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Essaouira, Morocco
Essaouira

Where to stay in Essaouira

A medina riad suits most first-timers, the Mellah anyone chasing value, and a sheltered garden riad travellers the relentless Alize wind would wear down.

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

Where to stay in Essaouira

For a first Essaouira stay, book a riad inside the medina near Bab Marrakech or the Skala โ€” it puts the ramparts, the port and the souks on your doorstep, and the lanes are pedestrian-only so they stay calm at night. Choose the Mellah end of the medina for the same atmosphere at a lower price, the beachfront strip south of the walls if you have come to kitesurf or want car access, and a garden riad 15-20 minutes out only if the Alize wind or the bag-carry up riad stairs would spoil the trip.

The short version

  • Best all-rounder: a medina riad near Bab Marrakech or Skala de la Ville.
  • Best value: the Mellah, the old Jewish quarter inside the same walls.
  • Best atmosphere: the central medina around Place Moulay Hassan and the port.
  • Best for kitesurfing and car access: the beachfront strip towards the Mogador dunes.
  • Avoid pinning your hotel search to a Boulevard Mohammed V seafront address; it is the windiest, sand-blown side and the medina is a better base.

Best areas to book

Central medina (Skala and port end)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The first-timer pick: tall riads off Rue de la Skala and Place Moulay Hassan, two minutes from the cannon ramparts, the port fish stalls and the souks. You get the full walled-town atmosphere, but expect steep riad staircases, a porter wheeling your bag from the gate, and gulls at dawn. Rooms cluster around ยฃ40-ยฃ90 a night with breakfast.

Best for: First stays, couples, atmosphere

Browse hotels Old city, walkable to everything

The Mellah

ยฃ value

The old Jewish quarter at the northern end of the medina, behind Bab Doukkala. Same pedestrian lanes and ramparts as the centre but rougher around the edges, quieter and noticeably cheaper, with guesthouses often ยฃ25-ยฃ50. Good value if you want medina life without the central premium and don't mind a slightly run-down walk to your door.

Best for: Value, longer stays, atmosphere on a budget

Browse hotels North medina, 5-10 min walk to the port

Bab Marrakech and the southern souks

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The medina's southern gate, nearest the Supratours drop and the spice and craft souks. Riads here put you a short, flat walk from where the bus leaves you, which matters when you are dragging luggage through the lanes. Slightly less postcard than the Skala end but the most practical base if you are arriving and leaving by bus.

Best for: Bus arrivals, shoppers, short trips

Browse hotels South medina, by the bus drop

Beachfront and kitesurf strip

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Modern hotels and surf schools along the bay south of the walls towards the Mogador dunes, with car parking and the kite spot on the doorstep. You trade riad character for convenience and a sea view, but this is the windiest, most sand-blown side and the medina is a 10-15 minute walk back along the front. Pick it only if wind sports or driving are the point.

Best for: Kitesurfers, windsurfers, easy car access

Browse hotels South of the medina, 10-15 min walk

Garden riads outside town

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Walled pool retreats in the argan country 15-20 minutes out by taxi, sheltered from the wind that funnels through the bay. The calm and the gardens are real, but you will taxi in for every dinner, sight and beach walk, and a petit taxi is hard to flag late at night. Best for families, honeymooners or anyone the town wind would wear down.

Best for: Families, quiet retreats, wind-shy travellers

Browse hotels 15-20 min by taxi

The simple choice

If you are booking quickly, filter for a riad inside the medina between Bab Marrakech and the Skala, then check the Mellah if prices look high. That one rule keeps most first-timers right: you are inside the pedestrian walls where it is quiet at night, a flat couple of minutes from the port stalls and the sunset ramparts, and you avoid the trap of paying a premium for a beachfront seafront room that the Alize wind sandblasts most afternoons.

Compare Essaouira medina riads

Wind, stairs and luggage

Two practical things decide more Essaouira stays than the price. First, the wind: the town sits in the Atlantic Alize trade winds, so a sea-facing beachfront room is breezier and gets more blown sand than a sheltered riad courtyard inside the walls. Second, the stairs and the bag-carry: cars cannot reach most riad doors, so you arrive at a gate and a porter wheels your luggage through the lanes, then up steep tiled staircases. If either would spoil the trip, take a ground-floor room or a garden riad out of town.

Book a riad with clear directions and a porter pickup from the nearest gate or square; the lanes are an easy place to get lost with bags.

Safety and noise

Essaouira is calmer and lower-hassle than Marrakech, but Morocco's everyday risk is petty crime in busy medinas and the 'bogus guide' or 'your riad is closed' touting scam (GOV.UK), so book a riad with proper directions rather than following anyone who offers to lead you there. For noise, a courtyard riad set back from Place Moulay Hassan beats a room over a port-side cafe, especially in summer when the squares stay lively late; carry cash in dirham, as many medina riads and stalls do not take cards.

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Where to stay in Essaouira FAQs

Is it better to stay inside the medina or on the beach in Essaouira?
For a first trip, inside the medina. The walled old town is pedestrian, calm at night and a flat walk from the port, the souks and the sunset ramparts. The beachfront strip is better only if you have come specifically to kitesurf or windsurf, or you want car parking and a sea view and will accept more wind and blown sand.
Where is the best value place to stay in Essaouira?
The Mellah, the old Jewish quarter at the north end of the medina behind Bab Doukkala. It has the same pedestrian lanes and rampart access as the centre but is quieter and cheaper, with guesthouses often ยฃ25-ยฃ50 a night. It is a little rougher around the edges, which is the trade-off for the lower price.
Do I need a hire car if I stay in Essaouira?
No. The medina is car-free and you can cross the whole old town and reach the beach on foot in about 15 minutes, with petit taxis for short hops and grand taxis out to Sidi Kaouki. A car is a nuisance to park outside the walls; only consider it if you are basing yourself at a garden riad out of town and plan to drive the coast.

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