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Casablanca vs Fez

Which destination is right for your next trip?

πŸ† Fez wins 77 OVR vs 73 Β· attribute matchup 3–5

Casablanca
Casablanca

Morocco

73OVR

VS
Fez
Fez

Morocco

77OVR

65
Safety
72
73
Affordability
90
86
Food
99
76
Culture
99
86
Nightlife
58
72
Walkability
86
58
Nature
58
81
Connectivity
67
72
Transit
44
Casablanca

Casablanca

Morocco

Fez

Fez

Morocco

Casablanca

Safety: 65/100Pop: 4MAfrica/Casablanca

Fez

Safety: 65/100Pop: 1.2M (city)Africa/Casablanca

πŸ’° Budget

budget
Casablanca: $30-50Fez: $25-45
mid-range
Casablanca: $80-130Fez: $60-130
luxury
Casablanca: $200+Fez: $200+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

Casablanca65/100Safety Scoreβœ“68/100Fez

Casablanca

Casablanca is a large North African city with the street-crime profile you would expect. Violent crime against tourists is rare; petty theft, pickpocketing, and tourist scams are not. The Corniche and Habous are generally safe in daylight; the Old Medina requires more awareness, particularly after dark. Solo women face persistent verbal harassment in some areas β€” this does not mean avoid the city, but it does mean dress modestly, ignore strangers who open with "where are you from?", and navigate with confidence. The police presence is visible and generally responsive.

Fez

Fez is generally safe for tourists, though the medina can be overwhelming and disorienting. The main annoyances are persistent unofficial guides (faux guides) and aggressive shopkeepers. Violent crime against tourists is very rare, but petty scams are common.

⭐ Ratings

Casablanca3/5βœ“English Friendly2/5Fez
Casablanca3/5Walkabilityβœ“4/5Fez
Casablanca3/5βœ“Public Transit1/5Fez
Casablanca4/5Food Sceneβœ“5/5Fez
Casablanca4/5βœ“Nightlife2/5Fez
Casablanca3/5Cultural Sitesβœ“5/5Fez
Casablanca2/5Nature Access2/5Fez
Casablanca4/5βœ“WiFi Reliability3/5Fez

🌀️ Weather

Casablanca

Casablanca has an Atlantic Mediterranean climate that is genuinely one of Morocco's most liveable β€” the ocean acts as a thermostat, capping summer heat around 28Β°C and keeping winter mild at 12–18Β°C. This is not Marrakech (where summer is brutal) and not the Sahara. The city gets around 400mm of rain annually, almost entirely between October and April. Humidity can be high in summer due to Atlantic moisture, and morning fog (sea fog) is common in spring and early summer.

Spring (March - May)15 to 22Β°C
Summer (June - September)20 to 28Β°C
Autumn (October - November)16 to 24Β°C
Winter (December - February)12 to 18Β°C

Fez

Fez has a Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters. The city sits at 410 m elevation in an inland valley, making summers hotter and winters colder than coastal Moroccan cities. Spring and autumn offer the most pleasant temperatures.

Spring (March - May)10-25Β°C
Summer (June - August)18-38Β°C
Autumn (September - November)12-30Β°C
Winter (December - February)4-16Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

Casablanca

Casablanca is a large and sprawling city but the visitor-relevant zones β€” Ville Nouvelle, Old Medina, Habous, and the Corniche β€” are reasonably connected by tram and petit taxi. The city launched a modern tramway in 2012 (T1) with a second line (T2) added since; together they cover the main east–west spine and the route to Casa Port and Casa Voyageurs train stations. For short hops, petit taxis are cheap and everywhere. The Corniche is too far west to walk from the centre β€” take a taxi or tram to a closer point.

Walkability: The historic centre (Ville Nouvelle, Habous, Old Medina) is compact and walkable. The Corniche requires transit. Casablanca is not a pedestrian-hostile city but is better navigated zone by zone rather than end-to-end on foot.

Tramway (T1 / T2) β€” 6 MAD per journey (~$0.60)
Petit Taxi (Cream) β€” 15–60 MAD for most urban trips (~$1.50–6)
Grand Taxi β€” 50–120 MAD per seat for inter-city routes

Fez

The medina is entirely pedestrian (and donkey). Getting around Fes el-Bali is exclusively on foot. For travel between the medina, Ville Nouvelle (new town), and other areas, petit taxis (red Fiats) are cheap and plentiful.

Walkability: The medina is exclusively pedestrian but extremely uneven β€” cobblestones, steep stairs, and drainage channels require sturdy shoes. The Ville Nouvelle is walkable and flat with sidewalks. Walking between the medina and Ville Nouvelle takes about 20-30 minutes along Avenue Hassan II.

Petit Taxis (Red Taxis) β€” MAD 10-30 (~$1-3) for most trips within the city
Grand Taxis (Shared) β€” MAD 25-100 (~$2.50-10) depending on destination
City Buses β€” MAD 3-5 (~$0.30-0.50)

The Verdict

Choose Casablanca if...

you want Morocco's economic powerhouse β€” Hassan II Mosque, Art Deco Protectorate legacy, the Corniche, and Casablanca nightlife beyond the medina circuit

Choose Fez if...

you want Morocco's oldest medina β€” 9,000 alleyways, Chouara tanneries, Al-Qarawiyyin (world's oldest university), and artisan souks without the hustle of Marrakech