Marrakech desert tours 3 days
Mountains, kasbahs, and 150-metre sand dunes — here’s everything you actually need to know before you go.
Best for: Solo travelers, couples & families
MARRAKECH DESERT TOUR 3 DAYS
Look, a 3-day desert trip from Marrakech isn’t your average weekend break. You’re not lounging by a pool — you’re crossing three completely different versions of Morocco in 72 hours. You start in the Red City, haul yourself over a mountain pass that looks like a screensaver, wind through valleys packed with ancient mud-brick castles, and end up standing on a 150-metre sand dune, wondering why you ever stressed about anything.
Most blogs will hype this trip without mentioning the long drive days. We’re not doing that here. You’ll get the full picture — the jaw-dropping parts and the “are we there yet” parts — so you can plan a trip that actually works for you.
Marrakech→Tizi n’Tichka→Aït Benhaddou→Dades Valley→Todra Gorge→Merzouga
Merzouga vs. Zagora: Which Desert Should You Pick?
This is honestly the most important thing to figure out before you book — and it’s wild how many blogs just skip past it entirely.
Recommended
Merzouga · Erg Chebbi
This is the Sahara you’ve seen in films. Erg Chebbi’s dunes hit 150 metres — think Gladiator, think every stunning desert photo you’ve ever double-tapped on Instagram. The colours are unreal too: deep amber at midday, molten copper at sunset, and this gorgeous dark purple right before the stars come out. If you’re doing the 3-day desert tour from Marrakech to Merzouga, this is why.
Drive from Marrakech: ~9–10 hours
Zagora
Solid plan B if you’ve only got 2 days, or your back already hurts thinking about 10 hours in a car. The dunes exist, but they’re more pebble-y and modest — it’s a taste of the desert rather than the full immersion. Perfectly nice, just not the cinematic wow factor of Merzouga.
Drive from Marrakech: ~5–6 hours
Our take
If you’ve got three full days, go to Merzouga. The extra hours of driving aren’t the inconvenient part — they’re basically how you earn the view.

MARRAKECH DESERT TOUR 3 DAYS ITINERARY:
DAY 1: MARRAKECH ⇢ HIGH ATLAS MOUNTAINS ⇢ AIT BEN HADDOU ⇢ DADES VALLEY
Mountains, Movie Sets & Mud-Brick Castles
You’re up early — before 7 AM ideally — because Day 1 is a long one and you want the best of it in daylight. First stop is the Tizi n’Tichka Pass at 2,260 metres, Morocco’s highest paved road. The views are ridiculous and the air gets noticeably cooler up there (snow-capped in winter — pretty wild). By late morning you’re pulling into Aït Benhaddou, the UNESCO-listed mud fortress that’s basically a movie star — Game of Thrones filmed here, so did Gladiator, and about 20 other productions. After wandering its winding alleyways you push on through Ouarzazate (Morocco’s answer to Hollywood) and settle into the Dades Valley for the night. If you can get a rooftop kasbah with sunset tea, do it.
7:00 AM — Depart Marrakech
9:30 AM — Tizi n’Tichka Pass (2,260m) photo stop
11:00 AM — Aït Benhaddou (UNESCO) guided walk
1:00 PM — Lunch in Ouarzazate, optional Kasbah Taourirt visit
6:00 PM — Arrive Dades Valley, overnight in a family kasbah
DAY 2: DADES VALLEY ⇢ TINGHIR OASIS ⇢ TODRA GORGE ⇢ MERZOUGA DESERT
Canyons, Palm Groves & Your First Glimpse of Sand
The next morning, we’ll enjoy a hearty breakfast at our guesthouse before setting off toward the breathtaking Todra Gorge. Its dramatic cliffs and striking landscapes are truly unforgettable—so impressive they feel worthy of being counted among the world’s natural wonders. After lunch on the second day, we’ll continue our journey to Merzouga.

Overnight in a Desert Camp
Merzouga sits deep in the heart of the desert, offering an authentic and peaceful escape. Here, we’ll ride camels across the sweeping dunes of Erg Chebbi, arriving at a traditional Berber desert camp where we’ll spend the night. At the camp, you’ll be treated to a delicious evening meal under the stars, followed by breakfast the next morning before we begin our final journey back to Marrakesh.
8:00 AM — Todra Gorge walk (30–60 min)
10:30 AM — Drive through Ziz Valley palm groves
4:00 PM — Arrive Merzouga, mount camels at the dune base
5:30 PM — Sunset from Erg Chebbi summit
8:00 PM — Tagine dinner, drumming & stargazing at desert camp
DAY 3: MERZOUGA DESERT ⇢ DRAA RIVER ⇢ OUARZAZATE ⇢ MARRAKECH
The Sunrise That Makes the Alarm Worth It
Set your alarm for 5:30 AM. Yes, really. The dunes go through this whole colour sequence at sunrise — deep purple, then dusty pink, then pale gold — and if you sleep through it you’ll genuinely be annoyed at yourself for the rest of the trip. After a camp breakfast, most tours start the long haul back to Marrakech — which is basically 9–10 hours of everything you already saw, in reverse. There’s a much better way to do this.
2 DAYS DESERT TOUR FROM MARRAKECH
The Fès Loophole — the thing most blogs won’t tell you
Instead of grinding back to Marrakech for another 10 hours, just book a one-way tour to Fès. The northern route is completely different scenery — cedar forests, the quirky Swiss-looking town of Ifrane, and you end up in one of the world’s most mind-blowing ancient medinas. It’s a whole new chapter of Morocco rather than a rerun of Day 1. You’ll need to sort one-way travel onward from Fès, but honestly? Totally worth the extra 10 minutes of planning.
Shared Tour vs. Private: What’s Actually the Difference?
| Type | Group size | 2026 Cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shared / Budget | 10–17 people, minibus | $100–250 pp | Solo travelers and backpackers — you’ll meet people, stops are fixed, but the price is hard to argue with |
| Private Standard | 2–6 people, 4×4 | $350–550 total | Couples and small groups who want to stop when they want, eat where they want, and not wait for 16 strangers |
| Private Luxury | 2–6 people, 4×4 | $700–900 total | Honeymoons or anyone who needs an actual hot shower after a day of camel riding — your back will thank you |
Quick note on “luxury” camps: it doesn’t mean extra-fluffy pillows. In the Moroccan desert, luxury means your own en-suite bathroom, a hot shower, and a heated tent. In winter, when temperatures drop near zero overnight, that upgrade feels less optional and more essential.

When’s the best time to go?
Spring (March–May) and Autumn (September–November) are the sweet spot — comfortable 20–30°C days and cool nights. Summer is brutal south of Ouarzazate (we’re talking 45°C+), so if you’re going in July, just know what you’re signing up for.
What to Actually Throw in Your Bag
Small overnight bag
Your camel is not a pack mule. One small backpack per person — leave the giant suitcase at your Marrakech riad.
Layers + shemagh scarf
Nights in the desert get cold — even in summer. The scarf also doubles as protection against wind and sand in your face.
Power bank
Desert camps have limited electricity. Charge everything before you hit Merzouga, then rely on the bank overnight.
Cash in MAD
Card machines are basically myths south of Ouarzazate. Grab dirham before you leave the city.
Offline maps downloaded
Signal vanishes south of Ouarzazate. Download Google Maps or Maps.me for the area before you go — and honestly, enjoy the disconnection.
Sunglasses + sunscreen
Sand reflects light like a mirror. Even on a mild autumn day, the dunes will roast you if you’re not protected.
FAQ – MARRAKECH TO MERZOUGA DESERT TOUR
Is the 3-day desert trip from Marrakech safe for solo female travelers?
Yep, totally. This is one of Morocco’s most well-traveled tourism routes, and reputable guides are professional and experienced. The usual common-sense precautions apply — same as traveling solo anywhere — but this isn’t a “brave” destination. Plenty of women do it alone and have a brilliant time.
Are the driving hours going to kill me?
Let’s be straight: Days 1 and 3 are long, proper 9-to-10-hour driving days. Day 2 is much more chilled at 4–5 hours. The scenery changes so dramatically every half hour that it doesn’t drag as much as you’d think. That said, if you’re sensitive to long car journeys, consider breaking Day 1 with an extra night in Ouarzazate. It’s a perfectly good town, and your back will appreciate it.
Are camels actually safe? What if I have kids or a dodgy back?
Camel rides are well-managed and generally fine for most people. If you’ve got young kids (under 8), back or hip issues, or you just look at a camel and think “absolutely not” — there’s a 4×4 option that’ll get you to the dune base instead. Just let your operator know in advance, it’s a totally normal request on any Marrakech desert tour for 3 days.
Will I have any phone signal out there?
Basically, no signal gets patchy south of Ouarzazate and disappears pretty much entirely around Merzouga and the camps. Download your offline maps before you leave, let people know your plans, and then just… roll with it. Honestly? Not being reachable for a night in the Sahara is kind of the whole point.

