Essaouira & Morocco's Atlantic Coast Guide
Comprehensive Guide

Essaouira & Morocco's Atlantic Coast Guide

Essaouira's ramparts, port and gnaoua music, plus Taghazout surf, Agadir reality-check, Oualidia oysters and El Jadida's Portuguese cistern.

Last updated: June 2026

Most people come to Morocco and miss the entire Atlantic coast. That is a mistake. Essaouira alone is worth the trip from Marrakech - and the wider coast between El Jadida and Agadir is one of the most varied stretches of Atlantic shoreline in Africa.


Essaouira: What It Actually Is

Essaouira sits 175km west of Marrakech on a wind-battered headland where the Atlantic has been hammering the same Portuguese-built walls since the 18th century. The city was known as Mogador for centuries and only took its current name after Moroccan independence in 1956.

The thing people don’t tell you before you arrive: the wind is relentless from around April through September. Not unpleasant wind - the blue-white city stays cool when Marrakech is a furnace - but persistent, damp Atlantic gusts that blow napkins off café tables and send kite strings horizontal. If you are coming for long, lazy beach days with a cocktail, Essaouira is not that. The beach is beautiful in a dramatic, wild-coast way. It is not a sunbathing beach.

What it is: a walled medina you can actually walk without a guide, a working fishing port that smells like the sea rather than a tourist attraction, gnaoua musicians playing in the squares at dusk, one of the most concentrated art communities in Morocco, and some of the best grilled fish you will eat anywhere.

I have been to Essaouira four times across six Morocco trips since 2017, and it remains the place I recommend most confidently to anyone who asks.


The Medina and Ramparts

The medina is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and it feels like one in the best sense - the scale is human, the architecture is coherent, and there are enough tourists to keep the guesthouses full but not so many that the souks have caved entirely to the souvenir trade.

Skala de la Ville is the sea-facing rampart running along the northern edge of the medina, lined with old Portuguese cannons pointing out to sea. Entrance costs around 10 dirhams (~€1). Opening hours run roughly 9am to 5:30pm. Walk the full length for the views back over the blue-trimmed rooftops and out to the Purpuraires Islands where Jimi Hendrix allegedly stayed - the story is probably at least half myth, but the islands are genuinely beautiful.

Skala du Port at the southern end near the fishing harbour charges around 50 to 60 dirhams to climb the fortified tower, which gives you the best vantage point over the port itself. Whether that is worth it depends on how much you care about the view versus just walking around the port for free.

The medina is compact enough to cover on foot in a few hours without getting seriously lost. The main commercial artery, Avenue de l’Istiqlal, runs north-south and is easy to navigate back to. The souks off the main drag sell woodwork (thuya root and cedar inlay is a genuine Essaouira speciality), silver jewellery, and argan products - more on those below.

Game of Thrones note: Essaouira served as Astapor, the slave city, in series three of Game of Thrones (2013). The ramparts and the port gate are recognisable to fans. This brings a certain number of visitors who take photos and leave the same day. If you’re one of them, consider staying - you’re missing most of it.


The Fishing Harbour and Grilled-Fish Stalls

Walk south past the Skala du Port and through the blue gate into the working port. It is a real working port - the painted blue boats are actually fishing boats, not props. Fish comes in daily and the port smells accordingly.

At the row of grill stalls just inside the port entrance, you choose your fish from the display - sardines, sea bass, sole, calamari, prawns - and they grill it while you wait. Sit at the wooden tables outside. This is not a curated experience for tourists; it is where Essaouiris eat lunch. A full plate of grilled sardines, bread, harissa and olives will run about 30 to 60 dirhams depending on what you pick. It is, without question, the best-value meal in the city.

Some of the stalls have become tourist-facing with pushy touts outside. Walk past the first two or three and the pressure drops. The quality is similar throughout. I have been using the stalls on the right-hand side as you enter the gate since 2019 and have never had a bad meal.


Gnaoua Music and What It Actually Is

Gnaoua is a spiritual music tradition brought to Morocco by sub-Saharan African enslaved people, now fused with Berber and Arab musical forms into something distinctive and hypnotic. The instruments are the guembri (a three-stringed bass lute), metal castanets called krakeb, and call-and-response singing. The music has roots in healing ceremonies.

You will hear it throughout Essaouira - in the medina squares, in some cafes, at the annual Gnaoua World Music Festival held each June. Street musicians playing for tips are often genuinely skilled; the tradition runs deep in the city’s identity rather than existing purely for tourist consumption.

The Gnaoua World Music Festival in late June draws tens of thousands of visitors and turns Essaouira into something else entirely. If you want the quiet, walled-city version, avoid that weekend. If you want to see gnaoua in a world-music context with international collaborations, that weekend is worth planning around.


Argan Cooperatives on the Road In

On the road between Marrakech and Essaouira, you will pass signs for argan oil cooperatives from about 30 minutes outside of Essaouira heading toward the city. There are now more than 20 women’s co-ops operating along this stretch.

The most visited is Cooperative Marjana, run by over 80 women - mostly divorced women or those who have no other income source. There is no entrance fee; the cooperative supports itself through sales. Women demonstrate the traditional process of cracking argan nuts by hand (a slow, skilled job: it takes roughly 16 hours of hand-cracking to produce one litre of oil), pressing the kernels, and separating the oil for cosmetic or culinary use.

What to buy and what to watch for: Cosmetic argan oil (unroasted, lightly golden) and culinary argan oil (roasted, darker, nutty) are legitimately different products and both have a place. Amlou - a paste of argan oil, almonds and honey - is excellent and cheap. Be aware that products sold at tourist hotels and Marrakech souks as “argan” are frequently adulterated. At the cooperatives themselves, the product is consistently genuine. Prices are fixed, so haggling is not the done thing here.

If you’re booking a guided day trip from Marrakech, most include a cooperative stop. You can browse Marrakech to Essaouira day trips via our tours page if you want a guided version with this included.


Getting There: The Supratours Bus

The simplest way from Marrakech to Essaouira is the Supratours bus, which departs from the Marrakech train station (Gare de Marrakech) on Avenue Mohammed VI.

  • Journey time: Around 3 hours including a 20-minute comfort break
  • Current fare: 140 MAD (~€13) one-way per person
  • Departures from Marrakech: 10:45am, 12:00pm, 2:45pm (check the Supratours website for live schedules as these change seasonally)
  • Departures from Essaouira: From 7:00am, with a last bus at 5:00pm
  • Booking: Online via supratours.ma, or at the station ticket window on the day (arrive early in summer)
  • CTM also runs the route on a similar schedule and at a similar price

The bus is air-conditioned, clean, and the seats are 2-by-2. The road crosses the Argan Forest (a UNESCO biosphere reserve) and is genuinely pleasant to watch from the window - the argan trees with their distinctive gnarled branches, goats occasionally perched in the branches eating the fruit, and the landscape shifting from the Marrakech plain to rolling scrubland as you approach the coast.

Shared taxi (grand taxi): Faster at around 2 to 2.5 hours if you fill a six-seat Mercedes, but less comfortable and you’ll pay more per seat unless you fill the car. Works better for groups.

Day trip versus overnight: Essaouira rewards an overnight stay. The medina changes character in the evening - the tourist volume drops, the gnaoua musicians come out, the light on the blue walls at dusk is worth sitting in a rooftop café to watch. A day trip from Marrakech is doable and is a lot of what the guided tour market runs, but you’re skipping the best part.


Where to Stay in Essaouira

Stay in the medina. This is not negotiable for a first visit - the beach-road hotels outside the walls are fine if you are there for surfing, but they miss the point of Essaouira.

Budget (dorm or basic private): Hostels in the medina run from around 28 to 80 MAD for dorm beds (~€3 to €8) and 300 to 500 MAD for private rooms. The Chill Art Hostel and Essaouira Trip Hostel are consistently well-reviewed.

Mid-range riads (600 to 1,200 MAD/night, ~€55 to €110): Riad Dar Latifa and Riad Dar Zayna are good options with proper riad architecture - courtyard, terrace, breakfast included. A riad in Essaouira is smaller and less grand than the Marrakech equivalents, which suits the city.

Splurge: A few riads with sea-facing terraces go for €150+ in peak summer. Worth it if the view matters to you.

For specific hotel and riad recommendations with neighbourhood notes, see our Essaouira accommodation guide. For the broader question of how to book riads without being disappointed by the photos, see our where to stay in Morocco guide.


Food in Essaouira

Beyond the harbour grill stalls:

  • Café-restaurants around Place Moulay Hassan: The main square at the entrance to the medina has a row of terrace cafes. Good for coffee and mint tea; food is acceptable but not exceptional. The touristy atmosphere is part of the deal.
  • Chez Sam: A wooden restaurant built on the port wall, open since the 1970s. More expensive than the grill stalls but a proper sit-down fish meal with wine available. A long lunch here is one of the classic Essaouira experiences.
  • Melon cafe and rooftop options in the medina: Better coffee than the main square; look for places with local clientele.
  • Harira and sellou: The traditional Moroccan soup and the sweet sesame-and-almond paste are both available from street vendors in the medina for a few dirhams. Harira in particular is worth eating once on every Morocco trip.

For context on Moroccan food and what to order throughout the country, the Marrakech travel guide covers food in more depth.


The Wider Atlantic Coast

Sidi Kaouki

Twenty-seven kilometres south of Essaouira, Sidi Kaouki is a village with a long, exposed surf beach backed by a small marabout (shrine) and a handful of guesthouses. The wind here is, if anything, more consistent than Essaouira, making it a genuine kitesurf and windsurf location for more experienced riders.

For casual visitors: it is a beautiful, undeveloped Atlantic beach with almost nothing to do except swim (carefully - currents are strong) and watch kites. Day trips from Essaouira are easy by taxi (about 80 to 100 MAD each way). A handful of small guesthouses cater to surfers staying several nights.

Taghazout and Tamraght

Two hours south of Essaouira and about 20km north of Agadir, Taghazout and the adjacent village of Tamraght are Morocco’s established surf towns. The point break at Anchor Point, 2km north of the village, is one of the best right-handers in Africa and draws experienced surfers who know exactly what they’re looking for.

For beginners and intermediates, Taghazout has a full infrastructure of surf schools:

  • Group surf lessons: Around 250 to 400 MAD (~€25 to €40) per session, typically 2 hours with board and wetsuit included
  • Private lessons: From around €70 to €100 for a 2-hour session
  • Week-long surf camps: From approximately €360 for 4 days or €595 for a week, covering accommodation, lessons, board rental, and meals

The village has changed significantly since around 2018 with the opening of Taghazout Bay, a planned resort development north of the original village that added a Marriott, a Club Med, and several other large hotels. The development has its defenders and its critics. The original village remains relatively low-key and the surf culture authentic enough.

Tamraght, about 3km south, is smaller, cheaper and less crowded. Many surf travellers prefer it to Taghazout’s increasingly tourist-facing centre.

You can browse surf lesson and camp options via our tours page if you want to book ahead rather than showing up and negotiating on the beach.

Agadir: The Honest Take

Agadir is Morocco’s biggest beach resort and it is, in most senses, not very Moroccan. The city was flattened by an earthquake in 1960 and rebuilt on a grid plan with none of the medieval medina architecture that defines most Moroccan cities. There is a purpose-built souk for tourists (Souk El Had), a rebuilt kasbah on the hill, and a 10km beach that is genuinely excellent - calm, wide, warm, and well-maintained.

Who Agadir suits:

  • Families who want a safe, calm beach and an easy flight home
  • Travellers who are not particularly interested in Moroccan culture and want sun, sea, and a decent resort
  • People who find the medina cities overwhelming and want somewhere to decompress
  • Anyone combining it with a few days in Essaouira or Taghazout

Who Agadir does not suit:

  • Travellers looking for authentic Moroccan character - it mostly isn’t there
  • People wanting to eat locally and cheaply - the resort strip is resort-priced
  • Those hoping for a historic medina to explore on foot - there isn’t one worth your time

The beach is genuinely 8 out of 10. The city around it is a 4 out of 10 if Moroccan atmosphere is what you’re after. The honest position: Agadir works as a base for access to Taghazout (20 minutes by taxi), the Anti-Atlas mountains, and onward travel south. On its own terms as a beach resort it is comparable to any mid-range Mediterranean package destination. That is not an insult; it is what it is.


Oualidia: Oysters and a Lagoon

Three and a half hours north of Essaouira on the coast road, Oualidia is the least-known of the Atlantic coast towns and one of the most genuinely lovely. The defining feature is a sheltered lagoon - a crescent of calm, turquoise water separated from the open Atlantic by a natural sandbar - where oyster farms have been operating since the 1950s.

The oysters: Oualidia produces more than 200 tonnes annually, flushed twice daily by Atlantic tides into the lagoon. They are eaten at small restaurants and directly from producers at the water’s edge. A dozen is inexpensive - expect to pay around 50 to 80 MAD. The season runs September through April when water temperatures are cooler; summer oysters are present but less at their best.

Getting there independently requires a car or a series of local buses that are slow and infrequent. Most people who make it to Oualidia are either driving the coast road from Casablanca or El Jadida, or on a private tour. It is worth the effort if the coast road is part of your itinerary rather than a detour.

El Jadida: The Portuguese Cistern

An hour north of Oualidia, El Jadida (formerly Mazagan under Portuguese occupation) holds one of the most extraordinary interiors in Morocco. The Portuguese Cistern is a vaulted underground reservoir built in the 16th century - a hall of Gothic arches reflected in a shallow film of water on the floor, lit from a circular opening in the ceiling. It was used as a gunpowder store, then sealed, then rediscovered in the 19th century. Orson Welles filmed a scene from Othello here in 1952.

The old Portuguese city - Cité Portugaise - is a UNESCO site with intact walls, bastions, and a small medina that feels very different from the Arab-Berber pattern of inland Moroccan cities. Worth a few hours. El Jadida is the most practical northern endpoint for a coast-road drive from Essaouira toward Casablanca.


Best Months to Visit

April to May: Good shoulder season for Essaouira. Wind building but not peak, weather warm and pleasant, fewer crowds. Water still cold (around 16 to 17°C). Good for general sightseeing.

June to August: Peak wind season. Kitesurfers and windsurfers consider June-August optimal (winds regularly reaching 22 to 28 knots). Comfortable temperature in Essaouira (around 21 to 24°C) while Marrakech is 38°C+ - this is a meaningful factor. The beach is too windy and cold for sunbathing. The Gnaoua Festival is late June.

September to October: Arguably the best all-round months. Wind easing but still consistent for water sports, water warming slightly (up to 22°C), the summer crowds thinning. The light in September is excellent.

November to March: Quieter, cheaper, and the wind is less reliable for kiting (around 20% of days may have very little). Still worth visiting for the medina, food, and atmosphere. Rain possible from December through February. Wetsuits essential in the water.

For Taghazout surf specifically, the swell is better in winter (October to March) when Atlantic storms push waves south - the summer months have cleaner wind but smaller swell.

For context on timing your broader Morocco trip, our best time to visit Morocco guide covers the full country.


Costs to Expect

Supratours bus Marrakech - Essaouira: 140 MAD (~€13) each way

Essaouira accommodation (medina):

  • Hostel dorm: 60 to 100 MAD (~€6 to €10) per night
  • Budget private room: 300 to 500 MAD (~€30 to €50)
  • Riad mid-range: 600 to 1,200 MAD (~€55 to €110)

Food:

  • Harbour grill lunch: 40 to 80 MAD (~€4 to €8)
  • Sit-down restaurant: 100 to 200 MAD (~€10 to €20) per person
  • Mint tea and bread: 10 to 20 MAD

Activities:

  • Skala de la Ville ramparts: 10 MAD
  • Skala du Port tower: 50 to 60 MAD
  • Taghazout group surf lesson (2hr): 250 to 400 MAD (~€25 to €40)
  • Taghazout private surf lesson: €70 to €100
  • Oualidia oysters (dozen): 50 to 80 MAD

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Essaouira worth visiting as a day trip from Marrakech?

Yes, a day trip works and you will see the main points - the medina, the ramparts, the port, lunch at the grill stalls. But you will miss the evening atmosphere, which is the best part of Essaouira. If you have any flexibility, stay one night. The Supratours bus makes this straightforward: take the morning departure, stay overnight, leave the next afternoon.

How windy is Essaouira and does it ruin the beach?

The wind is real and it blows from around April through September with real intensity - regularly 20+ knots in high summer. It does not ruin the beach but it does redefine what the beach is for. Walking, watching the kites and windsurfers, and dramatic Atlantic scenery: excellent. Lying in the sun reading without a kite hitting you: less achievable. For sunbathing, visit October to March when the wind is lighter and the city is quieter.

What is the difference between Essaouira and Agadir and which should I choose?

Essaouira has a real Moroccan character - a UNESCO medina, gnaoua music, a working fishing port, artisan workshops, and proper Atlantic-coast atmosphere. Agadir has a genuinely excellent beach and functions as a conventional beach resort. If you want Morocco, choose Essaouira. If you want a beach holiday with Morocco as a backdrop, Agadir works. If you have the time, do both: they are 170km apart and the Taghazout surf scene sits between them.

Can I learn to surf in Taghazout as a complete beginner?

Yes. Taghazout has a well-developed surf school infrastructure with a range of schools offering group and private lessons. Beginners are taken to gentler beach breaks rather than the exposed point breaks. Expect to pay around 250 to 400 MAD (€25 to €40) for a 2-hour group session with board and wetsuit. The best learning months are April to October when conditions are consistent. You can book surf lessons and camps in advance through our Morocco tours page.

Is the argan cooperative stop a tourist trap?

The cooperatives on the Marrakech - Essaouira road are not a trap in the pejorative sense, but they are structured around selling you product. The demonstrations are genuine and the products (culinary and cosmetic argan oil, amlou paste) are real and good quality - far better than what is sold in tourist souks in Marrakech. There is no entrance fee and no obligation to buy. The cooperatives support women who often have very few other income options. Buy something if you want it; look and leave if you don’t.

How do I get from Essaouira to Taghazout?

There is no direct public transport. Options: grand taxi (shared or chartered) between Essaouira and Agadir, then a short taxi from Agadir north to Taghazout. A chartered grand taxi from Essaouira to Taghazout costs around 400 to 600 MAD. Renting a car in Marrakech and driving the coast road gives the most flexibility if you want to combine Essaouira, Sidi Kaouki, Taghazout, and Agadir in one trip.

When is the Gnaoua World Music Festival in Essaouira?

The festival is held annually in late June, typically over four days. It is free and takes place across several stages in the medina and on the beach. International artists perform alongside Moroccan gnaoua masters in collaborative sets. If you’re coming specifically for the festival, book accommodation in Essaouira several months in advance - the city fills up. If you want the quiet medina version of Essaouira, avoid that weekend.

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Written by

Sarah

Sarah has visited Morocco six times since 2017, spending time in Marrakech, Fes, Essaouira, Tangier, the Sahara, and the Atlas Mountains. She started Explora Morocco because every friend planning a trip got the same 2,000-word email. Read more.

6 visits to Morocco since 2017