Solo Female Travel in Morocco: An Honest Local's Take
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Solo Female Travel in Morocco: An Honest Local's Take

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HeleneApril 29, 202610 min readMorocco
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Is Morocco safe for solo female travellers? A Marrakech based guide gives an honest, non sugarcoated answer with practical tips.

The Honest Question, Honestly Answered

I have been asked the "is Morocco safe for solo female travellers" question hundreds of times. The internet gives two extreme answers: the ones who say "perfectly safe, no problem at all," and the ones who say "you will be harassed every five minutes." Neither is fully right. As a Moroccan working with women travellers every week, here is the honest middle truth.

Morocco is broadly safe for solo female travellers in the sense that violent crime is rare. It is not free of unwanted attention, and most women experience some catcalling, persistent shopkeeper attention, and the occasional unwanted comment. The question is not "will it happen?" but "how much will it bother you and what tools do you have?"

This is what I tell women in my own family when they travel.

What "Catcalling" Actually Looks Like in Morocco

You will hear comments. They tend to be: "bonjour, hello, hola, where are you from, beautiful." Sometimes a hiss or a click. Almost always verbal, almost never physical, and almost always from younger men in tourist heavy areas (Jemaa el Fna, the souks, near major sights).

What it does not usually look like:

  • Following for long distances (rare and you can almost always shake them)
  • Physical contact (extremely rare; if it happens, react loudly and the public will side with you)
  • Threats (very rare)
  • What it consistently feels like, especially for first day visitors:

  • Surprising at first, especially the volume
  • Tedious by day three
  • Mostly background noise by day five
  • The single best tool against this attention is sunglasses. Not eye contact equals not engaging. Add a polite "la shokran" and keep walking, and 95 percent of the comments end in two seconds.

    Where to Stay (Solo Women Specific)

    A riad is almost always the right choice for solo women. Here is why.

    A riad is a small inward facing house with a courtyard, usually 5 to 12 rooms, run by a host who knows your name by lunch on day one. The door closes at night. Staff helps you arrange taxis, deliveries, recommendations. There is a "house" feeling that hotels rarely match.

    Three things to filter for:

  • Owner or manager on site (read recent reviews to confirm)
  • A daytime kitchen and a rooftop or terrace where you can hang out alone safely
  • Located in the central medina (Mouassine, near Dar el Bacha, around Bab Doukkala) rather than the deepest derbs where you would walk alone for 10 minutes through quiet alleys at 11pm
  • Hotels in Gueliz are also fine if you prefer a more "modern city" feel. The neighbourhood is essentially European in character, with cafes, walk in restaurants, and a relaxed dress code.

    Dress That Reduces Hassle Without Being a Costume

    You do not need to wear a long black robe and a headscarf. You also will be more comfortable in the medina if your shoulders and knees are covered. The simple rule: dress as a slightly modest version of yourself.

    A working uniform that solves the question:

  • High waisted loose pants or a long flowing skirt
  • A long sleeve light blouse, or a t shirt with a kimono jacket
  • Comfortable closed shoes
  • Sunglasses
  • A scarf in your bag for shoulders or for visiting any conservative area
  • The scarf is a multipurpose tool. Sun, dust, sand, sudden cool wind, a quick shoulder cover. Do not feel obligated to cover your hair. Moroccan women do not require it of you.

    What attracts more attention than necessary: tank tops and short shorts in the medina, very tight clothing, beachwear away from the actual beach. Wear those at the riad pool, in Gueliz cafes, on the coast, not in the souks.

    Transport: What Actually Works

    Petits taxis. Small red metered cars. Insist on the meter ("compteur svp"). In four years I have personally never had an issue with a petits taxi in Marrakech, and I would put my own sister in one alone at midnight without thinking twice. From medina to Gueliz: about 25 to 40 dirhams. From medina to the airport: about 100 to 130 dirhams.

    Grand taxis. White or beige cars, longer trips. Often shared. Solo women can book the whole car for "private" by paying for all 4 to 6 seats (around 6 times the shared price). Reasonable for a longer day trip if you do not want a stranger sitting next to you.

    Trains (ONCF). Excellent. I would put any solo woman on the Marrakech to Casablanca to Rabat to Fes route alone without hesitation. First class is air conditioned, calm and inexpensive (about 200 to 350 dirhams from Marrakech to Fes). The atmosphere is mostly local commuters and middle class families.

    CTM and Supratours buses. The two reputable bus companies. Reliable, on time, generally fine for solo women.

    inDrive and Heetch. Ride apps work in the major cities. inDrive is the most reliable in Marrakech in 2026. Heetch works in Casablanca and Rabat especially well.

    What I do not recommend for solo women: hitchhiking (just no), unbooked grand taxis at very late hours, agreeing to be driven by someone you met casually who offers a "free ride to your hotel."

    Hammam Etiquette for Solo Women

    The hammam is one of the best experiences for solo women in Morocco, and one of the safest. Hammams are strictly gender separated. The neighbourhood hammams are entirely women only during women''s hours (typically afternoon and early evening). The atmosphere is warm, gossipy, intimate, and entirely free of male presence.

    What to bring:

  • Plastic flip flops
  • Bottom underwear or a swim bottom
  • A small bucket
  • Black soap (savon noir) and a kessa (exfoliating mitt), both available for 20 to 30 dirhams nearby
  • A change of underwear for after
  • A large towel (often not provided)
  • Going topless is normal in the public hammam. If that is not comfortable, a sports top works fine. A scrubber (the kessa woman) is available for 50 to 100 dirhams and gives you the most thorough exfoliation of your life.

    For a softer experience, riad spas offer a private hammam with full towels, robes, oils and tea, in the 400 to 1,000 dirhams range. Both versions are wonderful in different ways.

    Cities Ranked by Ease for Solo Women

    This is my honest, non politically correct ranking based on how relaxed solo female visitors tend to feel.

  • Essaouira. Coastal, breezy, relaxed. Almost zero hassle.
  • Chefchaouen. Small, pretty, quiet. Mostly relaxed.
  • Rabat. Modern, calm, capital city manners.
  • Casablanca. Big city, modern, plenty of women in the streets at all hours.
  • Tangier. Cosmopolitan, mostly relaxed, varies by neighbourhood.
  • Marrakech. Wonderful, intense, more attention than other cities, but the safety baseline is solid.
  • Fes. Beautiful, more conservative, more intense at first. Comfortable by day three.
  • If you have never been to North Africa or the Middle East, starting in Essaouira or Rabat for a day or two before Marrakech can be a soft landing.

    When to Hire a Local Guide

    Three situations where it is worth it.

  • Your first day in the medina. A two to three hour private walk with a local guide pays for itself immediately. You learn the geography, the prices, the scams. The rest of the trip is yours alone.
  • An Atlas day trip. A private guide and driver versus a minibus is a real upgrade for solo travellers. You also avoid the awkwardness of being the only solo person in a group of couples.
  • A multi day Sahara tour. Choose a small group with reviews from other solo women, or pay slightly more for a private 4x4. Either is fine, the cheap shared minibus version is sometimes uncomfortable.
  • A reputable operator will be transparent about who is in your group and what the pace looks like. If they cannot answer specific questions, choose someone else.

    Phrases That Earn You Respect

    A few words in Darija (Moroccan Arabic) make a real difference.

  • Salam alaikum. Hello (the warm version).
  • La shokran. No, thank you.
  • Bezaaf. Too much (about a price).
  • Inshallah. God willing (use it freely).
  • Khoya. Brother (polite address to a man, says "I am not green").
  • Even one of these in conversation tells the person you have been here before. The unwanted attention drops noticeably.

    Tools That Help Solo Women

  • Sunglasses. Worth the bag space alone.
  • A small day bag worn in front in crowded areas. Not because Marrakech is dangerous (it is not particularly so), but because it is just sensible.
  • A photocopy of your passport. Carry the copy, leave the original at the riad.
  • A pre downloaded offline map with your riad starred.
  • A power bank. A dead phone in the medina at night is the only real anxiety scenario.
  • A wedding ring if you want one. Some solo women find it reduces persistent attention. Optional and personal.
  • What to Do in the Rare Tough Moment

    If a situation feels off, the strongest move is to step into a shop or cafe. Walk in calmly, sit down, order a tea. Anyone hassling you will not follow into a public space. Tell the staff if you are uncomfortable. Moroccans, broadly, take women''s discomfort seriously and will help quickly. The tourist police in Marrakech (red and black uniforms in Jemaa el Fna) are also a real resource.

    What Solo Female Travellers Tell Me

    Almost every woman I have hosted, after three days, says some version of the same thing. "It was less of a problem than I thought, more interesting than I expected, and I would do it again."

    The first day is the hardest. By day three, you are walking through the souks with sunglasses on, saying la shokran without thinking, and starting to find favourite cafes. By day five, you are stopping for tea with the spice seller you befriended on day two and laughing about the henna ladies you dodged on day one.

    Morocco rewards women who arrive prepared and stay open. It punishes women who arrive panicked or with their guard fully up.

    Prefer a female friendly first day? Ask for our women led custom medina walk when you book. Some of our best guides are women who have been showing visitors around the medina for years, and the dynamic is calmer and more relaxed for solo travellers.

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