23 Best Restaurants in Marrakesh, Morocco

Al Fassia Guéliz

$$ | Guéliz Fodor's choice

Serving some of the best à la carte Moroccan food in the city, the affordable menu here includes tasty tagines, tender brochettes with saffron rice, couscous topped with caramelized onions, succulent tangia, and sweet-savory pigeon pastilla. There's an extensive choice of Moroccan wines, too. The restaurant can be noisy and crowded with slow service if there are large party bookings. 

55, bd. Zerktouni, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-43–40–60
Known For
  • delicious and varied Moroccan dishes
  • traditional recipes from Fez
  • all-female family-run business
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and 3 wks in June and July, Reservations essential

Dar Yacout

$$$$ | Bab Doukkala Fodor's choice

Come hungry for the five-course traditional Moroccan feast served at this restaurant located deep in the medina. Aperitifs are taken on the rooftop, which has stunning panoramic views of the Koutoubia Mosque, and then you can choose to dine beside the pool on the lanterned terrace, in a vaulted upstairs room, or in the lush, cushion-filled main salon. Dinner, including drinks, costs 700 DH and courteous, discreet waiters in white djellabas and red fezzes scurry about to fulfill your every need. This is an exotic experience in a magical setting and alcohol is served.

79, Sidi Ahmed Soussi, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-38–29–29
Known For
  • plentiful amount of food served
  • magical fairy-tale setting
  • sumptuous Moroccan dining
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon. No lunch, Reservations essential

Latitude 31

$$ | Bab Doukkala Fodor's choice
Owner Ali Lamsouber has opened up his ancestral family home in the Bab Doukkala neighborhood to create a welcoming open-air restaurant in an enclosed garden courtyard. The innovative menu takes classic Moroccan dishes and adds an element of surprise, for example a succulent lamb tagine is loaded with wild mushrooms from the Middle Atlas Mountains, or the traditional pastilla (pastry) is filled with dates, apples, and ginger. Vegetarian options—spinach ravioli filled with goat cheese and dried tomatoes or risotto variations—are available and each course is beautifully and artfully presented with nice touches such as an amuse-bouche and small baskets of delicious homemade miniflatbreads. The overall ambience is low-key and casual, with jazz music playing in the background and the contemporary design—modern seating, lanterns, and low leather couches—contrasts nicely with the 1960s-style Moroccan patterned tiling. There's also a wide menu of nonalcoholic cocktails, soft drinks, and juices; alcohol is not served.

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Al Fassia Aguedal

$$ | Hivernage

The Al Fassia name has become synonymous with fine Moroccan cuisine in Marrakesh, and with tables hard to come by in Guéliz, this branch at the boutique Hotel Al Fassia near the Agdal Gardens lives up to the same high standards set by the older sister restaurant. The atmosphere is elegant though casual, and the restaurant is more spacious and tranquil than its city-center counterpart. On a warm evening a table on the outdoor garden terrace is very romantic. The menu offers the same traditional fare as the Guéliz restaurant, and the kefta of fish with ginger and herbs comes highly recommended. Vegetarians will enjoy the array of delicately flavorsome Moroccan salads as a subtantial starter.

9 bis, rte. de Ourika, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-38–11–38
Known For
  • <PRO>fine Moroccan cuisine</PRO>
  • <PRO>outdoor garden restaurant</PRO>
  • <PRO>excellent Moroccan wine list</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed 3 wks in June and July, Reservations essential

Amal Women's Association Restaurant

$ | Guéliz

A nonprofit center established the restaurant to help women from difficult backgrounds learn culinary skills and earn an independent living and the result is this friendly, brightly furnished restaurant and garden terrace, which attracts locals and expats for its excellent Moroccan and international dishes. The menu changes weekly but always has a mix of traditional Moroccan and international choices. Friday is couscous day, but make a reservation in advance! No alcohol, but lots of freshly squeezed juices are served.

Rue Allal Ben Ahmed and Rue Ibn Sina, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-44–68–96
Known For
  • great value
  • fresh, homemade items daily
  • reserve ahead for Friday couscous
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Azalai Urban Souk

$$

The shaded entryway of this pretty little restaurant gives way to a small dining area lovingly decorated with comfy seating areas and lots of plants. It's a local favorite, especially for brunch.  

Café Clock

$ | Kasbah

An outpost of the popular Café Clock in Fez, this so-called cultural café combines a fun vibe with tasty contemporary Moroccan cuisine. Signature dishes include camel burgers, a blue cheese and fig salad, veggie platters, and homemade ice cream. There's also a menu of cultural activities: exhibitions, live traditional gnawa music, local bands, cooking classes, and al halqa (traditional storytelling). No alcohol is served.

Chez el Bahia

$ | Medina

It won't win prizes for design, but this cheap joint is perfect for a lunchtime or evening pit stop. Locals and visitors alike frequent this friendly little canteen just on the right before the road opens into Djemâa el Fna. Tagine pots stand two rows deep on the street stall outside, and a barbecue sizzles away. There are much more interesting specialties available on the menu than some of the other little snack-restaurants, including spiced aubergine tagine, sardine tagine, and pastillas. It's cash only and there's no alcohol.

206, Riad Zitoune el Kdim, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
Known For
  • <PRO>unconventional range of tagines</PRO>
  • <PRO>authentic local street food</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards

Chez Lamine

$ | Guéliz

Slightly more elegant than its hole-in-the-wall branch in the souks, Chez Lamine has a reputation for the best mechoui (whole roasted lamb) in town and couscous on Friday. Its street-side tables in Guéliz are regularly filled with Moroccan families on Friday and weekends; there's also inside seating. Apart from mouthwatering tagines, try the restaurant's other specialty, tangia marrakchia (lamb cooked very slowly for hours in earthenware jars). No alcohol.

Rue Ibn Aicha, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-43–11–64
Known For
  • <PRO>traditional mechoui (roasted lamb)</PRO>
  • <PRO>popular with Moroccan families</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed during Ramadan, No credit cards

Dar Cherifa

$$ | Medina

An airy 16th-century riad turned café turned library turned art gallery, Dar Cherifa is wonderfully airy spot to take a break from shopping for a pot of mint tea. They also have the occasional cultural evening, including poetry readings, traditional music, and storytelling. 

Dar Moha

$$$$ | Medina

You can dine on delicious adaptations of traditional dishes---such as tiny melt-in-the-mouth pastilla (sweet pigeon pie) filled with a vegetable puree---at this lovely restaurant with a reputation for nouvelle cuisine marocaine. Andalusian lutes and Gnaoua music accompany dinner, which is a fixed five-course tasting menu at 530 DH; lunch is à la carte, with a limited menu for children. Alcohol is served.

81, rue Dar el Bacha, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-38–64–00
Known For
  • beautiful courtyard seating
  • modern Moroccan gastronomy
  • serves alcohol
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Reservations essential

Gastro MK

$$$$ | Medina

The menu at the English-owned Gastro MK features exceptionally fine modern-Moroccan cuisine. The menu is a balance of Moroccan and European influences aiming to be light and subtle to tempt those who are "tagined out'"; dishes include cauliflower couscous with raisins and capers or a deconstructed tagine of beef fillet with herb mash and zucchini. A five-course tasting menu (650 DH per person) is available upon request. Complimentary canapés are served 30 minutes before dinner and after-dinner digestifs, cigars, or sheesha pipes can be requested. Arrive early for pre-dinner cocktails on the gorgeous terrace.

The Gastro MK is in such high demand that advance bookings and payment of a deposit are essential.

14, Derb Lafkih Sebaii, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-37--61--73
Known For
  • <PRO>Moroccan fine dining</PRO>
  • <PRO>boutique experience</PRO>
  • <PRO>alcohol is served</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed.

Hadj Brik

$

If you want to eat with the locals, this is the perfect spot, though be forewarned that the menu is meat-only. Everything is ordered by weight and you'll get side dishes of olives as well as a tomato and onion salad. Expect a crowd around meal times but service and dining are quick.

Rue Beni Marine, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
Known For
  • perfectly charcoal-grilled meats
  • a go-to spot for locals
  • unpretentious, quick service

Kasbah Café

$$ | Kasbah

Perfectly positioned just opposite the entrance to the Saadian tombs, this Spanish-owned café is a welcome retreat for those who find themselves "kasbahed-out" at the end of a trek through the monuments of Marrakesh. The menu features Moroccan standards, as well as pizza, salads, and a cool gazpacho. An ornate Andalusian archway modeled on the mosque at Cordoba opens into a three-level restaurant finished with beige tadlak (a traditional, shiny, smooth effect) walls, wrought-iron balustrades, and bejmat tiling. The prices are steep (pizzas 90 DH, tagines 130 DH), but the food is fresh and well presented, and the shaded terrace has a great view across to the Moulay el Yazid mosque in this up-and-coming area.

L'Mida

$$

Just off the Rehba Kdima ("Spice Souk"), L'Mida is a pleasant spot serving a fresh, modern take on Moroccan flavors. There are plenty of meaty options, but vegetables get the royal treatment in dishes like a seven-vegetable vegan couscous and Amazigh gnocchi with chestnut butter and garlic confit. 

Le Foundouk

$$ | Medina

This French-run restaurant hidden at the souk's northern tip is regularly booked with upscale tourists and expats, and the candlelit roof terrace is a popular spot for balmy summer nights or predinner cocktails. The menu features traditional Moroccan fare as well as lighter international dishes such as sea-bass fillet served in a clam sauce, or vegetarian risotto. Originally an inn for passing merchants and their mounts, this three-story restored foundouk has a lot of original architectural features: solid old wooden beams, carved cedar ceilings, and wrought-iron balustrades around a central patio that opens to the sky, and it's decorated with statues and masks gathered from across West Africa. The ground-floor bar is open to nondiners. 

As you approach on foot or from your taxi drop-off, avoid the insistent locals who will offer to "guide"' you to the restaurant; instead, look for the uniformed restaurant staff bearing lanterns, who will walk you to the restaurant (tip them 20 DH).

55, Souk Hal Fassi, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-37–81–90
Known For
  • filled with character in a historic setting
  • intriguing international cuisine
  • serves alcohol
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Wed. No lunch, Reservations essential

Le Jardin

$$ | Medina

Building on the success of his Café des Épices, Moroccan entrepreneur Kamal Laftimi opened this laid-back spot in the heart of the souks. The menu features classic Moroccan dishes, but there are plenty of options for vegetarians and pescaterians, as well as delicious desserts. Head to the terrace for comfortable seating. No alcohol is served.

Le Marrakchi

$$ | Medina

With zellij walls, painted cedar ceilings, and white tile floors, this old palace serves up reliable Moroccan cuisine to mostly a non-Moroccan clientele. You can choose from the à la carte menu or one of the set menus, which begin at 280 DH. However, it's the views over Djemâa el Fna's nightly 'circus' that are the main draw; reserve in advance for a table on the top floor with a panoramic view of the square. Indoors there's a floor show with belly dancers thrown in (nightly around 9 pm). Service can be surly, and prices are rather high, but alcohol is served.

52, rue des Banques, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-44–33–77
Known For
  • <PRO>belly dancers</PRO>
  • <PRO>dining with a view of Djemâa el Fna</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Credit cards accepted

Le Tanjia

$$ | Medina

This stylish restaurant is a good bet for a special night out, with traditional Moroccan cuisine and live acoustic North African and Arabian music. The three-tiered restaurant is centered on a rose-filled fountain of the inner patio where the musicians play from early evening. Try the tanjia, a traditional, slow-cooked meat dish specific to Marrakesh. The covered terrace overlooking a busy souk is the perfect spot for lunch (order one of the Moroccan salads) or dinner and a glass of wine while marveling at the shimmying belly dancers. 

14, Derb J'did, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-38–38–36
Known For
  • easy to access via taxi
  • Marrakshi specialty tanjia, a slow-cooked meat dish
  • lively atmosphere

Le Tobsil

$$$$ | Medina

The tables are strewn with rose petals and lanterns line the walls of this intimate spot, the perfect setting for a romantic, fine-dining feast. The traditional Moroccan fixed menu (700 DH), featuring not one but two tagines (first poultry, then lamb), couscous, starter, and dessert, is wheeled out in serious style. It's stylish and friendly, and the food is very good. 

22, Derb Abdellah ben Hessaien, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-44–15–23
Known For
  • generous portions
  • elegant and romantic setting
  • very good Moroccan cuisine
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Tues. and July and Aug., Reservations essential

Nomad

$$ | Medina

Tucked into a side street off the so-called Spice Square in the souks, Nomad has become a local favorite for modern Moroccan cuisine in a quirky outdoor setting, with cushioned benches and festoons of woven lanterns that light up in the evenings. The menu offers takes on traditional Moroccan dishes as well as lighter options such as vegetarian pastilla with goat cheese and caramelized onions. The desserts are especially delicious. 

Royal Mansour

$$$$ | Medina

The prestigious Royal Mansour hotel is home to four restaurants, each with a different vibe, but La Grande Table Marocaine, which serves classic Moroccan dishes with a modern twist, is the one worth a splurge. You can order à la carte but the prix-fixe menu with seasonal variations is the best bet. Alcohol is served and reservations are essential. 

Souk Kafé

$ | Medina

After a hectic few hours in the souks, this café is a welcome respite for the frazzled traveler. Just beyond the Souk Cherifa and Souk Semmarine, you can relax in the stylish lounge of this converted old family house and admire your purchases. Colorful textiles, leather pouffes, African artifacts, and old photos adorn the walls; from the small terrace you can gaze over the surrounding rooftops. A satisfying Moroccan menu is served until 11 pm or you can just call in for mint tea, coffee, or a fresh fruit smoothie. Cash only, and no alcohol is served.

11, Derb Souk Jdid, Marrakesh, Marrakesh-Safi, Morocco
0524-39--08--31
Known For
  • <PRO>friendly service</PRO>
  • <PRO>views from the terrace</PRO>
  • <PRO>open late</PRO>
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards