List of Common Tourist Scams in Morocco — & How to Outsmart Them
“Morocco is one of the most captivating destinations on earth — labyrinthine medinas, saffron-scented souks, and hospitality that feels genuinely warm. But like any major tourist destination, knowing what to watch for makes the difference between a dream trip and a frustrating one.”
Morocco welcomed over 17.4 million international tourists in 2023, according to the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism, and the country has continued to grow as a global travel hotspot heading into 2025 and 2026. With that growth comes an inevitable handful of opportunists targeting newcomers in the medinas of Morocco’s iconic cities.
The good news? The vast majority of Moroccans are exceptionally kind, generous, and proud to share their culture. The Moroccan Tourism Police (Brigade Touristique) has become increasingly active in protecting visitors — many complaints result in rapid police response. This guide exists not to discourage travel, but to give you the honest, street-level knowledge you need to travel confidently. If you want a full picture of safety, read our dedicated piece on whether Morocco is safe to visit for tourists.
The Complete List of Common Tourist Scams in Morocco
Before diving into each one in detail, here is the at-a-glance list of common tourist scams in Morocco that travelers encounter most frequently. Every item below has been documented through traveler reports, official tourism advisories, and local knowledge.
One of the most widely reported Morocco taxi scams — the driver claims his meter is broken and quotes an inflated price, often 3–5× the real fare.
A friendly local offers to show you around for free, leads you through the medina, then demands a large tip — or escorts you to a shop where he earns commission.
Someone approaches rattling keys, claiming you dropped them. While you’re distracted, an accomplice picks your pocket or bag is grabbed.
Vendors near Erfoud, Agadir, and Marrakech sell painted rocks disguised as amethyst geodes or trilobite fossils. Some are even convincing to the untrained eye.
A charming local builds a quick emotional connection with a solo traveler, slowly extracting money for “family emergencies,” flights, or business investments.
A vendor places snacks, olives, or mint tea in front of you without being asked, then charges a steep fee when you eat or drink them.
In Jemaa el-Fna square, handlers place snakes or monkeys on tourists without consent and demand 100–300 MAD for photos they didn’t agree to take.
Sellers market sunflower oil or cheap blends as pure argan oil, one of Morocco’s most prized exports. Prices seem like deals but the product is worthless.
A person near the medina entrance tells you your pre-booked riad is closed, flooded, or full — and offers to take you to another place where they earn commission.
Street money changers offer tempting rates but palm off counterfeit or discontinued dirham notes. This is illegal and leaves you with worthless paper.
Items labelled as handmade — ceramics, leather goods, rugs — are sometimes mass-produced imports. Prices can be 10× what locals pay.
Women offer a “free” henna design on your hand, then demand 200–500 MAD once it’s done. Refusing causes a public scene designed to embarrass you into paying.
Jemaa el-Fna, Marrakech — vibrant and beautiful, but worth navigating with awareness.
Morocco Taxi Scams — The Transport Traps You’ll Face
Marrakech taxi scams and those in Fes, Casablanca, and Agadir follow similar patterns. Understanding how they work puts you in control before you even open the door.
The Broken Meter
Petit taxis (small city taxis) in Morocco are legally required to use their meters. If a driver tells you the meter is broken or proposes a flat rate first, it’s almost certainly an attempt to overcharge. For reference, a cross-town trip in Marrakech should cost 10–20 MAD, not 100 MAD. Always insist on the meter, or simply get out and hail another cab.
Airport Transfer Overcharging
The stretch between Marrakech Menara Airport and the medina is notorious. Unofficial drivers outside the terminal can quote 300–400 MAD. The official taxi fare is around 70–100 MAD depending on time of day. Look for licensed taxis with the municipality sticker, or pre-book your transfer online.
- Download Careem or inDriver — ride-hailing apps operate in Casablanca, Marrakech, and Rabat.
- Always sit in the back and confirm meter is running before the journey starts.
- Screenshot the official fare table displayed inside official taxis.
- At night, fares are legally 50% higher — account for this.
- Grand taxis (shared intercity) have fixed routes — confirm the destination price with other passengers first.
How to Avoid Scams in Marrakech — The Fake Guide Problem
The medina of Marrakech is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most disorienting, enchanting places on earth. Its 9,000 lanes were designed to confuse invaders — and they work equally well on tourists. This is exactly where the fake guide scam thrives.
A person, often young, well-dressed, and speaking excellent English or French, will approach you near Jemaa el-Fna or a major landmark. They claim to be a student, someone’s cousin, or simply a “friendly local,” and offer to show you a shortcut or a special place. After 30–40 minutes of navigation, they guide you into a shop — a cousin’s rug store, a spice stall, a leather tannery viewing platform — where you’re pressured to buy. The shop owner and guide split the commission.
Genuine guides are proud of their license and will show it without hesitation. If you’re planning to explore a medina independently, embrace getting a little lost — but have your riad’s address on your phone in Arabic, which any local can help you with.
Fake Geodes Morocco — Don’t Get Fooled by Pretty Rocks
Southern Morocco — particularly around Erfoud, Rissani, and the Sahara gateway towns — is genuinely rich in fossils and crystals. But fake geodes Morocco is a real and widespread problem, especially near tourist overlooks and roadside stalls.
Common fakes include: plaster cast “ammonites” painted to look aged, cheap quartz dyed to resemble amethyst, and polyester resin molds sold as natural selenite or aragonite. A truly convincing fake geode can fool even enthusiasts. The rule of thumb: if the price seems impossibly low for the size and beauty of the specimen, it probably is.
- Visit the Museum of Fossils and Minerals in Erfoud — reference point for authentic pieces.
- Ask if you can see under UV light; genuine fluorite and some calcites will fluoresce. Dyed fakes won’t react correctly.
- Reputable shops in Ouarzazate and Marrakech’s Mellah often have certified pieces.
- Real fossils are cool to the touch; plaster warms up quickly in your hand.
Morocco Romance Scams — The Emotional Long Game
Morocco romance scams are perhaps the most psychologically complex on this list. Unlike a grab-and-run pickpocket, these are carefully orchestrated emotional relationships — sometimes played out over weeks or months online before a traveler even arrives.
The pattern typically goes: a charming person (often targeting solo women, but by no means exclusively) strikes up a genuine-feeling friendship or romance in a café, on social media, or in a hostel. Over time, a financial request emerges — a sick mother, a business opportunity, a visa fee, a flight to visit you. The sums escalate. By the time the victim realizes what’s happening, significant money has been transferred.
It’s worth noting that Morocco romance scams are also perpetrated digitally, before the traveler ever boards a plane — some victims are never physically in Morocco at all. Morocco’s general safety for tourists is well-documented, and the vast majority of interactions with locals are warm and genuine. But emotional investment can bypass rational caution.
The Morocco Shaking Keys Scam — A Classic Distraction
The Morocco shaking keys scam is a classic distraction technique. Someone approaches you rattling a set of keys, enthusiastically pointing at you and asking “did you drop these?” While you’re momentarily confused — did I drop something? — an accomplice positioned nearby lifts your wallet, phone, or bag.
Variations involve dropping something near you (a phone, a coin), bending to pick it up, and using the momentary proximity to unzip your bag. In crowded areas like Djemaa el-Fna, the Grand Mosque entrance in Casablanca, or the Fes medina’s Bab Boujloud gate, these techniques are most effective because the chaos masks the moment of theft.
The defense is simple: keep your valuables in a front zipped pocket or a secure cross-body bag, be skeptical of any approach by strangers claiming you’ve dropped something, and trust your instincts if something feels orchestrated.
The souks of Marrakech are a feast for the senses — and a place where awareness pays off.
Morocco Scams Reddit — Real Stories from Real Travelers
Reddit’s r/Morocco and r/travel communities are goldmines of candid, unfiltered traveler experiences. Here are some of the most instructive stories, analyzed for what they teach us.
The single most effective way to avoid every scam listed in this guide is to travel with a licensed, government-certified guide. Mouhssine ELIOUJ holds official accreditation from the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism (Ref. No. 2898), giving you full legal protection, professional knowledge, and a genuine local perspective that no app or blog can replicate. Reach out directly on WhatsApp for tips, private tours, or simply to ask questions before your trip — his guidance is invaluable whether you’re visiting for three days or three months.
Chat on WhatsApp — +212 671 437 971General Tips for Avoiding Scams Across Morocco
Whether you’re visiting Morocco’s imperial cities or coastal towns, these principles apply universally across all destinations.
- Learn basic Darija phrases: “La, shukran” (no thank you) delivered confidently stops most approaches cold.
- Walk with purpose — hesitation and map-checking signal vulnerability.
- If you’re a woman traveling solo, research which cities are safest for solo female travelers before choosing your destination.
- Keep a small amount of cash (50–100 MAD) in an accessible pocket for small transactions — no need to reveal your wallet.
- Screenshot your accommodation’s location on Google Maps for offline access.
- Trust official spaces: licensed restaurants, certified cooperatives, and government tourist offices are scam-free zones.
- When in doubt, Morocco’s tourist police emergency number is 190.
- Consider whether Morocco’s development context matters to your expectations — it’s worth reading our piece on Morocco’s economic development.
Traveling aware doesn’t mean traveling afraid — Morocco rewards those who engage openly.
Frequently Asked Questions
This article is for informational purposes only. Traveler safety experiences vary. Always check your government’s latest travel advisory before visiting Morocco.
Sources: Moroccan Ministry of Tourism, Global Peace Index 2023, r/Morocco, r/travel (Reddit), Brigade Touristique official guidelines, IATA travel safety reports.
Is Morocco Safe? · Morocco Currency Guide · Cities in Morocco


