Skip to content
Five Riads in Marrakech We Love | Anmoon Travel Journal
Traditional Marrakech riad courtyard with fountain and orange tree
The Journal · Where to Stay
By Samir Achahri 11 min read

Five riads in Marrakech we love

Intimate courtyards, hand-poured tadelakt, and hosts who remember your name. Our short list of the medina's most soulful stays.

In Arabic, a riad is a garden. In Marrakech, it has come to mean something more specific: a traditional courtyard house, inward-facing, usually lemon and orange trees at its centre, usually three or four floors of pale pink walls looking down on a tiled fountain. A riad is not a hotel. The best ones never feel like one. They feel like being handed the keys to a friend's family home — a friend whose family happens to have been decorating the place for a couple of centuries.

What makes a great riad in Marrakech

After a decade of placing guests in nearly every riad in the medina, our short list always comes back to the same things. A truly great riad has three signatures. First, architectural integrity — real tadelakt (the polished lime-and-pigment plaster that glows when candles are lit against it), real zellij mosaic, real cedar ceilings that still smell of the mountains on a warm night. Second, quietness — riads close to the main souks can be noisy until 2 a.m. and again at 5 a.m. Third, and most important, the human: the housekeeper or owner who learns your name on arrival and remembers it on departure, and who knows, without being asked, that you prefer your breakfast pressed orange juice over coffee.

Below are five Marrakech riads that meet all three. They are in different corners of the medina, at different prices, for different kinds of travellers. We have stayed in each of them ourselves, many times, and send our own families there. We have no commercial relationship with any of them.

What makes a great riad in Marrakech

1. La Sultana Marrakech — the grand dame of the kasbah

In the quiet kasbah quarter, a minute's walk from the Saadian Tombs, La Sultana is actually five linked riads stitched together around a handful of patios and one very elegant rooftop pool. The style is heavier than a pure traditional riad — there is marble, there are carved animals, there is a certain theatrical Moroccan-Venetian flavour — but the craftsmanship is impeccable and the rooms are some of the largest in the medina. Book a Prestige Suite on the upper floor for a private terrace that looks across to the Koutoubia.

Best for: a first visit to Marrakech, couples who want space and a real spa, travellers who prefer a quieter neighbourhood.

1. La Sultana Marrakech — the grand dame of the kasbah

2. Riad Mena & Beyond — the quiet scholar

Tucked into a slim derb in the northern medina, Riad Mena is the kind of place you would walk past without noticing. Inside, it is one of the most refined interiors in the city: a restrained palette of ochre, ivory and dark wood, a library of travel books, a tiny patio with a single fig tree. Only seven rooms. The owner, a former photo editor, chooses every object herself. Breakfast is served on the roof, on hand-thrown Safi pottery, with warm msemen and homemade fig jam.

Best for: second-time visitors, quiet travellers, writers and readers, anyone who finds most "luxury" overstated.

2. Riad Mena & Beyond — the quiet scholar

3. Riad Jardin Secret — the hidden garden

The name is literal. This riad has one of the most beautiful private gardens in the medina — a long, narrow Andalusian courtyard with a central rill, shaded by three very old orange trees, where breakfast is served in winter and dinner in summer. Six rooms. The owner is a Moroccan-French couple who cook themselves on request (the chicken tagine with preserved lemon is quietly famous among our guests).

Best for: couples, honeymoons, small families, anyone who wants to wake up already inside a garden.

3. Riad Jardin Secret — the hidden garden

4. Dar Bensouda — the pure traditional riad

If you want the Marrakech of the nineteenth century, kept immaculate, Dar Bensouda is the address. Every surface is original or restored in the original way: tadelakt, zellij, carved stucco, painted cedar. A classical square patio with a long rectangular pool. The staff have been there for years and move through the house as if it belongs to them — which, in the way that matters, it does. Only eleven rooms. A small hammam in the basement that is always kept warm.

Best for: cultural travellers, design lovers, anyone who values authenticity over trend.

4. Dar Bensouda — the pure traditional riad

5. Riad Joya — the intimate art house

Seven rooms, behind an unmarked door, five minutes from the Jemaa el-Fnaa but as silent as a chapel. The owner is an Italian architect and every room is a quiet conversation between Moroccan craft and mid-century Italian restraint. Fireplaces in the ground-floor suites for winter nights. A small plunge pool on the roof. One of the best breakfasts in the city — not by accident but because the cook, Fatima, has been perfecting it for thirteen years.

Best for: design-led travellers, romantic escapes, anyone who wants to be in the old city without ever hearing it.

5. Riad Joya — the intimate art house

Practical notes for choosing a riad

A few things we tell every guest before they book. A riad is often reached on foot — a porter will meet you at the nearest vehicle point and walk your luggage through narrow lanes, which is part of the charm. Rooms on the ground floor are cooler in summer; rooms on the upper floors have better light in winter. Almost all riads will organise dinner on request, and in most cases we recommend eating in at least one night — the food in a good riad kitchen is often better than the restaurants everyone tells you about.

If you would like us to build a Marrakech stay around one of these riads — including private guides, a sunset on the Agafay desert, a cooking class in a dar above the medina — please tell us a little about your trip and we will design something quietly beautiful.

Practical notes for choosing a riad

A final thought

The question is rarely "which riad is the best in Marrakech". It is "which riad is the best for you, this time". Marrakech rewards travellers who choose slowly. We'd rather place you in the right small riad for three nights than the most famous one for four.

A final thought
S
Samir Achahri
Founder · Anmoon Travel

A Moroccan native, Samir has been designing private journeys across his home country for more than two decades. He lives in Marrakech with his family and still leads trips personally whenever he can.

Frequently asked questions

What is a riad in Marrakech?

A riad is a traditional Moroccan courtyard house built around a central patio with a fountain or small garden. Many have been restored as boutique guesthouses of six to twelve rooms, offering a more intimate and authentic stay than a conventional hotel.

Is it better to stay in a riad or a hotel in Marrakech?

For a first visit to Marrakech we almost always recommend a riad inside the medina walls. The atmosphere, the architecture and the personal service are essentially impossible to recreate in a modern hotel. Modern hotels in the Hivernage district suit travellers who prefer larger rooms and direct vehicle access.

Are riads suitable for families?

Many riads welcome families, but sizes vary. Riads with connecting rooms or family suites — including several on our list — are ideal. For children under six we sometimes recommend a larger kasbah-district riad with its own pool.

How much does a luxury riad in Marrakech cost per night?

Prices vary widely with season and room category. The five riads on this list run roughly from 250 USD to 950 USD per night including breakfast, with peak pricing in October, November, March and April.

Do Marrakech riads accept walk-in guests?

Some do, most of the smaller ones do not. The riads we recommend are small enough that the best rooms book three to four months in advance for peak season. Anmoon handles all reservations as part of your itinerary.

Is it safe to walk to a riad at night in Marrakech?

The medina is generally very safe at night, and all serious riads will send a staff member to meet you at the nearest car access point after sunset. We always arrange evening pick-ups on request.

Begin Your Journey

Ready to write your own Morocco?

Tell us a little and our team will begin shaping a private journey — quietly, precisely, in your time.

View Sample Tours