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Chefchaouen, Morocco
Chefchaouen

Where to stay in Chefchaouen

Sleep inside the blue medina near Place Outa el Hammam to catch the empty dawn lanes; the upper Rif Andaluz quarter is quieter but a stepped climb with luggage.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026
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In short

Where to stay in Chefchaouen

For a first Chefchaouen trip, book a riad inside the medina near Place Outa el Hammam, so the empty blue lanes everyone comes to photograph are a two-minute walk from your bed before the 9am buses and after the 4pm ones leave. Choose the upper Rif Andaluz quarter for the bluest, quietest streets and rooftop views if you can manage a stepped climb with your bag, and drop to the Ville Nouvelle below town only if a tight budget or an early grand-taxi connection makes the 10-minute uphill walk worth losing.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: a riad in the lower medina near Place Outa el Hammam.
  • Best blue-lane atmosphere: the upper medina / Rif Andaluz quarter, but it is a real uphill climb with luggage.
  • Best value and easiest arrival: the Ville Nouvelle, at the cost of being a 10-minute walk below the blue town.
  • Pack light: the medina is stepped and walk-only, so wheeled cases struggle and no taxi reaches your door.
  • Avoid basing in the Ville Nouvelle by default โ€” you came for the medina light, and that only works if you sleep inside the walls.

Best areas to book

Lower medina (near Place Outa el Hammam)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The default first-timer base: the flattest, most convenient corner of the old town, with the main square, the Kasbah Museum, the restaurants and the Bab el Ain gate all on your doorstep, so you are not hauling a case up steps to bed. You step straight into the empty blue lanes before about 9am and after the 4pm Tangier buses leave. The trade-off is that this is the busiest pocket by day when the day-trip coaches arrive, so book a riad a lane or two off the square itself if you want quieter afternoons.

Best for: First-timers, lighter luggage, easy access to the square

Browse hotels Old town core, on Place Outa el Hammam

Upper medina / Rif Andaluz quarter

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The steeper streets climbing towards the Spanish Mosque path, with the bluest, quietest lanes in town and the rooftop riad views people travel here for. It is the most photogenic base and the calmest at night, well above the daytime crowds around the square. The real cost is the climb: this is a genuine 5-15 minute uphill walk on stepped lanes, so pack light, accept that no porter has wheels here, and pick a riad that sends written directions for the last few turns.

Best for: Photographers, rooftop views, light sleepers

Browse hotels 5-15 min uphill from Place Outa el Hammam

Ville Nouvelle (lower town)

ยฃ value

The modern town below the medina, near the bus station and the ATMs you will want before climbing into the cash-only old town. It is cheaper and far easier for arrivals dragging a case, and it suits a late grand-taxi arrival or an early CTM departure. But it loses the whole reason you came: the blue lanes are a 10-minute uphill walk away, so you commute to the medina light morning and evening rather than living in it.

Best for: Tight budgets, late or early bus connections, heavy luggage

Browse hotels 10 min walk below the medina

The simple choice

If you are booking in a hurry, filter for a medina riad near Place Outa el Hammam that mentions help with bags from the nearest car drop, then decide how much climb you want: stay in the lower medina for flat, easy access, or up in the Rif Andaluz quarter for the bluest, quietest lanes and a rooftop view. That one rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps โ€” booking down in the Ville Nouvelle to save a little and then missing the early-morning and after-4pm light that is the entire point of Chefchaouen, or booking a beautiful upper-quarter riad with a heavy suitcase and discovering the stepped lanes the hard way. Two nights in a medina riad runs roughly ยฃ60-ยฃ120, so the saving from the Ville Nouvelle is small against what you give up.

Compare Chefchaouen riads

Safety and noise

Chefchaouen is a calm, low-key Rif town and GOV.UK does not single it out, but the same Morocco advice applies: petty pickpocketing in busy medina spots and 'bogus guide' or 'your riad is closed' touts who try to steer you elsewhere for commission, so walk straight to your booked riad and ignore anyone who insists it has moved. Noise is rarely the problem here that it is in Marrakech โ€” the medina is quiet by mid-evening โ€” but the lower square can carry day-trip-crowd bustle and the call to prayer, so a back lane or the upper quarter sleeps better. Two practical things matter more than danger: the dirham is a closed currency you cannot buy before you fly and many riads and cafes are cash-only, so draw dirhams from a Ville Nouvelle ATM before you climb in; and the lanes are stepped and unlit in places, so a riad that meets you or sends clear directions saves a frustrating first night with bags.

There is no ATM and no working taxi inside the medina. Draw enough dirhams in the Ville Nouvelle or at the bus station before you walk up, and budget about 60 MAD (around ยฃ5) for the Kasbah Museum and small cash tips for anyone who carries your bag.

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Where to stay in Chefchaouen FAQs

Should I stay inside the medina or down in the Ville Nouvelle?
Inside the medina, almost always. The empty blue lanes everyone photographs only exist before about 9am and after the 4pm buses leave, and you only catch that light if you sleep inside the walls. The Ville Nouvelle is cheaper and easier with a heavy case, but it is a 10-minute uphill walk below the old town, so you would commute to the very thing you came for. Save it for a tight budget or an awkward early bus connection.
Is the upper Rif Andaluz quarter worth the climb with luggage?
If you pack light, yes โ€” it has the bluest, quietest lanes and the rooftop riad views, and it sits well above the daytime crowds around Place Outa el Hammam. But it is a genuine 5-15 minute uphill walk on stepped lanes with no wheels and no taxi to the door, so a big suitcase makes it a slog. Choose a riad near the square in the lower medina instead if you are travelling heavy.
Do I need cash for a riad in Chefchaouen?
Usually, yes. Many medina riads and cafes are cash-only, and the Moroccan dirham is a closed currency you cannot get before you fly. There is no ATM inside the old town, so draw dirhams from a machine in the Ville Nouvelle or by the bus station before you walk up into the medina, and keep small notes for tips and the roughly 60 MAD (around ยฃ5) Kasbah Museum ticket.

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