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Getting Around Morocco

Practical · Transport

Getting Around Morocco

Morocco has good trains between the main northern cities, comfortable intercity buses, and — for the south, the mountains and the desert — private drivers. The right mix depends on your route and pace.

Updated June 20262 min readPractical

Morocco has good trains between the main northern cities, comfortable intercity buses, and — for the south, the mountains and the desert — private drivers. The right mix depends on your route and pace.

In this guide
  1. 01Trains, buses and the private car
  2. 02Why most visitors use a private driver
  3. 03Taxis and city transport
  4. 04Frequently asked

Trains, buses and the private car

The ONCF rail network links Tangier, Rabat, Casablanca, Fes, Meknes and Marrakech, including the Al Boraq high-speed line (Tangier–Casablanca in about two hours). Trains are the easy, cheap way down the populated north-west spine. Beyond the rail map — Chefchaouen, the Atlas, Ouarzazate, the gorges and the Sahara — you'll want a private driver or a long-distance bus (CTM and Supratours are the reliable operators).

Why most visitors use a private driver

For anything off the rail corridor, a private driver-guide is the comfortable choice: door-to-door from your riad, all your luggage, your own schedule, and the freedom to stop at a viewpoint, a co-op or a kasbah on the way. The Atlas passes and desert pistes are demanding to self-drive, and a good driver doubles as a guide and translator.

Taxis and city transport

Within cities, small 'petit taxis' handle short hops — agree the fare or insist on the meter. Larger 'grand taxis' run fixed intercity routes. For airport arrivals, a pre-booked private transfer with a flight-tracked, name-board pickup spares you the arrivals-hall haggling entirely.

Frequently asked

Is it better to take the train or hire a driver in Morocco?

On the Tangier–Rabat–Casablanca–Fes–Marrakech corridor, the train is fast and cheap. For Chefchaouen, the Atlas, Ouarzazate and the Sahara — where there's no useful train — a private driver is the comfortable, flexible way to travel.

Should I rent a car in Morocco?

Self-driving is fine on the motorways but demanding in the medinas (no cars), the Atlas passes and the desert pistes. Most visitors prefer a private driver, who also navigates, translates and guides.

How do I get from the airport to my riad?

Pre-book a private transfer with a fixed price and a name-board pickup. Marrakech and Fes medinas are partly car-free, so your driver will walk you the last few minutes to the riad door.

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