At a Glance — Morocco Cost of Living 2026
In This Guide
The Big Picture
Morocco is one of the most affordable countries in the world for Western expats — and the numbers are genuinely striking when you first arrive. A full restaurant meal costs what a coffee does back home. An apartment in a good neighbourhood rents for less than a shared room in many European cities. A monthly grocery bill that would cover one person for a week in London or New York can comfortably feed two people for a month in Casablanca.
That said, Morocco is not uniformly cheap. There are two Moroccos: the world your Moroccan neighbours live in, and the world tourists and cautious expats inhabit. Learn to navigate between them and your money will go extremely far. Stay inside the tourist economy and you'll still live well, but you'll pay two to three times more than you need to.
The figures in this guide come from current expat reports, local forums, and on-the-ground experience across Morocco's main cities. All prices are in Moroccan Dirhams (MAD). To convert to US dollars, divide by roughly 10. For euros, divide by about 10.8. These rates fluctuate, so always check the live rate before making financial plans.
Rent by City
Rent is your biggest expense and the number that varies most between cities and neighbourhoods. Morocco has a genuine two-tier rental market: properties aimed at local Moroccans, and properties marketed to expats and foreigners. The same apartment in the same building can command a significantly different price depending on which category you're placed in. The gap narrows in less-touristic cities and widens in Marrakech and Casablanca's premium districts.
The figures below are monthly rents for unfurnished apartments unless noted. Furnished adds 15–40% in most markets.
Casablanca
Morocco's economic capital has the highest rents and the widest spread. The medina and older working-class districts (Ain Chock, Hay Hassani) offer very low rents, while the expat-favoured neighbourhoods of Maarif, Anfa, and the Corniche command premium prices.
| Apartment Type | Budget Area | Mid-Range (Maarif / CIL) | Premium (Anfa / Corniche) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed | 2,500–4,500 MAD | 5,000–9,000 MAD | 10,000–16,000 MAD |
| 2-bedroom | 4,000–7,000 MAD | 7,500–13,000 MAD | 14,000–25,000 MAD |
| 3-bedroom | 6,000–10,000 MAD | 10,000–18,000 MAD | 18,000–40,000 MAD |
Rabat
The administrative capital is slightly cheaper than Casablanca and favoured by diplomats and international NGO workers. Agdal and Hassan are the main expat districts; Hay Ryad is newer and popular with families.
| Apartment Type | Budget Area | Agdal / Hassan | Hay Ryad / Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed | 2,000–4,000 MAD | 4,500–8,000 MAD | 8,000–13,000 MAD |
| 2-bedroom | 3,500–6,000 MAD | 6,500–11,000 MAD | 11,000–18,000 MAD |
| 3-bedroom | 5,500–9,000 MAD | 9,000–15,000 MAD | 15,000–28,000 MAD |
Marrakech
Marrakech has a split personality. The medina riad market is dominated by short-term tourist rentals that push prices up; long-term rentals in the newer Guéliz and Hivernage districts are more reasonable and better suited to expats.
| Apartment Type | Guéliz / Hivernage | Palmeraie / Premium | Medina Riad (furnished) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed | 3,000–6,000 MAD | 7,000–12,000 MAD | 5,000–15,000 MAD |
| 2-bedroom | 5,000–9,000 MAD | 10,000–18,000 MAD | 8,000–20,000 MAD |
| 3-bedroom | 7,500–13,000 MAD | 14,000–30,000 MAD | 12,000–35,000 MAD |
Tangier
Tangier's proximity to Spain and its cosmopolitan history make it popular with Europeans. The Ville Nouvelle is walkable and well-serviced; the Malabata coastal strip is upscale. Prices have risen with the new TGV link to Casablanca but remain below Rabat.
| Apartment Type | Medina / Budget | Ville Nouvelle | Malabata / Sea View |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed | 1,500–3,500 MAD | 3,500–7,000 MAD | 7,000–14,000 MAD |
| 2-bedroom | 2,500–5,000 MAD | 5,500–10,000 MAD | 10,000–20,000 MAD |
Fes, Essaouira & Agadir
These three cities offer the best value. Fes is Morocco's cultural heart with a living medina; Essaouira is a small Atlantic town beloved by artists and remote workers; Agadir has a resort-feel with wide beaches and modern infrastructure.
| Apartment Type | Fes | Essaouira | Agadir |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed | 1,500–4,000 MAD | 1,500–3,500 MAD | 2,000–5,000 MAD |
| 2-bedroom | 3,000–7,000 MAD | 2,500–6,000 MAD | 3,500–8,000 MAD |
| 3-bedroom | 5,000–10,000 MAD | 4,000–9,000 MAD | 5,500–12,000 MAD |
Groceries & Markets
Food shopping in Morocco splits into two very different experiences: the souk (local open-air market) and the supermarket. Both are fine, but the price difference is significant, and the quality in the souk is often higher for fresh produce.
Local Souk Prices
Every Moroccan neighbourhood has a souk — a covered or open-air market selling fresh vegetables, fruit, meat, fish, olives, eggs, and dried goods. These are where locals shop, and the prices reflect it.
| Item | Souk Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes (1 kg) | 2–5 MAD | Seasonal — prices double in winter |
| Potatoes (1 kg) | 3–6 MAD | Year-round staple |
| Onions (1 kg) | 2–4 MAD | |
| Courgettes / Zucchini (1 kg) | 3–6 MAD | |
| Chicken (whole, 1 kg) | 22–35 MAD | Freshly slaughtered same day |
| Minced beef (1 kg) | 60–90 MAD | |
| Fresh fish (1 kg) | 25–80 MAD | Wide range by type; sardines cheapest |
| Eggs (1 dozen) | 13–20 MAD | |
| Bread (khobz, 1 loaf) | 1.20–2 MAD | Subsidised staple |
| Olives (500g) | 8–18 MAD | Many varieties; sold loose |
| Oranges (1 kg) | 3–7 MAD | Morocco is a major citrus producer |
Supermarket Prices (Marjane, Carrefour, BIM)
Morocco has a well-developed supermarket sector. Marjane (hypermarket), Carrefour, Label'Vie, and the budget chain BIM cover most cities. Prices are higher than the souk but more predictable and more convenient for imported or packaged goods.
| Item | Supermarket Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Whole milk, 1 litre | 7–11 MAD | Centrale Laitière is the main brand |
| Rice (Riz du Maroc), 1 kg | 9–16 MAD | |
| Pasta, 500g | 6–14 MAD | |
| Olive oil (local), 1 litre | 45–90 MAD | Excellent Moroccan olive oil is affordable |
| Coffee (ground, 250g) | 20–60 MAD | Local brands cheap; Nescafé mid-range |
| Mineral water (1.5L) | 3–6 MAD | Sidi Ali, Ain Saïss widely available |
| Beer (Flag Spéciale, 33cl) | 12–18 MAD | Only in licensed supermarkets; not everywhere |
| Imported cheese (200g) | 35–80 MAD | Imported goods noticeably pricier |
| Butter (250g) | 18–30 MAD |
Monthly Grocery Estimates
| Household | Souk-Focused | Mixed (Souk + Supermarket) | Mostly Supermarket |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single person | 700–1,200 MAD | 1,000–1,800 MAD | 1,600–2,500 MAD |
| Couple | 1,200–2,000 MAD | 1,800–3,000 MAD | 2,800–4,500 MAD |
| Family of 4 | 2,000–3,500 MAD | 3,000–5,000 MAD | 4,500–7,500 MAD |
Eating Out & Coffee
Morocco's food scene ranges from among the world's best street food (dirt-cheap and extraordinary) to upscale rooftop restaurants that could stand in Paris or New York. The range of prices is enormous — and knowing which category you're in is important.
Street Food
Morocco's street food is world-class. A harira soup at a stall costs 5–8 MAD. A merguez sandwich is 10–20 MAD. A full Jemaa el-Fna dinner in Marrakech — tagine, bread, salad, and mint tea — runs 50–80 MAD if you eat at the open stalls rather than the tourist restaurants framing the square.
| Item | Street Price |
|---|---|
| Harira soup | 5–10 MAD |
| Msemen or m'smen (flatbread) | 2–5 MAD |
| Merguez sandwich (kefta) | 12–25 MAD |
| Brochettes (3–4 skewers + bread) | 20–40 MAD |
| Fried fish (small portion) | 15–30 MAD |
| Fresh-squeezed orange juice (large) | 5–10 MAD |
Restaurants
| Type | Meal Price (per person) | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Local workers' restaurant | 25–50 MAD | Set menu, tagine or couscous, bread, water — no frills |
| Neighbourhood café-restaurant | 50–100 MAD | Full meal, often with salad starter, pastilla or tagine, dessert |
| Mid-range restaurant | 100–200 MAD | Quality Moroccan or international food, decent setting |
| Tourist restaurant (medinas) | 200–400 MAD | Rooftop terrace, fixed menus, often overpriced |
| Upscale / gastronomic | 400–900+ MAD | Fine dining, Casablanca / Marrakech; competes with Europe on price |
Cafés & Coffee
Morocco's café culture is central to daily life. Moroccans spend hours in cafés and prices reflect this social function — they are not designed to extract tourist money.
| Item | Local Café | Tourist / Upscale Café |
|---|---|---|
| Mint tea (pot) | 5–10 MAD | 25–45 MAD |
| Café cassé (coffee with milk) | 6–12 MAD | 20–35 MAD |
| Cappuccino / latte | 18–30 MAD | 35–65 MAD |
| Fresh orange juice | 8–15 MAD | 25–45 MAD |
Transport
Getting around Morocco is genuinely cheap by almost any standard. The intercity train network (ONCF) is comfortable and fast; local buses and grand taxis make short trips affordable. Owning a car is increasingly unnecessary in the larger cities.
Within the City
| Transport Mode | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| City bus (Casablanca, Rabat) | 4–6 MAD per trip | Regular network; cards available in some cities |
| Tram (Casablanca, Rabat) | 6–8 MAD per trip | Clean, on-time, good coverage in both cities |
| Petit taxi (metered) | 15–60 MAD | Short urban trips; always ask for the meter to be running |
| Grand taxi (shared) | 5–15 MAD per seat | Fixed-route, departs when full — very cheap for longer urban trips |
| Careem / Bolt | 30–90 MAD | Available in Casablanca, Rabat, Marrakech, Tangier |
| Monthly bus / tram pass | 200–350 MAD | Best value for daily commuters |
Between Cities
| Route | Train (ONCF) | Bus (CTM) | Grand Taxi |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casablanca → Rabat | 55–100 MAD (45 min) | 60–80 MAD | 50–70 MAD/seat |
| Casablanca → Marrakech | 100–170 MAD (3 hrs) | 120–150 MAD | N/A direct |
| Casablanca → Tangier | 150–250 MAD (2 hrs 10 min, TGV) | 130–170 MAD | N/A direct |
| Rabat → Fes | 120–190 MAD (2.5 hrs) | 110–140 MAD | 100–140 MAD/seat |
| Marrakech → Agadir | No train | 130–180 MAD (3 hrs) | 120–160 MAD/seat |
Owning a Car
Petrol costs roughly 12–14 MAD per litre (€1.10–€1.30) — cheaper than Europe but higher than many people expect. Parking in city centres costs 2–5 MAD per hour with a gardien; monthly underground parking runs 300–700 MAD. Car insurance for a small car starts around 3,000–5,000 MAD per year. The road quality is excellent on motorways (autoroutes, with tolls of 30–80 MAD per stretch) but variable on secondary roads.
Utilities & Bills
Morocco's utilities are affordable but have some quirks worth knowing. Electricity and water are usually billed together via RADEEMA, LYDEC, or the relevant local authority depending on the city.
| Service | Typical Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Electricity + water (studio / 1-bed) | 150–350 MAD | Low usage, no air conditioning |
| Electricity + water (2-bed, AC summer) | 400–900 MAD | Air conditioning drives costs up significantly July–September |
| Gas (butane canister for cooking) | 35–55 MAD per canister | A canister lasts 3–5 weeks for a single person |
| Fibre internet (Maroc Telecom / Orange / Inwi) | 249–400 MAD | 100 Mbps–1 Gbps; good coverage in major cities |
| Mobile SIM + unlimited data (4G) | 79–199 MAD | Maroc Telecom has best rural coverage; Inwi often cheaper |
| Netflix / streaming services | 40–100 MAD | Priced in MAD; same content as international plan |
Healthcare Costs
Healthcare in Morocco is a tale of two systems. Public hospitals are free or nearly free but frequently overcrowded and under-resourced. Private clinics and hospitals are good to excellent in the major cities, with prices far below European equivalents.
| Healthcare Item | Private Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| GP / general practitioner visit | 100–300 MAD | Walk-in or appointment |
| Specialist consultation | 200–500 MAD | Cardiologist, dermatologist, etc. |
| Blood test panel | 150–400 MAD | Full lipid/CBC panels available same-day |
| Dental check-up + cleaning | 200–500 MAD | Quality varies widely; ask for recommendations |
| Private health insurance (expat) | 500–2,000 MAD/month | International plans (AXA, Allianz) cover clinics + repatriation |
| Pharmacy prescription (generic) | 30–120 MAD | Generics common and cheap; brand names available |
Entertainment & Lifestyle
Morocco's lifestyle can be as rich as you want to make it — and is generally far more affordable than in Europe or North America for the same level of activity.
| Activity / Service | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Cinema ticket (Megarama, Colisée) | 50–90 MAD |
| Hammam (local neighbourhood hammam) | 15–30 MAD |
| Hammam (tourist / upscale) | 200–600 MAD + massage |
| Gym membership (monthly) | 250–600 MAD |
| Tennis court (1 hour) | 50–120 MAD |
| Golf (18 holes, day rate) | 500–1,200 MAD |
| Domestic cleaner (bi-weekly) | 150–300 MAD per visit |
| Haircut (men, local barber) | 25–60 MAD |
| Haircut + colour (women, salon) | 200–600 MAD |
| Museum entrance (national museums) | 20–70 MAD |
| Surf lesson (Agadir, Essaouira, Taghazout) | 200–400 MAD |
| Day trip (guided, e.g. Atlas from Marrakech) | 300–700 MAD |
Monthly Budget Breakdowns
These are realistic all-in budgets for a single expat living in Casablanca. Other cities will be 15–30% cheaper on rent and marginally cheaper elsewhere. All figures are per month.
Budget Lifestyle
5,200 MAD
≈ $520 / month
Comfortable
10,500 MAD
≈ $1,050 / month
Expat Luxury
22,000 MAD
≈ $2,200 / month
Couple Budget — Comfortable in Casablanca
| Expense | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| Rent (2-bedroom, Maarif area) | 9,000 MAD |
| Groceries | 2,500 MAD |
| Eating out (several times a week) | 2,000 MAD |
| Transport (1 car + Careem) | 1,500 MAD |
| Utilities + internet + 2 phones | 1,200 MAD |
| Housekeeper (2× per week) | 800 MAD |
| Entertainment + travel + misc | 2,000 MAD |
| Total | ~19,000 MAD (~$1,900) |
City-by-City Comparison
This table gives a quick snapshot of the cost difference between Morocco's main expat cities for a single person living comfortably.
| City | Rent (1-bed, decent area) | Monthly Total Est. | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casablanca | 5,000–9,000 MAD | 9,000–15,000 MAD | Business, networking, urban life |
| Rabat | 4,500–8,000 MAD | 8,000–13,000 MAD | Safe, calm, diplomatic community |
| Marrakech | 4,000–8,000 MAD | 8,000–14,000 MAD | Culture, climate, creative scene |
| Tangier | 3,500–7,000 MAD | 7,000–12,000 MAD | Europe-proximity, cosmopolitan |
| Agadir | 2,500–6,000 MAD | 6,000–11,000 MAD | Beach lifestyle, warm winters |
| Fes | 2,000–5,000 MAD | 5,500–9,500 MAD | Culture, history, authentic Morocco |
| Essaouira | 1,800–4,500 MAD | 5,000–9,000 MAD | Artists, remote workers, tranquillity |
How to Keep Costs Down
Morocco's affordability is real but it requires some intentionality, especially at the start when you haven't yet built local networks and habits.
- Learn basic Darija greetings. Even a few phrases — sbaH l-khir (good morning), bsHa (cheers), shHal? (how much?) — change how merchants interact with you. You move from tourist to neighbour very quickly.
- Shop at neighbourhood souks, not tourist markets. The same olives that cost 8 MAD at the souk near your apartment cost 40 MAD at the medina stall aimed at tourists.
- Eat where Moroccans eat lunch. Worker restaurants near offices and factories serve enormous set-menu lunches for 30–50 MAD. This is some of the best food in the country.
- Negotiate your annual rent. Moroccan rental markets reward upfront commitment. Offering three or six months rent in advance almost always gets you a lower monthly rate.
- Use the tram and buses. Casablanca and Rabat have genuinely good transit networks. A monthly tram pass at 200–300 MAD versus daily Careem rides adds up to 800–1,500 MAD in savings per month.
- Get an Inwi or Orange SIM on a monthly plan. Tourist SIMs are expensive. A local monthly plan with unlimited data costs 99–179 MAD; the tourist equivalent is three to four times the cost.
- Cook Moroccan food at home. A tagine for two from souk ingredients costs 80–120 MAD. The same tagine in a restaurant costs 300–500 MAD. Morocco's cuisine is genuinely one of the world's great cuisines and the ingredients are extraordinary.
- Get a BIM loyalty card. BIM is the low-cost supermarket chain with genuinely good products at prices 20–40% below Marjane or Carrefour for staples.
Planning Your Move to Morocco?
Once you know your budget, the next step is finding and securing an apartment. Our full renting guide covers neighbourhoods, how to negotiate, what's in a lease, and what red flags to watch for.
Read the Apartment Renting Guide →The Bottom Line
Morocco represents genuine, substantial value for money. If you're coming from Western Europe, the US, or Canada, you will almost certainly find that the same standard of living — good apartment, decent restaurants, domestic help, entertainment, travel within the country — costs 40 to 60 percent less than at home.
The sweet spot for most expats is the 9,000–14,000 MAD range (roughly $900–$1,400 per month for a single person). That buys you a comfortable, genuinely enjoyable life in Casablanca or Rabat — and significantly more in Tangier, Agadir, or Essaouira.
What Morocco asks in return is a bit of adaptability. The electricity can dip in summer. The bureaucracy can test your patience. Some things that are easy back home — opening a bank account, getting certain medications — take longer here. But for people who approach the country with curiosity rather than resistance, Morocco more than rewards the effort. The food is extraordinary, the people are warm, the Atlantic and Mediterranean coastlines are world-class, and the history is ten layers deep in every direction.