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When to Visit Morocco, Season by Season | Anmoon Travel
High Atlas mountain landscape in Morocco
The Journal · Tips & Planning
By Sara 13 min read

When to visit Morocco, season by season

Sahara nights in December, Atlas wildflowers in April, Essaouira winds in August — a Moroccan's guide to Moroccan time.

The honest answer to "when is the best time to visit Morocco" is another question: where in Morocco, and what do you want to do there? A country that stretches from the Atlantic dunes of Dakhla to the cedar forests of the Middle Atlas does not have one season. It has four or five, sometimes overlapping, always regional. This is a Moroccan's guide to Moroccan time — written by someone who has watched the country from the inside for thirty years.

A quick answer, if you are in a hurry

If you have time for only one line: mid-March to early May and late September to early November are the two most reliably beautiful windows for a first visit to Morocco. Days are warm, nights are cool, the Atlas is either flowering or lit in low amber, and the Sahara is perfect for overnight camps. Everything else is a more specific answer, depending on where you want to go.

A quick answer, if you are in a hurry

Spring (March – May): the country at its most flattering

Spring is the classic answer and, most years, the right one. After the short Moroccan winter, the High Atlas valleys fill with almond and apple blossom in March, then with wildflowers, rosemary and wild thyme through April and into May. Marrakech is pleasantly warm (22–28°C), the Atlantic coast is still cool but fresh, and the Sahara is still comfortable for camel treks and overnight camps without the summer heat.

Spring is also when the famous rose harvest happens in the M'Goun valley, around Kelaa M'Gouna, usually in the first two weeks of May. It is one of the few moments in the travel year that is genuinely worth rearranging a trip around.

Watch out for: the weeks around Easter and European school holidays, when the best riads and Sahara camps fill up early. We often ask guests to book peak spring dates four to five months ahead.

Spring (March – May): the country at its most flattering

Summer (June – August): coast season, inland retreat

Summer in Morocco is a story of two countries. Inland — Marrakech, Fes, the Sahara — daytime temperatures climb steadily from late June, often reaching 38–42°C in the plains and above 45°C on the edge of the Sahara by August. These are not comfortable conditions for walking tours or camel treks, and we will usually try to gently redirect summer travellers.

The Atlantic coast, however, is at its best. Essaouira, Oualidia, Sidi Kaouki and the wilder stretches below Agadir are cool, windy, perfectly clear, and full of Moroccan families on holiday (which is part of the charm). High Atlas walking — above 2,000 metres — is also excellent in July and August, with warm days and cold nights, and trailheads such as Imlil and the Aït Bouguemez valley become viable base camps.

Our summer recommendation: spend as little time as possible in Marrakech city, and as much time as possible on the coast or up in the mountains. If you must be in Marrakech in July or August, choose a riad with a serious pool and treat the midday hours as siesta.

Summer (June – August): coast season, inland retreat

Autumn (September – November): the second golden window

If spring is the country's most flattering season, autumn is its most generous. The heat of August breaks in mid-September. By early October, Marrakech is back down to 26–30°C days and 15°C nights, the imperial cities are at their most walkable, and the Sahara enters what we quietly consider its finest weeks of the year — warm golden days, cool star-heavy nights, and an air so clean you can see the Erg Chebbi dunes from fifty kilometres away.

October and early November are also when the date harvest happens in the Draa valley oases, and when the olives are pressed in the argan belt — small, quiet, delicious moments that most itineraries ignore and we love to include.

Watch out for: occasional first rains from late October in the north (Tangier, Chefchaouen, Fes) and in the High Atlas passes. They rarely disrupt a trip but they are worth planning around.

Autumn (September – November): the second golden window

Winter (December – February): the Sahara's quiet secret

Most travellers assume Morocco is too cold in winter. They are almost entirely wrong. December to February is a fascinating, underrated window — and it is the season we choose for our own family trips.

Marrakech and the southern kasbah route (Ouarzazate, Skoura, the Draa valley) have bright, dry, cool days (18–22°C) and cold nights. The Sahara is at its most atmospheric: you can sit around the fire in the dunes under a sky so full of stars it is almost noisy, and the nights are cold enough to justify the heavy camel-hair blankets that the camps always provide. The High Atlas, meanwhile, is genuinely snowy — Oukaïmeden has a small ski station, and the panorama from the Tizi n'Tichka on a clear January morning is one of the great sights of North Africa.

Fes, Chefchaouen and the north can be damp and cold in January and February — pack properly — but the medinas are beautifully empty, the riad fireplaces are lit, and the food (harira soup, bisara, tanjia, steaming glasses of mint tea) suddenly makes complete sense.

Watch out for: the week around Christmas and New Year, when prices climb and the best Sahara camps book up. January and most of February, however, remain quietly magnificent and surprisingly good value.

Winter (December – February): the Sahara's quiet secret

Region by region, in one table

If you still need a quick planner, here is a rough guide to the best months by region. Marrakech: March–May and October–November (January also excellent). Fes and the imperial cities: April–May and September–October. Sahara (Merzouga, M'hamid): late September to early May; avoid June–August. High Atlas trekking: April–June and September–October; summer for high routes only. Atlantic coast (Essaouira, Oualidia): May–September. Chefchaouen and the north: April–June and September–October.

Region by region, in one table

A note on Ramadan

Ramadan moves about eleven days earlier each year on the Gregorian calendar. In 2026 it falls roughly from mid-February to mid-March, and in 2027 it begins in early February. Travelling during Ramadan is entirely possible and in some ways beautiful — evenings take on a quiet, communal warmth that is unique in the Islamic world — but daytime service in smaller towns slows, and guides, drivers and riad staff are fasting. We always tell guests in advance and let them decide. Many of our favourite guests specifically ask to travel during Ramadan, year after year.

A note on Ramadan

How we help you choose

There is no perfect month in the abstract — only the right month for the kind of trip you actually want. If you tell us what you want to see, how you want to move, and when you have time off, we will tell you honestly when to come — and when not to. The right answer is sometimes not the month you first had in mind, and that is exactly the conversation we enjoy most. When you are ready, write to us and we'll start shaping it together.

How we help you choose
S
Sara
Anmoon Travel

A Moroccan travel designer based in Marrakech, Sara has been planning private journeys across her country for over a decade and writes the Journal's seasonal guides.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best time to visit Morocco?

For a first visit, mid-March to early May and late September to early November are the two most reliably beautiful windows. Days are warm, nights are cool, and the Sahara, the imperial cities and the High Atlas are all at their best.

Is Morocco too hot to visit in summer?

Inland Morocco — Marrakech, Fes, the Sahara — is uncomfortable from late June to early September, often above 40°C. The Atlantic coast, however, is cool and windy and at its best, and the High Atlas above 2,000 m is perfect for trekking.

Can you visit the Sahara in winter?

Yes — winter is arguably the Sahara's most beautiful season. Days are bright and cool, nights are cold and star-heavy, and the luxury camps provide heavy blankets and fire pits. December to February is our favourite Sahara window for returning travellers.

Is Morocco worth visiting during Ramadan?

Yes, if you understand what it means. Daytime service slows in smaller towns and guides are fasting, but evenings have a warm communal atmosphere unique in the Islamic world. We always advise guests honestly before booking Ramadan dates.

When is rainy season in Morocco?

Most rainfall occurs from November to March, and is concentrated in the north (Tangier, Chefchaouen, Fes) and the High Atlas. Marrakech and the south remain mostly dry even in winter.

How far ahead should I book a Morocco trip?

For peak spring (late March to early May) and peak autumn (October to early November) we recommend booking four to five months in advance for the best riads and Sahara camps. Winter and summer trips can often be arranged on shorter notice.

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