Desert Trips from Marrakech
Private Sahara Tours, Camel Treks & Custom Itineraries
From a sunset at Agafay to a two-week tour through the Sahara, these are the desert trips from Marrakech most requested by our travelers, each one departing with private transport and a driver-guide from your riad in Marrakech or the airport.
Below are every one of our desert trips from Marrakech. Each route departs from Marrakech, and every itinerary can be shortened, extended or rebuilt around your own dates before you book.
How Booking Works
Choose Your Route
Pick any of the desert trips from Marrakech below, or tell us your dates and group size and we’ll design one.
We Confirm the Plan
Our team replies, usually within a few hours, to confirm dates, pricing and any changes you’d like.
We Pick You Up
Your driver-guide meets you at your hotel/riad or the airport, ready to start your Moroccan journey.
All Our Desert Trips from Marrakech
A curated collection of routes below, ranging from quick half-day escapes to sweeping multi-day journeys, allowing you to easily compare options in a single scroll.
Zagora, Merzouga or Erg Chigaga?
The word “desert” covers more than one landscape south of Marrakech, and the route you pick decides what you’ll actually stand in front of.
Agafay: The closest option
Forty-five minutes from Marrakech, Agafay trades rolling sand for a rocky, lunar plateau under the High Atlas, with the snow-capped peaks as a backdrop. It works well as a half-day or overnight add-on, easy to combine with quad biking or a sunset camel ride, but it isn’t the dune scenery from the postcards.
Zagora: The Draa Valley route
Reachable inside a two-day trip, Zagora sits at the end of the palm-lined Draa Valley and offers smaller dunes than Merzouga, with a slower, more historic drive through old caravan towns and pottery villages.
Merzouga or Erg Chebbi: The iconic Sahara
For the tall, photogenic dunes most travelers picture, Merzouga is the destination. Getting there means crossing the Tizi n’Tichka pass through the High Atlas, stopping at the UNESCO-listed red towers of Ait Ben Haddou and the film studios of Ouarzazate, then continuing south through the Dades and Todra gorges. It’s a minimum of three days round-trip from Marrakech.
Erg Chigaga: The remote dunes
For travelers willing to trade comfort for solitude and wilderness, Erg Chigaga lies deeper into the Sahara past Zagora, reached by 4×4 through the Iriqui National Park, with far fewer camps and far fewer other visitors than the routes to Merzouga.
Why Travel With Us
Whichever desert trips from Marrakech you pick, our foundational quality and dedication to your experience stay constant.
Real Local Knowledge
Every route is planned by people who’ve actually driven these roads, not pulled from a brochure.
Private & Flexible
You travel in a private vehicle with an English-speaking driver-guide, and the plan can still change before you leave.
A Real Reply, Fast
An actual person answers your enquiry, usually within a few hours, not an automated quote.
Pickup at Your Door
Collection and drop-off at your Marrakech hotel or riad, a camel trek and a night in camp, included as standard.
Marrakech Before the Sahara
Marrakech earned the name Red City for the ochre ramparts that have ringed its medina for close to a thousand years, and that medina still sets the tone for everything beyond it. At its center, Jemaa el-Fnaa runs spice stalls and storytellers by day and turns into an open-air kitchen and stage by night. The city is also the practical starting point for the Sahara: no other Moroccan city sits this close to both the High Atlas and the open desert, which is why so many desert trips in Morocco begin from Marrakech.
Before or after the desert, the city rewards a day on foot: the carved plaster of the Ben Youssef Madrasa and the dye pits of the souks inside the medina, the Bahia Palace and Jardin Majorelle just beyond it, and the wide Art Deco avenues of Gueliz for an evening that feels like a different century entirely. Many of the routes above continue on to Fes or Tangier instead of looping back, and travelers with more time often add the coastal town of Essaouira or the blue streets of Chefchaouen before flying home.
When to Go & What to Pack
Best Time to Go
Spring (March to May) and autumn (September to November) are the best times to visit Morocco: warm days, cool nights, and the clearest light over the dunes. Late April and early May fill up fastest, so itineraries in that period are worth booking three to four weeks ahead. Summer pushes daytime desert temperatures past 40°C, so camel treks and dune walks shift to early morning or after sunset. Winter brings the opposite problem after dark: desert camp nights regularly drop close to freezing, even when the daytime forecast in Marrakech looks mild.
What to Pack
Loose, breathable layers for the day, a warm jacket or fleece for the camp at night, and a scarf or cheche that doubles as sun and wind protection on the camel trek. Closed shoes handle the dunes better than sandals, and sunscreen and sunglasses are worth packing at any time of year. Keeping a change of clothes separate from the rest of your luggage helps too, since desert sand has a way of finding everything.
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to what people ask us most before booking desert trips from Marrakech.
How many days do I need for a desert trip from Marrakech?
Two days is enough to reach Zagora or Agafay, but three days is the realistic minimum if Merzouga or Erg Chigaga are the goal. Four to five days adds breathing room, and a week or more lets you build in the Dades and Todra gorges without rushing.
What’s the difference between the Zagora and Merzouga routes?
Zagora sits closer to Marrakech and follows the Draa Valley, with smaller dunes and a shorter drive. Merzouga reaches the taller, more photographed dunes of Erg Chebbi, but takes longer to get to and back from.
When is the best time for a desert tour from Marrakech?
March to May and September to November give the most comfortable balance of warm days and cool nights. Summer is very hot during the day, and winter nights in camp can drop close to freezing, so both ends of the calendar call for extra planning.
Are these private tours, and can the itinerary change?
Most of the routes above run as private trips with their own vehicle and driver-guide, and the day-by-day plan can usually be shortened, extended or adjusted before departure. Tell us your dates through the form below if you’d like a route built around your travel preferences.
Is a multi-day desert tour suitable for families or older travelers?
Yes. With a private vehicle, the pace remains completely flexible. The primary consideration is the driving distance, so we recommend itineraries of four days or more to comfortably break up the road time.
How far in advance should I book?
A few weeks ahead is usually enough outside peak periods. Around Easter, the last two weeks of April, and the Christmas and New Year window, camps and vehicles fill up faster, so four to six weeks ahead is worth doing if your dates fall there.
Can I combine a desert tour with Fes, Tangier or Chefchaouen?
Yes. Several of the itineraries above are built to end in Fes or Tangier instead of looping back to Marrakech, and longer routes can be extended to include Chefchaouen or the Atlantic coast.
What’s included in the price?
Private transport, an English-speaking driver-guide, hotel pickup and drop-off in Marrakech, a camel trek, and at least one night in a desert camp are standard across these itineraries. Exact inclusions vary slightly by route, so check the individual itinerary or ask us directly.
Plan Your Desert Trips from Marrakech
Tell us your dates, group size and how many days you have, and we’ll put together a route or adjust one of the itineraries above to fit. If you’re picturing something different, just say so in the message and we’ll work from there. Departing from somewhere else? We also run tours from Casablanca, Agadir, Ouarzazate and Errachidia. Most messages get a reply within a few hours.
