Taroudant Travel Guide: The Little Marrakech (2026)

Taroudant is what Marrakech was 40 years ago. Walled medina (7.5 km of intact 16th-century pisé ramparts — the most beautiful walls in Morocco), traditional souks where artisans actually work, no aggressive guides, no tour-bus crowds, prices half what you’d pay 230 km north. The travellers who find Taroudant tend to keep coming back; the ones who don’t hear about it never make it down to the Souss valley.
This guide covers what to see, where to stay, when to come, and why a 1–2 night detour from Agadir or Marrakech is a smart use of your Morocco days. Last reviewed May 2026.
⚡ Taroudant quick facts
- Best for: Slow travellers, second-time Morocco visitors, anyone tired of tourist crush
- Skip if: Your only Morocco stop is short and you haven’t done Marrakech/Fes yet
- Time needed: 1–2 nights for the medina, 3+ if exploring the Souss valley
- Best season: October–April (summer is desert-hot)
- Budget per day: €40–80 mid-range, €150+ luxury palace hotels
- Last reviewed: May 2026
Is Taroudant worth visiting?
Yes if you have 7+ days in Morocco and you’ve already done Marrakech, or if you’re basing in Agadir for a week and want a culture stop. Taroudant fills a specific gap: a walled imperial-era medina without the tourism intensity of Marrakech or Fes. It was the Saadian dynasty’s capital before they moved to Marrakech in the 16th century — same architectural period, same dynasty, much smaller scale.
The 7.5 km circuit of pink pisé ramparts is the visual highlight. Walk them at sunset (Borj el-Ouedayer at the south-east corner is the best photo spot) or hire a calèche for a leisurely 90-minute loop.
5 best things to do in Taroudant
1. Walk the ramparts ⭐ Don’t miss

7.5 km of 16th-century pink pisé walls, completely intact, with five monumental gates (Bab el-Kasbah, Bab Sedra, Bab Targhount, Bab el-Khemis, Bab Zorgane). You can walk the full circuit (90 minutes) or hire a horse-drawn calèche from Place Assarag (~150 MAD for a 60-minute loop). Sunset is the best light — the walls turn from pink to deep red.
Practical: Free. Best at sunset (5–6pm in summer, 4–5pm in winter). Calèches wait at the main square.
2. Souk el-Berbère + Place Assarag

The two main squares — Place Assarag (locals + tourists) and Place Talmoklate (more local) — are the medina’s social hubs. The covered Souk el-Berbère sells silver jewellery from Tiznit, leather, spices, and the famous Souss valley argan oil. Less aggressive than Marrakech — vendors talk price after you ask, not before.
3. Hammam & argan oil cooperatives
Taroudant is the gateway to Morocco’s argan-producing region. Several women’s cooperatives outside the walls (e.g., Tighanimine, Tafyoucht) welcome visitors to see the production process and buy direct. Combined with a traditional public hammam visit (Hammam de la Place Talmoklate, ~30 MAD entry, women’s and men’s sessions), this makes a slow half-day.
4. Borj el-Ouedayer & the Mellah
The Borj el-Ouedayer watchtower at the south-east corner of the walls is the best photographer’s vantage point — you see the entire ramparts curve away into the distance. The adjacent Mellah (former Jewish quarter) is small and residential; the architecture is distinctive (balconied houses, like Marrakech) but most synagogues are gone.
5. Day trip to Tiout palmeraie or the Anti-Atlas
An hour east of Taroudant lies the Tiout palm grove — a 9th-century Berber kasbah above a working palmeraie, with a small museum and donkey-cart rides through the date palms. Further (3-hour drive) into the Anti-Atlas: Tafraout’s painted rocks, Aït Mansour palm gorge, almond blossom valleys (February). Best done with a hired driver or rental car.
Pre-book Taroudant + Souss valley experiences Day trips from Agadir, Souss valley + Anti-Atlas excursions, and Taroudant city tours – the easiest way to fit Taroudant into a Morocco trip from Agadir or Marrakech.
- Taroudant + Tiout palm grove from Agadir
- Taroudant city + ramparts guided tour
- Anti-Atlas + Tafraout day trip
Affiliate disclosure: CityQuest Morocco may earn a small commission if you book through these links — at no extra cost to you. We only link to operators we’d use ourselves.
Where to stay in Taroudant
| Area | Vibe | Price band | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inside the medina | Restored riads, traditional | €40–150 | Atmosphere, walkers, budget travellers |
| Outside walls (south) | Palace hotels with grounds + pools | €120–500 | Couples, honeymooners, longer stays |
| Souss valley (5–15 km) | Country estates with gardens | €90–350 | Quiet retreats, families with cars |
For specific hotel picks, see our Where to Stay in Taroudant guide.
Food and where to eat
Taroudant’s food is Berber-influenced Moroccan — heavier on argan oil (used in cooking, not just cosmetics), more lamb and goat than in Marrakech, fewer tagines with prunes. Standout dishes: amlou (roasted almonds + argan + honey paste, the local breakfast spread), tagine djaj makfoul (chicken with onion and tomato confit), tanjia taroudannia (slow-cooked lamb with preserved lemon).
- Place Assarag stalls — evenings only, grilled meat skewers, salads, fresh bread for €4–8 per person.
- Restaurant Riad Maryam (Bab el-Khemis) — set Moroccan menu in a restored riad, ~€20–35.
- Chez Nada (medina) — local couscous Friday, tagines daily, €10–20.
- Hôtel Palais Salam restaurant — fine Moroccan in the historic palace, €30–50 for non-guests with reservation.
Getting there and around
By road
Most travellers arrive from Agadir (1h 15 drive, 80 km west) or Marrakech (3h 30 drive, 230 km north). CTM and Supratours buses run from both daily (Agadir 2h, ~50 MAD; Marrakech 4h, ~120 MAD). Grand taxi from Agadir is faster and ~80 MAD per seat.
By air
Closest airport is Agadir Al Massira (AGA), 1 hour’s drive west. Fly to AGA from London, Paris, Madrid (RyanAir, EasyJet, Air Arabia). Pre-book a transfer or take an airport bus + taxi combination.
Inside Taroudant
The medina is small enough to walk. Petit taxis (yellow) cover anywhere within 5 km for 10–25 MAD. The famous calèches (horse-drawn carriages) wait at Place Assarag for ramparts loops and city tours.
Practical tips
- Avoid summer — the Souss valley is one of the hottest places in Morocco from June to September (45°C+ midday).
- Skip: the “official tannery” tour touts at the gates — Taroudant’s tanneries are smaller and less interesting than Fes’s.
- Cash: ATMs at Bab el-Kasbah and on Place Assarag. The medina is mostly cash.
- Best souk day: Sunday morning is the regional market — most worth visiting if you can time it.
- Argan cooperative caution: the legitimate ones are women-only co-ops (Targanine, Tighanimine, Tafyoucht). If a tourist shop calls itself an “argan cooperative” and is run by men in the medina, the prices and quality differ.
📱 Stay connected in Morocco
Get a Morocco eSIM before you fly — instant activation, no roaming, around €5–15.
Affiliate link.
FAQ — Taroudant
How many days do you need in Taroudant?
1–2 nights covers the city itself (ramparts, souks, hammam). Add 1–2 days for the Souss valley and Anti-Atlas excursions if you want full depth.
Is Taroudant a good day trip from Agadir?
Yes — 1h 15 drive each way, easy day trip. Take the early Supratours bus or hire a driver (~€50–80 round-trip with waiting). You can fit in the ramparts loop, both squares, lunch and the souks.
Is Taroudant safer than Marrakech?
Comparable, but with much less hustle. The medina is genuinely residential (you’ll meet locals on their daily errands rather than tour groups). Solo female travellers report a more relaxed experience here.
Should I visit Taroudant before or after Marrakech?
After. Marrakech sets the imperial-Moroccan baseline; Taroudant feels like a calmer version of the same era. Coming the other way (Taroudant first) makes Marrakech feel overwhelming.
Can I drive the ramparts?
You can drive the road around the outside of the walls (one-way clockwise loop, takes 20 minutes by car). Walking or calèche is more rewarding inside. Cycling around the outside is also popular — bikes rentable from some hotels for ~€8/day.
What is the best time of day to walk the ramparts?
Late afternoon to sunset. The walls’ pink pisé turns deep red as the light angles. Borj el-Ouedayer at the south-east corner is the best photo vantage. Avoid midday in summer (no shade).