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Tinghir

Drâa-Tafilalet · Todra Valley

Tinghir, Morocco

Tinghir is the Todra valley gateway — a lush oasis town set against the southern Atlas, the base for one of Morocco's most dramatic canyon hikes.

Best time

March–May and September–November; the gorge is accessible year-round but can flood briefly after heavy rain

Recommended

1–2 nights

Airport

Ouarzazate (OZZ) + 2h drive, or Errachidia (ERH) + 1h30 drive

Region

Drâa-Tafilalet · Todra Valley

Tinghir (also written Tinerhir) is a market town and oasis at roughly 1,342 m in the Drâa-Tafilalet region, situated on the northern edge of a wide date-palm oasis watered by the Todra river as it descends from the High Atlas. It sits approximately 180 km east of Ouarzazate and 33 km west of the Todra Gorge's most dramatic narrows, making it the principal overnight base for visitors to the canyon. The town itself — its terraced palmeries, the Glaoui kasbah on the hill, the weekly Tuesday souk and the cluster of Berber village quarters — is a rewarding destination in its own right beyond its role as a gorge gateway. Tinghir's palmery is one of the widest and most fertile in southern Morocco, some 50 km long.

What to see

Highlights of Tinghir

01

What is the Todra Gorge and how close is it to Tinghir?

The Todra Gorge is a slot canyon where the Todra river has cut through 300-metre-high walls of limestone to a passage as narrow as 10 metres at its tightest point. The main narrows are 33 km north-east of Tinghir, reached by a scenic road through the palm oasis; the drive itself is part of the spectacle.

02

Tinghir palmery and terraced gardens

One of the longest and most productive oases in southern Morocco — the palmery stretches roughly 50 km along the Todra river, with terraced plots of dates, alfalfa, henna, figs and pomegranates worked by Berber farmers using traditional irrigation channels.

03

Glaoui kasbah and old town quarters

The 19th-century Glaoui fortress on the hill above Tinghir overlooks a cluster of old village quarters — Ait Ouaarda, Ait Bou Oulli and others — of earthen architecture with distinctive defensive towers and painted doors.

04

Rock climbing in the Todra narrows

The vertical limestone walls of the Todra Gorge host more than 150 bolted sport-climbing routes from 5a to 8b, making it one of the premier rock-climbing destinations in Africa. Several guiding outfits in the gorge hire equipment and lead climbers of all levels.

Itineraries

Our Tinghir tours

Every itinerary below is privately operated, fully customisable, and includes a deep stop in Tinghir. Click any tour for the day-by-day plan, the map, dates and pricing.

3 days

Marrakech → Sahara via the gorges

Tinghir and the Todra Gorge narrows are a key overnight stop on the private desert route from the Atlas to the dunes.

from $1,240Enquire →
2 days

Dadès & Todra gorge explorer

A private two-day circuit: the Dadès switchbacks and monkey-finger formations on day one, Tinghir and the Todra narrows on day two.

from $580Enquire →

Before you go

Practical notes

  • Getting there: About 2h (180 km) east of Ouarzazate on the N10; or 1h30 west of Errachidia on the same road
  • The gorge road: The 33 km road from Tinghir to the Todra narrows winds through the palm oasis — an easy and beautiful drive in any vehicle
  • Best combined with: Aït Ben Haddou, Ouarzazate, Skoura and the Dadès Gorge on the full southern kasbah loop

Concierge

Have your Tinghir trip designed by a local

Tell us your dates, group size and pace. We'll send back a written proposal within 24 hours — private guides, transfers, riads, the lot.

Request a proposal →

FAQ

Tinghir — common questions

Is Tinghir worth staying at, or just a pass-through for the Todra Gorge?+

Both are valid, but Tinghir rewards an overnight. Walking the palmery at dawn, visiting the old quarters, and returning to the gorge in the early morning light (before tour buses arrive from Ouarzazate) makes for a richer experience than a two-hour stop.

How narrow is the Todra Gorge at its tightest point?+

The main narrows — the most photographed section — are approximately 10 metres wide at the base, with limestone walls rising 300 metres on each side. The passage is around 600 metres long and follows the shallow Todra river; you wade across the stream several times.

Is the Todra Gorge better than the Dadès Gorge?+

They are different experiences. The Todra is more dramatic at the narrows — sheer vertical walls, an enclosed slot — while the Dadès is wider, longer and features the famous switchback road and the unusual 'monkey-finger' rock formations. Serious visitors to southern Morocco do both on the same loop.