7 Days Tour from Casablanca

7 Days Tour from Casablanca Overview

Join us from Casablanca to Marrakech for 7 days in our quest for knowledge. Moroccan Imperial Cities Tour by strolling through the narrow streets of Rabat, Meknes, Fes and Marrakech, enjoying the colorful souks and markets, experiencing Moroccan culture and traditions on a 7-day Casablanca to Marrakech, visiting the most attractive imperial cities, During the tour, you will visit the desert and Sahara dunes, ride camels, visit world-heritage Kasbahs, and enjoy Moroccan warmth and delicious Moroccan cuisine.

Note: At Explore Morocco Holidays, if the tours we offer do not fit your requirements, please contact us, and we will adapt a tour to your unique needs.

7 Days Tour from Casablanca Highlights

  • Hassan ll Mosque in Casablanca.
  • Hassan Tower in Rabat.
  • The blue city Chefchaouen.
  • Explore Fes
  • Barbary Apes in Azrou Cedar forest.
  • Panoramic of Erg Chebbi dunes.
  • Experience Camel ride in Merzouga Desert.
  • Sunset over the sand dunes.
  • Sand-boarding activity.
  • Dinner and party around campfire (berber drums).
  • Overnight at Merzouga Desert Camp.
  • Discovery, Merzouga, & Nomad families.
  • Atlas Studio & Taourirt Kasbah in Ouarzazate.
  • UNESCO world heritage of Ait Ben Haddou Kasbah.
  • Spectacular views of the Atlas Mountains landscapes.

Includes

Not Included

7 Days Tour from Casablanca Itinerary

DAY 1: Casablanca, Rabat and Chefchaoune

First and foremost, we will pick you up from your Casablanca hotel or the airport and bring you to Chefchaouen. On this 7-day Days Tour from Casablanca, one of the best Morocco Sahara tours, we’ll stop in Rabat to see of the city’s monuments, including the Hassan ii Tower, before continuing to Chefchaouen, the blue city. Finally, spend the night in a traditional riad in the Medina.

DAY 2: Explore Chefchaouen

You will have a free day on the second day of our 7-day Days Tour from Casablanca to Marrakech to walk about the blue City alleys and see the highlights of madina , which is the town’s primary center. The Akshour Falls, the Kasbah Ethnographic Museum, Utah Lhmam Square, which is the city’s dynamic and active heart, and the Al-Saiqa District are all worth visiting. second night at a traditional Riad.

DAY 3: Chefchaouen, Volubilis, Meknes and Fes

Depart from your riad after breakfast and travel to Fes via Ouazzane and the Roman city of Volubilis. Then, after a few of hours of driving, we arrive in Volubilis, a well-preserved Roman empire dating from 225 BC, where you’ll view some of Morocco’s most stunning Mosaics from the 3rd century BC,As a result, you will be given a guided tour of the site and will learn a great deal about the Roman Empire. After that, we drove to Meknes, Morocco’s Ismaili capital. In Meknes, we visit the Sultan Moulay Ismail’s Mausoleum and Bab Mansour, as well as the granary and the Sahrij Souani, which are utilized for irrigation and plantation. Then We continue to Fes via the highway and overnight stay in riad in the medina.

DAY 4: Fes Sightseeing tour with a local guide

We will begin exploration of Fes, Morocco’s “Spiritual City,” after breakfast in your riad. As a result, you’ll be spending the entire morning visiting Medina and its alleyways. The journey begins with a visit to the majority of the cultural and historical attractions in the city, including the famed Al Karaouine Mosque and University (the world’s oldest), as well as the Madrasa Bouanania. The Tanneries and the Najjarine Fountain are also worth visiting. After lunch, we’ll take you beyond Medina to see the Royal Palace entrance, walk through “the Mellah,” and then visit a pottery cooperative. Later in the afternoon, we’ll take you to one of the fortresses for a spectacular panoramic view over Fes’ entire Medina. same riad for the night.

DAY 5: Fes, Ifrane, Azrou, Midelt, Erfoud and Merzouga

After breakfast, travel south through Midelt and Errachidia to the Merzouga desert. Your first destination on this Grand Tour of 7 Days tour from Casablanca  will be to Ifrane, dubbed “Morocco’s Switzerland.” Midlet and the Ziz Valley are on the way to Merzouga. You’ll get sights of the Middle Atlas and Higher Mountains during this excursion.Following that, you will visit the famed cedar forest, Morocco’s largest, where you will have the opportunity to view Barbarian apes. As you reach Er Rachidia, you’ll observe how the environment transforms to offer clues of the desert, and for lunch in Midelt, your journey continues down the magnificent Ziz Valley, with stops along the way for panoramic views. We’ll drive through Berber villages to Erfoud, then to Rissani, the birthplace of Morocco’s current ruling royal family, the Alaouites. When we arrive in Merzouga at the end of the day, you’ll be greeted with a glass of mint tea and then ride your camel to see the sunset in the middle of Morocco’s highest sand dunes. Spend the night at our well-equipped desert camp, where you will be served dinner.

DAY 6: Merzouga Desert, Todra Gorge and Dades Valley

In the morning, after breakfast and a hot shower in the desert camp, you can see the dawn, which may be the best sunrise you’ve ever seen. After that, you’ll return to your starting point on a tranquil camel journey, taking in the unique beauty of the stunning Erg Chebbi dunes, which change with the light as the day advances. You’ll meet your driver and depart for the Tinghir and Todra gorges, Morocco’s tallest and narrowest canyons. You’ll be able to wander along its valley here, and then we’ll drive into the Dades Valley, where you’ll view gorgeous sand castles and incredible rock formations known as “monkey toes.” Finally, overnight will be in a riad or hotel in the heart of the Dades gorge. (dinner and breakfast).

Day 7: Dades Valley | AIt Ben Haddou Kasbah | Marrakech

The last day, we’ll drive through the Dades Valley to Kalaat Mgouna and Ouarzazate after breakfast. The route through Dades Valley is known as the “Kasbah Road” since it passes past a thousand Kasbahs. As a result, you’ll have plenty of chances to snap some of your best photos of the trip. Later On this 7-day tour from Casablanca, we’ll stop in Kalaat Mgouna, “the rose city,” to buy rosewater, which will keep your linen smelling fresh long after your trip is over. Then travel to Ouarzazate, dubbed “Africa’s Hollywood.” After that, lunch will be served at the famed Ait Ben Haddou Kasbah, Morocco’s largest Kasbah. UNESCO has designated it as a World Heritage Site. It has served as the setting for a number of films, including ‘Lawrence of Arabia,”Gladiator’, “Game Of Thrones,etc then we continue through the spectacular Tizi ‘n’ Tichka pass (2260 m) across the High Atlas Mountains, where we stops to learn about the process of making argan oil at women’s cooperatives before arriving at your hotel in Marrakech, where the tour will end.

7 Days Tour from Casablanca Map

⇒ Destination Overview 

Our agency is your gateway to learning about the most significant aspects of Morocco. Our website offers readers the chance to learn more about Morocco if they are considering a trip there. We provide you with the Merzouga Sahara Desert, Marrakech, Casablanca, Tangier, Fes, and many more places to travel.

Casablanca City!

Filmed and set during World War II, it follows an American expatriate (Bogart) who must choose between his feelings for a woman (Bergman) and assisting her husband (Henreid), a Czechoslovak resistance leader, in escaping from the Vichy-controlled city of Casablanca to continue fighting the Germans.

Rabat City!

The Almohads established Rabat in the 12th century. Following the fall of the Almohads, the city experienced initial growth before entering a protracted period of decline. In the 17th century, Rabat became a sanctuary for Barbary pirates.

Chefchaoune City!

In 1471, Moulay Ali Ben Moussa built the town of Chefchaouen. It began as a modest castle to defend Morocco against the Portuguese invasions. Following the Spanish Reconquista in 1492, it became home to the Ghomara tribes, Moriscos, and Jews. In 1920, Spain captured the ancient town, which became part of Spanish Morocco.

Volubilis Roman ruins!

On the site of a Carthaginian city from the third century B.C., the Romans constructed Volubilis in the first century A.D. It developed into a significant Roman city in North Africa. It is believed that Volubilis had 20,000 residents.

Meknes City!

Meknes, an Almoravid military outpost established in the 11th century, rose to prominence under Sultan Moulay Ismail (1672–1727), the first ruler of the Alawite dynasty.

Fes City!

In the eighth and ninth century CE, under Idrisid control, Fez was established. It originally consisted of two independent, rival communities. Early in the ninth century, successive waves of mostly Arab immigration from Ifriqiya (Tunisia) and al-Andalus (Spain and Portugal) gave the emerging metropolis its Arab identity.

Ziz Valley!

The massive Ziz Valley or Ziz Gorges, which begin about south of Rich in the Middle Atlas and about 30 kilometers north of Errachidia, offer a rocky route south through the Tunnel du Zaabel, which the French constructed in 1928.

Merzouga Desert!

According to legend, Merzouga was once a thriving tropical jungle before being transformed into a desert by God, who punished families for rejecting contributions to a needy lady by burying them in the sand dunes of Erg Chebbi. Initially uninhabited, Merzouga later developed into a hub for travelers carrying goods to Timbuktu.

Rissani City!

The past of Rissani is legendary. Sijilmassa, the renowned capital of the desert, was located in Rissani between the 14th and the 18th centuries. It was the location of lucrative slave and gold trades. For producing leather of the highest caliber, Rissani is renowned.

Todra Gorge!

In Morocco’s eastern High Atlas mountains, close to the town of Tinerhir, are the Todra gorges, a collection of limestone river canyons or wadis. These substantial cliff-sided gorges were carved out by the Todgha and nearby Dates rivers over their final 40 kilometers through the mountains.

Ait Ben-Haddou!

It is reported that, up until the 1940s, the palace was home to over 98 families. Today, only five families call Ksar home, which is unlikely. One of the families converted the home into a coffee shop, where they welcomed visitors and provided them with an overview of the way of life of the original occupants.

Marrakech City!

It was established by Ysuf ibn Tshufn of the Almoravid dynasty in the middle of the 11th century, and it served as the Almoravid capital until it was conquered by the Almohads in 1147. The Marnids, whose chosen capital was the northern city of Fès, took possession of Marrakech in 1269.

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