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Fez el-Bali Medina, Morocco
Fez el-Bali Medina

Fes-Meknes

Fez el-Bali Medina

How to visit the Fez el-Bali medina: why you book a licensed guide for the first morning, when to go, and how to do the world's largest car-free old city without getting lost or fleeced.

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

Where

Fez, Morocco

Opening hours

The medina lanes are open and walkable around the clock, but souks and workshops run roughly 09:00โ€“19:00, mostly closing Friday lunchtime for prayers. Paid sights inside (the Bou Inania and Al-Attarine madrasas) open about 09:00โ€“18:00; the Quaraouiyine mosque is closed to non-Muslims. Hours shorten during Ramadan.

Tickets

The medina is free to enter. A licensed guide for a 3โ€“4 hour private walk is about 300โ€“500 MAD (ยฃ24โ€“ยฃ40) for your group; madrasa entry is around 70 MAD (ยฃ6) each; budget a 20โ€“50 MAD (ยฃ2โ€“ยฃ4) tannery-terrace tip.

Time needed

A guided half-day (3โ€“4 hours) for orientation, then a free afternoon; two days lets you slow right down.

In short

Visiting Fez el-Bali Medina

The medina itself is free to walk into through Bab Bou Jeloud โ€” but book a licensed guide for your first half-day before you fly, because the 9,000-odd lanes have no grid and a good guide turns a lost morning into a working map. Go early: the Chouara tanneries before 10am, the madrasas next, then wander unguided in the afternoon. Allow a half-day with a guide plus a free afternoon, and carry small dirham for terrace tips and madrasa tickets.

How to visit without losing the first morning

The medina is free โ€” you walk in through Bab Bou Jeloud, the blue gate, and nobody sells you a ticket. The mistake is treating that as a reason to skip a guide. Fes el-Bali is the largest car-free city on earth, around 9,000 lanes with no grid and a GPS that drifts uselessly between the high walls, so an unguided first morning is mostly being lost and steered by touts telling you your riad is โ€œclosedโ€.

Book a licensed guide for a half-day before you fly โ€” through your riad or a reputable partner, about 300โ€“500 MAD (ยฃ24โ€“ยฃ40) for the group, and check for the official badge. A good one takes you to a leather-shop terrace above the Chouara tanneries before 10am, into the Bou Inania madrasa (the grandest of the medinaโ€™s open-to-all theological colleges and the most rewarding ticket in the city, around 70 MAD), past the smaller Al-Attarine madrasa, and shows you how the souks are arranged. Carry small dirham: the terrace tip is 20โ€“50 MAD, anything over 100 MAD is a hustle.

Timing the lanes, and the wandering

Go early in the day and early in the season โ€” spring or October keep the lanes walkable, while July and August bake the medina and sharpen the tannery smell into something genuinely hard going. Do the guided loop in the morning, then spend the afternoon deliberately getting lost on your own; that is when the place stops being a tour and starts being yours.

This is the reason to come to Fez, and it earns it. It is a working medieval city rather than a restored set, and the small guide fee is exactly what turns an overwhelming first day into a navigable one. Keep your riadโ€™s card for the walk back, treat one wrong turn per outing as normal, and donโ€™t try to โ€œfinishโ€ the medina โ€” the point is the wandering, not the checklist.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Fez city guide.

More to see in Fez

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Fez el-Bali Medina FAQs

Do you need to book a guide for the Fez medina in advance?
Book one for your first morning. Fes el-Bali is a genuine medieval maze of around 9,000 lanes with no grid, and a licensed guide (look for the official badge) gets you to the right tannery terrace and the madrasas without the wrong turns. Arrange it through your riad or a reputable tour partner before you travel rather than taking an unofficial 'guide' who approaches you at the gate.
Is the Fez el-Bali medina worth it?
Yes โ€” it is the reason to come to Fez. It is the largest car-free urban area in the world and an intact, working medieval city rather than a museum piece. The honest caveat is the first morning: without a guide you spend it lost and hassled, so the small guide fee is what makes the place worth it rather than overwhelming.
What is the best time of day to visit?
Early. See the Chouara tanneries before 10am while the light is good and the smell is at its mildest, then the madrasas, then wander the souks. Spring and October keep the lanes bearable; high summer bakes the medina and intensifies the tannery smell, and Friday lunchtime is quiet for prayers.