October to April is the Moroccan Sahara's golden window — comfortable days, cold clear nights and dunes lit by low golden light. July and August are brutal and best avoided.
In this guide
Why season matters so much in the Sahara
The Moroccan Sahara around Merzouga and M'Hamid is one of the most extreme seasonal environments on the planet. In December and January, daytime temperatures at Erg Chebbi hover around 15–20°C under brilliant sunshine, while nights drop to 2–5°C — cold enough to need a fleece and hat around the camp fire. In July, the same dunes bake at 45–50°C by midday, and even a short walk in direct sun becomes a physical ordeal.
This thermal range determines everything about the experience: whether your camel trek is magical or miserable, whether sunrise on the dunes is a pleasure or a mercy, whether you have any desire to be outdoors at all outside a narrow two-hour window.
The best months: October to April
October through April is when the Sahara is at its most hospitable and most photogenic. Autumn (October–November) brings warm days (25–30°C) and cool nights; the light on the dunes in late October is particularly golden and the summer crowds have cleared. Winter (December–February) is peak Sahara season for many experienced Morocco travellers: cold nights with blankets and a fire, brilliantly clear skies for star-gazing, and the dune shadows at sunrise are extraordinary. Spring (March–April) is equally good, with warming days and the chance to see wildflowers in the drier scrubland near the camp edges.
- October–November: warm days, cool nights, excellent light, thinning crowds
- December–February: cold nights (2–8°C), clearest skies, fewest tourists, premium Sahara atmosphere
- March–April: warming quickly, pleasant days, some wildflowers, still comfortable at night
The shoulder months: May and September
May sees temperatures beginning to climb toward 35°C by midday — still manageable with early starts and late-afternoon activity. Many camps run normally and the dunes are quieter than the spring peak. September is transitional in the other direction: the worst summer heat has broken but it remains hot (35–40°C at midday); the month improves dramatically in its second half.
Both months are viable with adjusted expectations. Avoid the middle of the day for outdoor desert activity; sunrise and sunset are still excellent.
When to avoid: June to August
June to August is when many higher-end camps either close or dramatically reduce their operations. Midday temperatures at Merzouga consistently exceed 42°C, rising to 48–50°C in July. A camel trek becomes a 15-minute dash to the dunes rather than a meditative experience, and sitting outdoors in the afternoon is genuinely dangerous without shade and water. If your dates fall in summer, the Atlantic coast or the High Atlas are far more rewarding desert alternatives.
- June: warming fast — feasible in early June, uncomfortable by end of month
- July–August: avoid for any outdoor desert activity; some camps close
- Heat mitigation: luxury camps with air-cooled tents and generators; all outdoor activity before 9 am and after 5 pm
Erg Chebbi vs Erg Chigaga: does season choice differ?
Both dune fields share similar seasonal patterns. Erg Chigaga (near M'Hamid) sits slightly lower in elevation and can run 1–2°C warmer in summer; its remoteness makes the logistics of a summer visit even more demanding. In the prime season (October–April), Chigaga's greater isolation from any road or settlement makes for darker skies and quieter dunes — a meaningful advantage for night-sky photography.
Frequently asked
What is the best month to visit Merzouga?
October, November, December and March are the standout months. December offers the coldest nights but the most dramatic atmosphere and clearest skies; October and March balance warmth and comfort for those who prefer mild desert nights.
Is the Sahara cold at night?
Yes — significantly. From October to February, desert nights drop to 2–8°C, occasionally lower. Luxury camps supply blankets and many provide fleece jackets; still, bring a warm layer of your own. The cold is part of the experience — sitting around the camp fire under a desert sky earns it.
Is the Sahara too hot in summer?
July and August daytime temperatures routinely exceed 45°C. Most experienced operators and travellers recommend avoiding the desert in these months. If you must travel in summer, request an air-cooled tent and plan all outdoor activity before 9 am and after 5 pm.
Can you see stars in the Moroccan Sahara?
On clear, moonless nights — spectacularly, yes. The best conditions are December to February on a new-moon night at a remote camp away from any generator. Erg Chigaga, more distant from roads and towns, has marginally less light pollution than Merzouga.
How cold does the Sahara get in December?
Daytime highs of 15–20°C are typical at Erg Chebbi in December, with nights dropping to 2–5°C. Wind chill on an exposed dune ridge at 3 am can feel significantly colder — dress accordingly.
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