You don't have to choose between Morocco's culture and its coast. The smart move — what German travellers literally search for as a 'Rundreise und Baden' — is to pair a road trip through the highlights with a few days of beach downtime at the end. Here's how to combine them, where the best beaches are, and how many days it really takes.
You don't have to choose between Morocco's culture and its coast. The smartest way to end a Morocco trip is to pair a road trip through the highlights with a few days of beach downtime — tour first, unwind after. It's such a common request that German travellers have a single word for it (Rundreise und Baden — 'round-trip and bathing'). The honest answer up front: give the tour 7–9 days and the beach 3–4, end on the Atlantic coast (Essaouira for charm, Agadir or Taghazout for sun and surf), and let a driver connect the two so you're not hauling bags onto buses after two weeks of medinas.
I build this combination for guests constantly — usually people who've done the research, realised the classic loop is intense, and want to come home rested rather than wrung out. Here's where the good beaches are, how many days it takes, and how to stitch the two halves together.
Can you combine a Morocco tour with a beach holiday?
Yes, and easily — Morocco's coast is never far from the route. The country has over 3,000 km of Atlantic and Mediterranean coastline, and the best beach towns sit a short drive from Marrakech, the usual end-point of the cultural loop. Essaouira is just 2.5 hours from Marrakech; Agadir and the surf coast are about 3 hours. So you finish the medinas-and-desert circuit and slide straight onto the sand without backtracking.
Where are Morocco's best beaches to end your trip?
Four coastal options cover every style, all on the Atlantic (Morocco's Mediterranean beaches are lovely but far from the tour route):
| Town | Best for | From Marrakech | The vibe |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essaouira | Charm + character | 2.5 hrs | Walled medina on the sea, blue boats, wind (great for kite/windsurf, breezy for sunbathing) |
| Agadir | Reliable sun + resorts | 3 hrs | Big sheltered bay, package-style hotels, family-friendly, the most 'beach holiday' of the four |
| Taghazout | Surf + boho calm | 3 hrs | Laid-back surf village, boutique stays, yoga-and-waves crowd |
| Oualidia | Quiet + seafood | 3.5 hrs | Calm lagoon, oysters, low-key — for slow travellers who want nobody around |

How many days do you need for a tour-and-beach trip?
Plan on 10 days as a comfortable minimum, 12–14 to do it justice. The mistake is shaving the tour to almost nothing for the beach, or vice-versa. Here's how the split works:
| Total | Tour | Beach | Realistic shape |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 days | 7 | 3 | Marrakech + a 3-day Sahara loop, then 3 nights Essaouira |
| 12 days | 8 | 4 | Imperial cities or desert circuit + 4 nights Agadir/Taghazout |
| 14 days | 9–10 | 4 | Full imperial-cities-and-desert tour + a proper coastal wind-down |
When is the best time for both the tour and the beach?
Spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) are the sweet spot — warm enough for the Atlantic, comfortable for touring inland, and the desert isn't yet brutal. High summer (July–August) is peak beach season, but Marrakech and the desert are punishingly hot then, so a tour-and-beach trip in summer means front-loading the inland part early in the day. The Atlantic coast is always a few degrees cooler and breezier than the brochures suggest — Essaouira especially is windy, which is wonderful for surfers and a little brisk for pure sunbathers. If you want guaranteed lounging weather, lean Agadir, which sits in a sheltered bay.
A sample tour-and-beach itinerary (12–14 days)
Here's the shape that works best, ending rested on the coast:
- Days 1–2 — Marrakech. Medina, gardens, a first slow day to beat jet lag.
- Days 3–5 — The Sahara loop. Over the Tizi n'Tichka to Aït Benhaddou, the gorges, a night on the Erg Chebbi dunes, back via the Draa valley.
- Days 6–9 — North to the imperial cities (optional, for the 14-day version): Fes, Meknes & Volubilis, Rabat — then back south.
- Days 10–14 — The coast. Drive to Essaouira or Agadir and stop touring. Sea, seafood, a hammam, a surf lesson if you fancy. Fly home from Agadir or back via Marrakech.

How do you connect the tour and the coast?
This is the part that trips people up. After 8–9 days of touring, the last thing you want is to drag suitcases onto a bus to reach the beach. The clean solution is a private driver for the touring half who simply drops you at your coastal hotel at the end — one vehicle, no logistics, no transfers. From there you don't need a car at all; the beach towns are walkable and relaxed. (If you're weighing transport generally, our honest take on renting a car vs hiring a driver covers the trade-offs.)
If you'd like the tour-and-beach combination built around your dates — the right number of days on each side, the coast town that matches your style, and a driver who hands you over to the sea at the end — that's exactly the kind of trip we design. See how many days you really need and our sample Morocco itineraries, then tell us your dates and we'll shape the split for you.

Written by
Youssef El Alaoui
Lead Morocco Specialist
Born in Fes, based in Marrakech. Designs private itineraries for Morocco Beauty Spots and still argues mint tea is best in the Atlas.








