixteenth century and named Mazagan (Mazagão in Portuguese), was taken by the Moroccans in 1769.
The fortifications of the Portuguese city, with their bastions and ramparts, constitute an early example of the “Portuguese military architecture of the Renaissance”.
The Portuguese buildings still visible are the Portuguese cistern, the Portuguese fortress of Mazagan, and the Church of the Assumption, built in the Manueline style. They offer an exceptional testimony to the crossed influences between European and Moroccan cultures.
At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the city burst out of the walls of the Portuguese city. It extends far beyond what is now a historic island on the Atlantic coast.
Day 10: Transfer to the Airport
Transfer from your hotel in Casablanca 2 hours before your flight. End of our services.
10 Days Morocco Itinerary from Casablanca: Prices Includes
What’s included on your private tour
- Pick up and drop off at (your accommodation, the airport/port, any other place).
- Private Tour in 4×4 vehicle / Minibus / Minivan with A/C.
- An experienced English-French-Spanish-speaking driver/guide.
- Car Fuel during the trip.
- Local guide in Fes
- Local guide in Marrakech
- Desert camel trekking experience.
- Camel per person.
- Night in the desert camp near the sand dunes.
- 8 Nights accommodation at hotel/riad.
- Stops in the sites that deserve photography.
- Free time for lunch.
- Tour Confirmation at time of booking*.
What’s NOT included on your private tour
- Flight Tickets from/to Morocco.
- Entry fees to monuments/museums.
- Lunch during the trip.
- Drinks.
- All that not mentioned in the itinerary
Map of: 10 Days Tour from Casablanca to Marrakech
Here are the most FAQs for the 10 days tour from Casablanca to Marrakech.
Yes, it is very safe, Morocco is the embodiment of one of the safest countries in the world, thanks to the combination of the country where the crime rate is very low and its government that is always proactive in protecting their guests and locals.
There are no strict rules about dressing. Morocco is deemed an open and liberal country, due to its proximity to Europe. Therefore, dressing for foreigners has not to be a big issue. However, it is important to note that the majority of Moroccan people are conservative, and do not approve of seeing foreign guests wearing inappropriate clothes which may break public norms. It doesn’t mean you should wear like the locals, but particularly, women have to respect the general clothing norms, which are covering the knees and breasts and avoiding tight or transparent outfits.
“Berber Planet” ensures high security and care to its customers. If you are a sole woman traveling to Morocco, you will have nothing to worry about. We devote special attention to foreign women during the tour, especially if they are traveling alone. It can be a serious matter if she is coming to Morocco without being involved with a tour company because solo women are often treated badly if they are not accompanied by a trusted guide. Hence, our staff will treat you well along the road and ensure you are not irritated under any circumstances.
Absolutely yes, if you have children and are willing to visit Morocco, you needn’t leave them babysitting, you’d better bring them to discover something extraordinary. This decision can be challenging for you to bear extra burdens when it comes to providing care to your children, but little kids like to amuse themselves and enjoy traveling like adults. Besides, their Morocco experience will remain a lifetime journey for them to broaden their mind till they grow up mature.
In a word, delicious. Salads are lovely; fresh, succulent vegetables are served with light vinaigrette on the side. Harira is the Moroccan word for thick vegetable soup. A particularly delicious one contains a bread dumpling. Main courses are usually one of the following: grilled meat on skewers often served with French fries; couscous, either vegetarian or meat with vegetables, and Tajin, the Moroccan stew, usually meat, tomatoes, potatoes, onions, and spices.
Moroccan cooks use a melange of spices such as cumin, turmeric, paprika, saffron, and pepper for a subtly flavored cuisine. In the Sahara, you can find “Berber pizza”. This is a double-crusted pie filled with meat, hard-boiled eggs, almonds and spices. Sometimes rather peppery, “Berber pizza” is best eaten with glass after glass of hot, sweet, mint tea.
Every seaport has freshly caught fish prepared by the fishermen on or near the piers. Do not miss this treat! Fresh fruit is served for dessert; pomegranates, melons, bananas, apples, oranges, and dates all produced in Morocco and all bursting with flavor. One ongoing benefit of the French occupation is the fresh baguettes available nearly everywhere. Pastries both French and Moroccan are available in many bakeries.