Total spent: $347 across 10 days including all accommodation, food, transport, activities, and shopping. International flights excluded.
Route: Marrakech (3 nights) → Merzouga Sahara (2 nights) → Fes (3 nights) → Chefchaouen (2 nights).
This is genuinely achievable. Morocco is one of the world's great budget destinations — if you eat like a local, sleep in riads rather than hotels, and use the bus network. Here is every expense, honestly recorded.
Total Budget Breakdown
| Category | Total (10 days) | Daily Average | % of Budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | $78 | $7.80 | 22% |
| Food & drinks | $95 | $9.50 | 27% |
| Transport | $62 | $6.20 | 18% |
| Activities & entry fees | $45 | $4.50 | 13% |
| Shopping | $67 | $6.70 | 19% |
| TOTAL | $347 | $34.70 | 100% |
Accommodation — $78 for 10 Nights
The secret: Morocco's hostels and budget riads are genuinely good. I stayed in dorm beds at hostels (average $6–8/night) in Marrakech and Chefchaouen, a budget guesthouse at Merzouga ($12/night including desert camp dinner), and splurged one night at a proper riad in Fes ($18) to feel what it's like.
Food — $95 for 10 Days
$9.50 a day sounds impossible for food. It isn't — if you eat Moroccan. Here is what I ate:
Typical Day Spending on Food
- Breakfast — Harira soup + msemen at a street stall: 15 MAD ($1.50)
- Lunch — Set menu at a local restaurant (soup, tagine, bread, water): 70 MAD ($7)
- Afternoon snack — Fresh orange juice (4 MAD), sfenj doughnuts (4 MAD): 8 MAD ($0.80)
- Dinner — Street food: merguez sandwich or kefta brochettes: 25 MAD ($2.50)
- Mint tea — 10 MAD ($1)
- Daily total — approximately 128 MAD ($13)
I ate well. I was never hungry. I ate every meal that was extraordinary at under $10. I spent slightly more on two nights out (one dinner at a mid-range restaurant in Fes, one at a rooftop in Marrakech), which is included in the total.
Transport — $62 for 10 Days
| Journey | Mode | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Marrakech → Merzouga (via CTM bus + change) | Bus | $12 |
| Merzouga → Fes (CTM overnight) | Bus | $15 |
| Fes → Chefchaouen (CTM) | Bus | $7 |
| Chefchaouen → Tangier airport (shared taxi + bus) | Taxi/Bus | $10 |
| City taxis (10 days) | Petit taxi | $18 |
| Total transport | $62 |
Activities & Entry Fees — $45
- Camel trek + Sahara camp (2 hours, included with guesthouse package): $0 extra
- Chouara Tannery viewing terrace (Fes): $3
- Bou Inania Madrasa entry: $2
- Majorelle Garden (Marrakech): $7
- Hammam (traditional scrub, Marrakech): $10
- Spanish Mosque hike (Chefchaouen, free): $0
- Cooking class (Fes, Café Clock): $12
- Sandboarding (Merzouga): $5
- Miscellaneous tips and donations: $6
Shopping — $67
I bought: one pair of babouche leather slippers (80 MAD), a ceramic tagine for serving (120 MAD), 500g of ras el hanout spice blend (60 MAD), a djellaba (200 MAD), and a handwoven blanket in Chefchaouen (350 MAD). These prices are after reasonable haggling. Total: approximately 810 MAD ($81) — I went slightly over my shopping budget.
How to Go Even Lower
If you want to stay under $25/day:
- Sleep in hostel dorms consistently: $5–7/night
- Eat only street food and set menus: $6–8/day
- Skip the hammam and cooking class: save $22
- Buy only food souvenirs (spices, argan oil), not crafts
- Take shared grands taxis instead of CTM buses where the route allows
At absolute bottom, Morocco can be done for $20–22/day excluding flights. I know travellers who've managed it. I don't recommend cutting that close — the $35/day level lets you actually enjoy the country rather than stress about every dirham.
Sample 10-Day Route at $350
Itinerary structure matters enormously for budget travel. Expensive flights between cities, unnecessary taxi rides, and inefficient routing eat money fast. Here is the route that produced my $350 breakdown, optimised for cost:
The Five Budget Hacks That Actually Work
- Take the bus, always. CTM buses cost a fraction of domestic flights, run on time, have air-conditioning and reclining seats, and take you city centre to city centre. Casablanca to Marrakech: 80 MAD. The equivalent domestic flight: 500+ MAD plus airport hassle. The bus wins on every metric except speed.
- Book riads, not hotels. A riad at 200–300 MAD/night often includes breakfast, gives you a private room, and provides local knowledge that saves you money all day. The 80 MAD hostel dorm bed next to a rooftop bar playing music until 2am saves money and costs sleep.
- Find the restaurant with no English menu. The price differential between tourist restaurants and local restaurants in Morocco is approximately 3:1. A meal that costs 120 MAD at a restaurant with photos on the menu costs 40 MAD one street away at the place with plastic chairs and a handwritten chalkboard.
- Visit souks to look, buy in pharmacies and supermarkets. Toiletries, sunscreen, water, snacks — supermarkets in every Moroccan city charge reasonable prices. The souk pharmacy sells the same ibuprofen for a fraction of the tourist shop price.
- Free sights first. Morocco's best experiences are often free: medina wandering, beach walks, watching the Djemaa el-Fna at sunset, the Kasbah des Oudaias in Rabat, the Bou Inania madrasa courtyard in Fes (5 MAD entry). Build your itinerary around these and treat paid attractions as bonuses.
Where the Budget Breaks
Morocco's budget-friendliness has limits. These are the situations where costs spike and first-time visitors are caught off guard:
- Airport taxis — Marrakech airport taxi to medina is around 70–80 MAD; touts quote 200–300 MAD to new arrivals. Take the bus (30 MAD) or agree the price firmly before getting in.
- Riads in peak season — Marrakech riads that cost 250 MAD/night in March cost 550 MAD/night in Christmas week. Book early or shift your dates slightly off peak.
- Desert packages — A 2-night Sahara camp booked through a Marrakech tour operator costs 1,800–2,500 MAD per person. The same package booked directly with a guesthouse in Merzouga costs 600–800 MAD including the camel trek. Always book Sahara accommodation directly.
- Guided tours of souks — "Free" guides who approach you in medinas always end at a carpet or handicraft shop with a commission structure that adds 30–50% to the price of anything you buy.
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