Guide de sécurité pour les voyageurs au Maroc
Conseils pratiques des locaux et voyageurs expérimentés — comment profiter du Maroc sans tomber dans les arnaques.
Morocco is safe — and amazing
The vast majority of Moroccan people are genuinely hospitable and welcoming. Tourism hustling happens in high-traffic tourist areas, not everywhere. Being aware of the common patterns below will let you relax and enjoy the country without defensiveness. Most of these situations are easy to sidestep once you know what to look for.
Medinas & Souks
The "Helpful Stranger" Guide Scam
Common scamSomeone approaches you in the medina claiming you're going the wrong way, then leads you to a shop and demands payment or the shop owner pays them a commission from your purchase. If you need directions, ask shopkeepers (they have no reason to lead you astray) or use Google Maps offline.
Henna artists at tourist spots
Common scamWomen near tourist monuments will offer to apply a small henna design — sometimes without asking — then demand 200–500 MAD. Only use henna artists where prices are clearly displayed. Agree on a price before they touch your hand.
Photo requests for your animals
Common scamSnake charmers and men with monkeys near Jemaa el-Fna or Aït Benhaddou will let you take photos, then demand large sums. Move past quickly if not interested; a firm "la shukran" (no thank you) works.
"The shop is free to look" pressure tactic
Pro tipYou're invited in for "free" mint tea — then pressured to buy something to justify the tea. You owe nothing. Accept the tea if you like, browse genuinely, and leave without guilt if you don't want to buy.
Bargaining is normal and expected
Good to knowIn souks, the first price is almost always 2–4× the fair price. Counter at 30–40% of the asking price and meet in the middle. Never start bargaining unless you intend to buy — walking away after agreeing on a price is considered rude.
Money & Prices
Know the fair prices before you go
Good to knowRough benchmarks: mint tea 5–15 MAD, street food (harira, msemen) 5–20 MAD, a small souvenir tagine 50–120 MAD, a leather bag (genuine) 150–400 MAD, a short petit-taxi ride 10–25 MAD. Tourists often pay 3–5× the local price.
ATMs are safer than exchange bureaus
Pro tipAirport exchange desks often offer terrible rates. Use ATMs in banks (Attijariwafa, CIH, BMCE). Avoid exchange stands in medinas — short-changing tricks are common. Check your withdrawal fees with your home bank first.
Restaurant "tourist menus" vs. local plates
Good to knowRestaurants facing major squares (like Jemaa el-Fna) charge 4–6× more than restaurants one street back. A decent set menu in a local restaurant is 50–80 MAD. The same meal on the square can be 250+ MAD.
Taxi meters — insist on them
Pro tipPetit taxis in cities are legally required to use meters. If the driver refuses, get out and take the next one. Grand taxis (intercity) have fixed shared fares — ask locals what the going rate is before you board.
Tipping culture
Good to knowTipping is appreciated but not obligatory. For restaurants: round up or leave 10%. For hotel housekeeping: 10–20 MAD/day. For a tour guide: 50–100 MAD per day is generous. Never tip someone who scammed you.
Safety & Security
Keep valuables out of sight
Pro tipPickpocketing happens in crowded medinas and on public buses. Use a money belt or inside jacket pocket. Keep your phone face-down on restaurant tables. Never leave bags unattended.
Photographs of people require consent
Good to knowPhotographing people without asking can cause confrontations — especially with women, men in religious dress, or market vendors. Ask first (a smile and pointing at your camera works across languages). Offer a small tip if someone posed for you.
Dress modestly outside beach/resort areas
Good to knowMorocco is a Muslim country. Shorts and sleeveless tops are fine on the beach and in tourist resorts, but in medinas, mosques, and smaller towns, covering shoulders and knees shows respect and reduces unwanted attention for both men and women.
Drink only bottled or filtered water
Pro tipTap water in Morocco is technically treated but travellers' stomachs are not adapted to local microbes. Buy 1.5L bottles (5–8 MAD at supermarkets) rather than paying restaurant prices. Avoid ice unless you're in a reputable establishment.
Emergency numbers
EmergencyPolice: 19 · Gendarmerie: 177 · Ambulance/SAMU: 15 · Tourist Police (Brigade Touristique): available in Marrakech, Fez, Agadir — ask at your hotel for the local number.
Tours & Activities
Book tours through verified platforms
Pro tipStreet tours sold by hustlers near monuments are often overpriced, uninsured, and the guide may abandon you mid-way. Booking through a verified platform (like Imourig) means the operator is vetted, insured, and accountable.
Sahara tours — what to watch out for
Common scamMany agencies sell '1-night Sahara tours' that rush through the desert in 20 hours of driving for 30 minutes of dunes. Reputable tours are 3+ days with overnight camping. Check reviews and ask for the exact itinerary before paying.
Surf school safety
Good to knowEnsure your surf school provides life vests for beginners and has a qualified instructor in the water with you. Agadir and Taghazout have strong rip currents. Never surf alone on an unfamiliar beach.
Camel ride pricing
Pro tipShort camel rides near Merzouga and Marrakech: agree the price for the full ride before mounting — not per photo, not per loop. Get any included items (tea, photos, return) confirmed in writing or with a clear verbal agreement.
Hammam — public vs. tourist
Good to knowTourist hammams in medinas are priced 150–400 MAD. Public hammams used by locals cost 15–30 MAD. Both are legitimate — tourist hammams have English-speaking staff; public hammams are a more authentic (and cheaper) experience.
Quick Reference — Fair Prices
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