Essaouira Travel Guide

The Wind City. Morocco's most atmospheric Atlantic port — blue fishing boats, ancient ramparts, seagulls wheeling over whitewashed walls, and the most relaxed, creative, un-touristy medina in the country.

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UNESCO
World Heritage medina
2h30
Drive from Marrakech
300+
Days of wind per year
2–3 Days
Ideal length of stay

Morocco's Creative Atlantic Soul

Essaouira is where Morocco exhales. After the intensity of Marrakech or Fes, this breezy Atlantic port city feels like a deep breath of salt air. The medina — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — is a labyrinth of white-and-blue painted streets where artists, musicians and fishermen share the same cobblestones.

The city has attracted artists and bohemians for centuries. Jimi Hendrix famously stayed here in 1969. Orson Welles filmed Othello on these ramparts. Today, it's a hub for Gnawa music, woodworking crafts (thuya wood is unique to this region), and some of Morocco's finest seafood.

The wind is constant — which makes Essaouira the kitesurfing and windsurfing capital of Africa, and also keeps it cool even in the height of summer. A rare beach destination that works year-round.

Year-round destination 3h from Marrakech Famous for wind & kitesurf Best seafood in Morocco Thriving arts scene
Essaouira beach blue sky kitesurf

When to Visit Essaouira

Best

Spring
Mar – May

Mild 18–22°C. Strong wind ideal for kitesurfing. The medina's blue-white colours shine in spring light. Pre-peak crowds.

Good

Summer
Jun – Aug

Peak season — wind keeps it cool (20–26°C) while inland Morocco bakes. Gnaoua Festival in June. Beach kiting at its best.

Best

Autumn
Sep – Nov

Best balance — warm enough (18–24°C), wind still strong for kiting, crowds thin by October. Photographers love the autumn light.

Good

Winter
Dec – Feb

Stormy and dramatic. Atlantic waves are huge — surfers love it. Cold (10–16°C) and fierce wind. Few tourists but very atmospheric.

Complete Insider Guide

3 Perfect Days in Essaouira — Ramparts, Seafood & Wind Culture

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Top 10 Things to Do in Essaouira

From rampart walks to ocean adventures — the best of the Wind City

People on Essaouira ramparts sea view
1

Walk the Skala Ramparts

The sea-facing cannon ramparts (Skala de la Ville) offer the most cinematic views in Essaouira — blue Atlantic crashing below, seagulls overhead, and the medina behind. Magical at sunset.

Always accessible Free North medina wall
Blue fishing boats Essaouira port
2

The Blue Fishing Port

The iconic blue-painted working port where fishermen repair nets, unload catches and the day's freshest fish goes straight to the grill stalls. Vivid, alive, and one of Morocco's most photographed scenes.

Best 7–10am Free Port south of medina
Grilled fish on outdoor barbecue Essaouira
3

Eat at the Port Seafood Grills

Point at what you want, it gets grilled on the spot. Sardines, calamari, prawns, sea bass — the freshest seafood in Morocco, 5 metres from where it was landed. Served with bread, olives and argan oil. A feast for $5.

12pm–4pm From 60 MAD Port entrance
Person walking Essaouira medina street
4

Explore the Medina

Essaouira's medina is the most laid-back in Morocco — no harassment, no fake guides, just artists in studios, craft shops and small cafés. The blue and white color palette is simply beautiful. Wander freely.

Daily Free City centre
Kitesurfing waves Essaouira Atlantic coast
5

Kitesurfing & Windsurfing

Essaouira's consistent Atlantic wind (the "Alizée") makes it one of the world's best kitesurfing locations. Multiple schools offer lessons for beginners, equipment rental for experts. The beach stretches for 10km.

Best: noon–6pm Lessons from $60 Essaouira beach
Artisan hands working wood craft Essaouira
6

Thuya Wood Craft Workshops

Essaouira is the world's only source of thuya wood — a fragrant, beautifully grained root wood used in marquetry and cabinetmaking. Watch master craftsmen at work and buy directly from workshops for fair prices.

Mon–Sat 9am–6pm Free to browse Skala du Port area
Hands cracking argan nuts cooperative Morocco
7

Argan Oil Cooperatives

Essaouira is in the heart of Morocco's argan forest — the only place on earth where argan trees grow. Visit a women's cooperative on the road from Marrakech to see the traditional extraction process and buy authentic oil.

Daily 9am–5pm Free visit Road from Marrakech
Traditional Gnawa instrument hands Morocco
8

Live Gnawa Music

Essaouira is the capital of Gnawa — hypnotic West African-Moroccan music played with guimbri bass lute and metal castanets. Catch impromptu performances in the medina or wait for the annual Gnawa World Music Festival (June).

Evenings, year-round Tip-based Place Moulay Hassan
Man walking camel on beach Morocco
9

Horse or Camel Riding on the Beach

Essaouira's vast, windswept beach is perfect for horse and camel riding — a much more dramatic setting than anywhere else in Morocco. Rides available from the beach entrance near the medina walls.

Daily, best morning From 100 MAD/hour Essaouira beach
Sidi Kaouki beach Essaouira
10

Sidi Kaouki Beach

28km south of Essaouira, Sidi Kaouki is one of Morocco's most dramatic beaches — wild waves, a marabout shrine on a rocky point, camels on the sand. Perfect for an afternoon escape from the city.

All day Free 28km south

3 Perfect Days in Essaouira — $11.99

Our full guide covers the best restaurant tables (the ones with sea views that fill up fast), the finest thuya wood workshops, the honest argan oil cooperatives, day trip routes, the kitesurf schools we trust, and a 2-day itinerary.

  • 2-day Essaouira itinerary
  • Best seafood restaurants by budget
  • Recommended kitesurf schools
  • Authentic argan oil buying guide
  • Day trips: Sidi Kaouki & argan forests
  • Gnawa festival guide
  • Instant digital download
Download Now — $11.99

Where to Stay in Essaouira

Small city, big personality — all accommodation types within walking distance

Medina Riads

Traditional riad guesthouses within the medina walls — the most atmospheric option. Many have rooftop terraces with ocean views. Book early for peak months (July–August).

Budget: $40–$200/night

Beachfront Hotels

Modern hotels along the beach road outside the medina walls. Better amenities, pools, parking. Ideal for kitersurfers and families. 10-min walk to the medina.

Budget: $60–$250/night

Coastal Villas (Sidi Kaouki)

Remote eco-lodges and private villas south of Essaouira for a true escape. No crowds, wild beach, incredible sunsets. Rent a car to access.

Budget: $80–$400/night

Find Hotels in Essaouira

Compare riads, beach hotels and guesthouses

Best Restaurants in Essaouira

Fresh Atlantic seafood, argan-infused dishes and ocean views

1

Port Seafood Grill Stalls

The daily grilled fish stalls at the port are the best meal in Essaouira. Point and eat. Outrageously fresh, absurdly cheap, completely authentic. Go for lunch.

Seafood Street Food $
2

Les Chandeliers

Refined Moroccan-European cuisine in an elegant riad setting. One of Essaouira's most celebrated restaurants — excellent fish tagines and stunning wine list.

Fine Dining Wine $$$
3

Chez Sam

A Essaouira legend — inside an old stone fishing warehouse right on the port. Classic seafood dishes with real character. The paella and grilled lobster are exceptional.

Seafood Port View $$
4

Café de France

The classic café on Place Moulay Hassan — the living room of Essaouira. Sit on the terrace with a coffee and watch the entire city pass by. Essential stop, not just for food.

Café Square View $

Insider Tips for Essaouira

From a wind-city veteran

The wind is real

Essaouira earns its name "Wind City" — the afternoon Atlantic wind is strong, especially June–September. Afternoons on the beach can feel harsh. Mornings and evenings are perfect.

Blue hour in the port

The 20 minutes after sunset in the fishing port, when the boats glow in the last light, is the most beautiful photography moment in Essaouira. Position yourself on the Skala du Port above the boats.

Real vs fake argan oil

Pure argan oil is amber-coloured, smells nutty, and is expensive. Anything cheap is mixed or cosmetic grade. Buy from the women's cooperatives on the Marrakech road — certified and fair-trade.

Gnawa Festival timing

The Gnawa and World Music Festival (late June) transforms Essaouira — free concerts on the ramparts and beach for 4 days. Accommodation fills months in advance. Book extremely early if visiting then.

Day trip vs overnight?

Essaouira is often done as a day trip from Marrakech (3h each way). Don't. Stay at least 2 nights — the city only reveals itself slowly, and the morning light and evening atmosphere are worth the extra night.

Thuya wood quality

Only buy thuya wood items with the natural grain visible — no paint or lacquer. The grain of the root wood is extraordinary and should be the selling point. Check that items are solid wood, not laminate.

Ride on the beach at sunset

Essaouira's beach stretches 10km south with constant Atlantic wind. Horse and camel rides along the shoreline at sunset are genuinely spectacular — arrange with the riders near the medina's sea gate (Bab Doukkala). 100–150 MAD for 30 minutes.

The music is everywhere

Essaouira is Morocco's music capital — Gnawa, blues, reggae and Andalusian all coexist here. Don't just attend the June festival: seek out the small cafés on the ramparts where musicians play informally every evening.

Walk the ramparts at dawn

The 18th-century sea bastions are best at sunrise when the light hits the cannons and the fishing boats are heading out. The rampart walk from the Skala de la Ville to the port takes 20 minutes and has no crowds before 8am.

Getting to Essaouira

Easy from Marrakech, more effort from elsewhere

By Bus from Marrakech

Supratours and CTM run several daily buses from Marrakech (3h, from 100 MAD). The bus station is just outside the medina walls — very convenient. Book ahead for weekends.

Self-Drive

3 hours from Marrakech on excellent roads through argan forests. Hire a car and stop at the argan cooperatives en route. Park outside the medina walls — free parking available.

Shared Taxi

Grand taxis run between Marrakech and Essaouira (3h). Depart when 6 passengers are full. Cheaper than buses but less comfortable. Ask at Marrakech's taxi ranks.

What to Do in Essaouira

Wind, waves, Gnawa music, and the most relaxed medina in Morocco — Essaouira rewards slow travel. The Atlantic provides the backdrop for everything.

Windsurfing & Kitesurfing

The Alizée trade wind blows at 30–40 knots most of the year, making Essaouira one of the world's top windsurfing spots. Beginners: Club Mistral and Explora rent boards and run lessons (€30–45/session). Best wind: June–September.

Gnawa Music Evening

Essaouira is the spiritual home of Gnawa — the trance music tradition brought by sub-Saharan slaves centuries ago. Café Alizée on the ramparts and Café Taros have live Gnawa musicians most evenings. The July Gnawa World Music Festival is world-class.

Rampart Walk at Sunset

The 18th-century Portuguese ramparts (Skala de la Ville) face due west over the Atlantic — the sunset from the cannons is the single best photo in Morocco. Go 45 minutes before sunset and stay until the light disappears.

Argan Cooperative Visit

The arganeraie (argan forest) around Essaouira is a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and source of all genuine Moroccan argan oil. Visit a women's cooperative south of town — see the traditional hand-pressing process and buy direct. Avoid tourist shops selling fake argan.

Camel Ride on the Atlantic Beach

The long Atlantic beach stretches 20km south of the city walls — camel and horse rides along the shoreline are arranged directly at the beach entry (from 100 MAD/30 min). The beach itself is free and spectacular.

Marquetry & Thuya Wood Workshops

Essaouira's woodworkers produce exceptional marquetry using thuya root from Atlas cedar forests. Watch craftsmen work in the souks south of the Skala sea bastions and buy direct from the maker. Far higher quality and better prices than Marrakech souvenir shops.

Beyond the Medina

Essaouira sits between the Marrakech Atlas to the east and the Atlantic to the west — day trips explore both directions.

Marrakech (2.5h bus)

CTM direct to Marrakech runs several times daily (~80 MAD, 2.5h). A day trip is possible — arrive for the medina, Djemaa el-Fna evening — but Marrakech is worth an overnight. Most travellers use Essaouira as a 2–3 day break from Marrakech, then bus back.

Diabat & Jimi Hendrix Legend (15min taxi)

The ruins of a 17th-century casbah at Diabat village, 10km south, became famous when Jimi Hendrix visited in 1969 and supposedly planned to build a recording studio here. The ruins themselves are atmospheric; Diabat village is quieter and more local than Essaouira. Petit taxi ~30 MAD.

Safi Pottery Town (1.5h)

An under-visited Atlantic city 130km south — Morocco's pottery capital and an important sardine fishing port. The Place Assif is lined with pottery workshops; the Portuguese Qasr el Bahr sea fortress overlooks the harbour. CTM bus from Essaouira (~50 MAD). Half-day.

Ouzoud-Style Beaches via Tafedna (1h)

Ask any gîte owner to point you to Cap Sim (15km south) or the hidden beach at Tafedna (40km south) — no facilities, no tourists, just wild Atlantic coast and argan trees down to the waterline. Rent a car or arrange a taxi for the day (~200 MAD return).

Full Day Trips Guide — Sidi Kaouki, Argan Cooperatives, Cap Sim & more →

What to Eat in Essaouira

Essaouira's food is defined by the Atlantic — the freshest fish in Morocco, argan oil from the surrounding biosphere and a Gnaoua-influenced spice tradition unlike anywhere else in the country.

Port Fish Grill

Essaouira's port grill stalls are legendary — choose your fish from the display (price by weight), they grill it over charcoal while you wait, served with chermoula and bread. The most authentic fish experience in Morocco. Budget 60–120 MAD depending on fish.

Calamari & Crevettes

The Atlantic off Essaouira produces excellent calamari, prawns and octopus. Served fried or grilled at the port stalls. Morning catches arrive from 7am — for the freshest, arrive early.

Argan Oil & Amlou

The arganeraie (argan forest) surrounds Essaouira — argan oil is used in cooking here more than anywhere else. Amlou (ground almonds, argan oil, honey) is the traditional dip. Buy direct from women's cooperatives — avoid tourist shop versions.

Fresh Orange Juice & Avocado

The market stalls inside the medina serve freshly squeezed orange juice (5–10 MAD) and thick avocado juice throughout the day. Pair with an msemen flatbread for a complete snack.

Gnaoua Spiced Tea

The Gnaoua culture (descended from West African slaves) has influenced Essaouira's spice markets — look for ras el hanout blends unique to this city. Gnaoua-spiced tea (ginger, cinnamon, cardamom) is sold at medina tea stalls.

Where to Eat

Chez Sam (port) — old-school fish restaurant with Atlantic views; La Table by Madada — refined Moroccan-Mediterranean; Ocean Vagabond (beach) — casual, surf-crowd favourite; port grill stalls (60–120 MAD) for the most authentic experience.

3 Days in Essaouira

1 Day 1 — Medina, Ramparts & the Port

  1. Morning: Walk the sea ramparts (Skala de la Ville) — the 18th-century Portuguese cannons and Atlantic views are spectacular in the morning light
  2. Mid-morning: Enter the medina through Bab Doukkala — the souks here sell thuya wood crafts, blue fishing nets and Gnawa instruments
  3. Lunch: Harbour fish grill — choose your fish at the port stalls and have it grilled on the spot; the freshest seafood in Morocco
  4. Afternoon: Mellah (Jewish quarter) and the art galleries of Rue de la Skala — Essaouira has the best contemporary art scene outside Marrakech
  5. Sunset: Beach walk south along the 10km Atlantic beach; kite-surfers performing in the wind
  6. Dinner: Taros rooftop café or Les Alizés — goat cheese, spiced lamb, ocean views

2 Day 2 — Argan Trail & Sidi Kaouki

  1. Morning: Visit a women's argan cooperative outside the city — see the full extraction process and buy direct from the source
  2. Mid-morning: Drive or taxi to Sidi Kaouki (25 min south) — a wild Atlantic surf beach with a marabout shrine and almost no tourists
  3. Lunch: Café at Sidi Kaouki beach — the wind here is constant, the waves are serious, the atmosphere is magic
  4. Afternoon: Return to Essaouira; horse or camel ride on the beach at low tide (book through your riad)
  5. Evening: Gnawa musicians often perform near Bab Marrakech in the evenings — check for impromptu sessions

3 Day 3 — Wind, Waves & Slow Mornings

  1. Morning: Late breakfast at a medina café — Essaouira is a slow city; buy fresh-baked msemen from the bakery near the clock tower
  2. Late morning: Kitesurfing or windsurfing lesson at Explora or Ocean Vagabond — Essaouira's wind is world-class, lessons for beginners available
  3. Lunch: Riad rooftop or one of the simple fish restaurants inside the medina gates
  4. Afternoon: Final medina walk — the blue boats in the harbour at low tide, the Scala du Port fortifications
  5. Departure: Shared taxi or bus to Marrakech (2.5h) or Agadir (2.5h)

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Essaouira — Frequently Asked Questions

What is Essaouira known for?
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Essaouira is known for its beautifully preserved UNESCO-listed medina, its powerful Atlantic winds that make it one of the world's top windsurfing and kitesurfing spots, its thriving arts and music scene (home to the famous Gnawa World Music Festival each June), and its laid-back atmosphere as a slower-paced alternative to Marrakech.

How far is Essaouira from Marrakech?
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Essaouira is about 190 km west of Marrakech — roughly 2.5 to 3 hours by road. Supratours buses run 4 to 5 times daily from Marrakech's ONCF station for around 90 MAD. CTM also operates the route. The drive over the Jbilet plains and argan tree forests is pleasant — keep an eye out for goats climbing the argan trees.

Is the wind always strong in Essaouira?
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Strong afternoon winds blow almost every day from spring through autumn — Essaouira earns its Berber nickname 'Alizee' for good reason. Mornings are typically calm and perfect for exploring the medina. By early afternoon the wind picks up significantly on the beach. June and September are the calmest months. Always bring a light jacket — the wind makes evenings cool even in summer.

Complete Essaouira travel guide — read more →