How many days in Casablanca?
Plan 2-4 days for Casablanca. 2 days hits the must-sees; 4 lets you eat well, walk neighbourhoods you've never heard of, and take one day trip.
The minimum
2 days
2 days fits the top sights, one good food walk, and one neighbourhood deep-dive β no day trips.
The sweet spot
4 days
4 days adds one day trip, two more neighbourhoods, and three more sit-down meals you'll actually remember.
Slow travel
6 days
6 days is when you leave the to-do list at home and actually live in the city for a week.
The headline things to do in Casablanca
From the Casablanca guide β these are the items that anchor a 2-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the Casablanca travel guide.
- Hassan II Mosque β Corniche district, western waterfront
The undisputed headline sight. Built on a promontory over the Atlantic, its 210-metre minaret β the tallest in the world β is laser-topped and visible for miles at sea. The interior, which can hold 25,000 worshippers, is finished in hand-carved cedar, zellij tilework, and marble from Agadir. Non-Muslims enter on one of four daily guided tours (morning tours typically best light). Photography is permitted inside. 120 MAD admission (~$12). Arrive 20 minutes early β tours fill fast and the security queue is genuine.
- La Corniche (Boulevard de la Corniche) β Corniche / Ain Diab
The 5-kilometre oceanfront promenade running west from the Hassan II Mosque toward Ain Diab. It is not a quiet boardwalk β this is where Casablancans actually live their weekends: beach clubs, fish restaurants stacked above the rocks, young people on motorcycles, families walking. La Sqala and the old ramparts anchor one end; the Miami Beach-style Ain Diab clubs anchor the other. The strip at golden hour on a Friday afternoon is one of the better people-watching scenes in North Africa.
- Quartier Habous (La Nouvelle MΓ©dina) β Habous, southeast of centre
Built by the French in the 1930s as a planned medina for the growing Muslim population β a rare example of French colonial planners actually engaging with traditional Moroccan urbanism rather than simply building over it. The result is a quarter that looks genuinely old but has wider streets, more logical layout, and better craft shops than the Old Medina. Excellent for leather goods, embroidery, Moroccan slippers (babouches), and argan oil at prices below Marrakech. The royal palace is adjacent; the surrounding cafΓ©-lined square fills with older men in djellabas playing cards from mid-morning onward.
- Boulevard Mohammed V (Art Deco District) β Ville Nouvelle / City Centre
The main axis of the French Ville Nouvelle and one of the most concentrated Art Deco streetscapes outside the Americas. The arcaded buildings lining the boulevard β from the Central Market at one end past the main post office, the Hotel Lincoln, and the Palais de Justice β were built between the 1920s and 1950s in styles ranging from pure Art Deco to Mauresque (Art Deco fused with Islamic geometric ornament). Most are unrenovated and slightly shabby, which makes them more atmospheric, not less. Walk the full length on a weekday morning before the heat builds.
- MarchΓ© Central (Central Market) β Ville Nouvelle, off Boulevard Mohammed V
A covered market hall built in 1917 at the foot of Boulevard Mohammed V, still functioning exactly as intended. The seafood section at the back is the reason to come: stalls piled with sardines, sea bass, red snapper, prawns, and lobster at prices that will seem absurd to anyone from Northern Europe. Several small restaurants around the perimeter will cook your purchase on the spot for a service fee of 30-50 MAD. The spice stands along the main corridors are excellent for ras el hanout, saffron (check it's genuine β rub a little on wet skin to test colour), and preserved lemon.
- Ain Diab Beach Clubs β Ain Diab, western Corniche
The stretch of private beach clubs west of the Corniche is Casablanca's answer to the beach-club culture you find in Beirut or Barcelona. Clubs like La RΓ©serve, Miami Plage, and Le Cabestan have pools overlooking the Atlantic, day-bed rentals, DJs on weekends, and restaurants serving grilled fish and mezze. Entry runs 80β200 MAD depending on the club and day; beach chairs extra. The Atlantic here has a reliable swell β actual surfers use the breaks south of Ain Diab. A genuinely local experience, not a tourist construct.
- Old Medina β Old Medina, northeast of centre
Casablanca's original medina is smaller, less labyrinthine, and less polished than Fez or Marrakech's β which makes it more approachable. The ramparts date to the 18th-century Alawite fortification; the streets inside still have working craftsmen, neighbourhood hammams, and hole-in-the-wall restaurants serving harira (tomato-lentil soup) and brochettes. The Place JemaΓ’ has good photo lines toward the minaret of the Grand Mosque. Less tourist infrastructure than other Moroccan medinas but also no carpet-shop pressure.
Frequently asked
Is 2 days enough in Casablanca?
2 days is the minimum for a satisfying visit β you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 4, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.
Is 6 days too long in Casablanca?
6 days is for travellers who want to slow down β eat at neighbourhood spots tourists don't reach, take repeat day trips, and live in the city. If you're a tick-the-list traveller, 4 is enough.
What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to Casablanca?
4 days is the sweet spot for a first visit β long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 2 usually feels rushed; more than 6 is into slow-travel territory.
Should I add Casablanca to a longer regional trip?
Yes β Casablanca works well as a 2-4-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.