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I walked into my first Moroccan hammam with the confidence of someone who had read half a blog post about it. Within three minutes I was sitting in a dark hot room wrapped in a scratchy mitt, unsure whether to lie down, sit up, or apologise. Three hours later I emerged with the softest skin of my life, completely converted to one of the most restorative rituals on earth.
The hammam is not a spa. It is not a sauna. It is a centuries-old bathing ritual that is as much about social connection and physical restoration as it is about cleanliness. Understanding the difference — and knowing what to expect — transforms it from bewildering to extraordinary. Here is everything I wish someone had told me.
What Is a Hammam
A hammam is a traditional steam bathhouse with roots in Roman and Byzantine bathing culture, adapted and refined through centuries of Islamic practice. In Morocco, the hammam has been a community institution for over 1,000 years. Every neighbourhood has one — often several. In the Fes medina alone, there are over 100 active public hammams, many of them continuously operating since the medieval period.
The hammam serves a practical function (bathing in communities where private bathrooms were rare) and a social one (neighbours meet, news travels, friendships form). For visitors, it offers something rarer still: a direct encounter with daily Moroccan life that no souk tour can replicate.
Types of Hammam
Not all hammams are equal. Understanding the differences saves you from booking the wrong experience — or paying ten times more than necessary for an identical result.
My recommendation for first-timers: a riad or tourist hammam. You get the full authentic process with the reassurance of an English-speaking attendant who will guide you through each step. Once you know the routine, the public hammam is a wonderful next-step.
The Process Step-by-Step
A traditional hammam follows a specific sequence that has remained essentially unchanged for centuries. Each stage serves a purpose, and rushing it defeats the point entirely.
- Undressing room (bayt el-maslakh) — You disrobe and leave your clothes in a locker or on a shelf. Keep your underwear on in a public hammam. In a luxury hammam, a disposable thong or swimsuit bottoms are provided.
- Warm room (bayt el-wastani) — You enter the first room to let your body acclimatise to the heat. Temperature is around 40°C. Sit quietly, breathe slowly, and let the steam open your pores. 10–15 minutes.
- Hot room (bayt es-skhoun) — The main room. Temperature reaches 50–55°C. This is where the scrubbing happens. An attendant (kessala for women, kessal for men) will scrub your body with a kessa glove — a rough mitt that removes dead skin. The amount of grey detritus this produces is simultaneously horrifying and satisfying.
- Black soap (savon beldi) — Before or during the scrub, black olive-oil soap is applied and left on the skin for several minutes to soften it further. The soap smells earthy and herbal.
- Ghassoul clay mask — In tourist and luxury hammams, a ghassoul (volcanic clay) mask is applied to face and hair, left for 5–10 minutes, then rinsed. Extraordinary for the skin.
- Rinse and cool-down — You are rinsed with warm then cool water. The cool water is not optional — it closes the pores and prevents post-hammam lethargy. Then you rest on a marble slab wrapped in towels, often with mint tea.
What to Bring
- Flip-flops / sandals — Essential. Never walk barefoot on the hammam floor.
- Underwear or swimwear — Keep it on throughout in a public hammam. Disposable underwear provided at luxury hammams.
- Kessa glove — Your own is more hygienic and cheaper than renting.
- Savon beldi — Black olive-oil soap. Non-negotiable.
- Small towel — For the cool-down room. Most hammams provide one, but bringing your own is preferred in public hammams.
- Hair tie — Long hair needs to be kept out of the way during the scrub.
- Small amount of cash — For tips and any extras. Leave your wallet in your riad safe.
Etiquette & Customs
The hammam is a shared, intimate space. Behaving respectfully is not just polite — it is what transforms a tourist activity into a genuine cultural experience.
- Same-sex spaces: Public hammams are segregated — women and men either use separate buildings or enter at different times. Tourist hammams often have mixed-use private rooms.
- Quiet voices: The hammam is not silent, but it is not a place for loud conversation or laughter. Moroccan women chat quietly; match that energy.
- No phones or cameras: This cannot be overstated. Even asking would cause offence.
- Tip the attendant: 20–30 MAD at a public hammam, 50–100 MAD at a tourist hammam. The scrub is physical work and the tip is expected.
- Don't rush: Arrive with at least 90 minutes free. The hammam ritual takes time and rushing signals disrespect for the process.
Best Hammams in Morocco
Public Hammams (Authentic)
- Hammam Mouassine, Marrakech — One of the oldest in the medina, dating to the 16th century. Located near the Mouassine Mosque. 15 MAD entry, entirely local clientele.
- Hammam Sidi Azzouz, Fes — In the heart of Fes el-Bali, near the tanneries. The most atmospheric public hammam in Morocco. 10 MAD entry.
- Hammam Ziani, Essaouira — The best option in the blue city. 20 MAD, friendly staff who are used to the occasional curious visitor.
Luxury Hammams (Special Occasions)
- La Mamounia Spa, Marrakech — The most famous hotel in Morocco offers a hammam package from 1,200 MAD. Extraordinary marble interiors.
- Les Bains de Marrakech — Specialist hammam spa in the medina. Full treatment packages from 600 MAD. Excellent for couples.
- Farnatchi Spa, Marrakech — Intimate, impeccably designed. From 800 MAD per treatment.
- Riad Fes Spa, Fes — The most beautiful hammam room in Fes, with authentic Moroccan tilework and cedar ceiling. From 500 MAD.
Cost Guide
The hammam is one of Morocco's great bargains at the local price point — and still excellent value at the luxury end compared to equivalent spas in Europe.