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Mazel Café Marrakech: An Honest Review From a Local Licensed Guide

Mazel Café Marrakech interior — colourful pop-art Moroccan design at Place des Ferblantiers
Licensed Guide’s Review · Marrakech

Mazel Café Marrakech: An Honest Review From a Local Licensed Guide

🗓 Updated June 2026 ☕ Food & Café Review 📍 Place des Ferblantiers, Medina

Finding a reliable lunch spot inside the Marrakech Medina takes some experience. Between places that overcharge tourists and kitchens that look better in photos than they taste on the plate, the genuinely solid options are worth knowing by name. Mazel Café Marrakech is one of them. This is a straightforward account of what the place is, what it does well, and where it still has room to improve.


What is Mazel Café? ↑ Contents

Mazel Café is a Mediterranean street food café located at 8 Place des Ferblantiers, a square in the southern Medina that sits between the Mellah quarter and the edge of the old city. The address puts it close enough to Jemaa El Fna to work as a natural stop during a walking tour, but far enough from the main tourist drag to feel like an actual neighbourhood choice.

The concept draws on Levantine and North African food traditions: falafel, hummus, wraps, fresh salads, and a coffee counter with several specialty options at reasonable prices. Portions are generous, and the staff moves naturally between Arabic, French, and English depending on who they are talking to. The menu is written in English, which removes the guesswork for most international visitors.

Mediterranean Street Food Vegetarian Friendly Vegan Options Budget-Friendly Quick Bite Near Jemaa El Fna Pop-Art Moroccan Interior

Why I Always Take My Tour Guests to Mazel Café ↑ Contents

As a licensed guide working in Marrakech and Essaouira, I think about pacing. A midday break is not filler; it shapes how people feel about the whole afternoon and, in a way, about the city itself. The choice of where to stop matters.

Mazel Café solves a practical problem that comes up on almost every group tour: dietary variety. When six people sit down and at least two of them are vegetarian or following a plant-based diet, you need a menu that works for everyone without making half the group feel like an afterthought. Here, the plant-based options are the menu, not a footnote added for compliance.

Guide Mouhssine with tour guests at Mazel Café Marrakech Tourists enjoying a healthy lunch at Mazel Café Marrakech

Lunch break with guests at Mazel Café. A regular stop on Medina walking tours.

Beyond the food, I value the transparency of the place. The bill matches the menu price. There is no pressure to order more than you want, no persistent suggestions or upselling. For visitors who are still calibrating what normal interactions look like in a Moroccan medina setting, that kind of straightforward hospitality is genuinely reassuring.

Licensed guide Mouhssine with tourists inside Mazel Café Marrakech

The pop-art interior makes group photographs lively and distinctly Marrakchi.


The Menu: Mediterranean Street Food ↑ Contents

The menu is in English and reads clearly: wraps, bowls, falafel plates, hummus with toppings, a short list of salads, and a coffee section that covers standard espresso drinks through to specialty options. Prices are reasonable and consistent with what is listed on the menu.

What stands out

The falafel is cooked well: through without being dry, seasoned with herbs rather than just salt. The hummus has texture and depth rather than the bland processed quality you find in some tourist-facing spots. Pair either with a fresh salad and the meal is complete and filling for a fair price.

On the coffee side, the selection is solid and well-priced across multiple preparation styles. Milk alternatives (oat, almond) are not currently on offer, which is the clearest gap for strict vegans or those with dairy sensitivities. Everything else is covered.

A fair, well-executed menu with no obvious weak links. The falafel and hummus in Marrakech Medina do not often reach this standard at this price point.

Download the Mazel Café Menu ↑ Contents

Planning ahead or checking dietary options before you arrive? The full Mazel Café menu is available to download below.

Mazel Café Marrakech menu preview
Official Document
Mazel Café Marrakech — Full Menu (PDF)
Complete food and drinks menu. Useful for checking vegetarian, vegan, and dietary options before your visit.
Download Menu

Atmosphere and Interior Design ↑ Contents

The interior of Mazel Café leans into a pop-art aesthetic filtered through modern Moroccan craft references. Bold colour, geometric patterns, tilework, and graphic elements share the space without any one element overwhelming the others. It photographs well in both natural daylight and the softer interior light of the afternoon, which is why group shots taken here tend to come out well.

Noise levels stay manageable throughout the day. Background music is present but kept at a volume where conversation is comfortable at a normal tone. The space does not feel rushed or transitory; people settle in for the duration of a proper meal rather than just grabbing something and leaving.

Wi-Fi is available and functional enough for browsing and photo uploads. Power sockets are limited in number, which makes longer work sessions impractical. For a broader overview of connectivity expectations across Morocco, see our article on Wi-Fi quality in Morocco. International bank cards (Visa, Mastercard) are accepted without issue.


Ratings Breakdown ↑ Contents

Scores are based on multiple visits across different days and group sizes. Each criterion is rated out of 10.

Accessibility & Communication
Menu language
English ✓
Multilingual staff (AR / FR / EN)
10/10
International card payment (Visa, Mastercard)
Accepted ✓
Digital & Physical Comfort
Wi-Fi speed and reliability
7/10
Power sockets availability
3/10
Restroom cleanliness
8/10
Product Quality & Dietary Options
Coffee quality and variety
10/10
Vegetarian and vegan food options
7/10
Milk alternatives (oat, almond, etc.)
Not available
Atmosphere & Experience
Visual identity and sense of place
8/10
Noise level and music comfort
9/10
Transparency & Service
Price clarity (menu matches bill)
10/10
Staff conduct and respect for guests
10/10
No pressure or upselling tactics
10/10
8.5
Guide’s Overall Score out of 10

A consistent and well-run café in the Medina. Strengths are clear: food quality, hospitality, transparent pricing, and a welcoming atmosphere. The main gaps are the absence of milk alternatives and a limited number of charging sockets. Everything else performs well above the Medina average.


Practical Info: Location, Hours and Getting There ↑ Contents

📍 Address 8 Place des Ferblantiers, Marrakech 40000
🕙 Opening Hours Every day: 10:00 to 21:30
💳 Payment Visa, Mastercard and cash (MAD)
🌐 Languages Menu in English. Staff: Arabic, French, English

Place des Ferblantiers is the tinsmith’s square in the southern Medina, historically one of the craft quarters of the old city. From Jemaa El Fna, walk south through Rue Riad Zitoun el Jedid or via the Mellah. The walk takes roughly 10 minutes on foot through quieter residential lanes. It is worth doing on foot rather than taking a taxi if time allows.


Book a Tour With a Licensed Marrakech Guide ↑ Contents

A lunch stop like Mazel Café works best as part of a day that moves deliberately through the Medina. If you want a guide who knows the neighbourhood, can adjust pace to the group, and will take you to places that have actually been tested rather than just searched online, get in touch directly.

Mouhssine Eliouj, licensed tour guide in Marrakech and Essaouira
Mouhssine Eliouj
🏅 Licensed by the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism — No. Réf. 2898

Specialist in Marrakech and Essaouira. Private day tours, half-day Medina walks, and custom itineraries for individuals and small groups. Fluent in Arabic, French, and English.


Frequently Asked Questions ↑ Contents

Is Mazel Café suitable for vegetarians and vegans?
Largely yes. The core menu is built around plant-based dishes: falafel, hummus, wraps, and salads. Most items are vegetarian by default, and several are fully vegan. The one gap is that milk alternatives for coffee (oat, almond, soy) are not currently available.
How far is Mazel Café from Jemaa El Fna?
About a 10-minute walk south through the Medina. The most direct route goes via Rue Riad Zitoun el Jedid through the Mellah before arriving at Place des Ferblantiers. The walk itself passes through quieter parts of the old city and is worth taking on foot.
Does Mazel Café Marrakech accept credit cards?
Yes. Visa and Mastercard are both accepted. Cash in Moroccan dirhams is also fine. Prices on the menu match what appears on the bill with no added charges.
What are the opening hours of Mazel Café?
Open every day of the week from 10:00 to 21:30, including weekends. No reservation is needed for lunch or a coffee stop.
Is the interior good for photography?
It photographs well. The interior uses bold colour combinations, geometric tilework, and pop-art graphic elements that hold up in both natural light (afternoon is best) and indoor lighting. Group shots taken here tend to be more visually interesting than the average café interior in the Medina.
Is the Wi-Fi usable for remote work?
The Wi-Fi is adequate for browsing, email, and photo uploads (rated 7/10). Power sockets are limited (3/10), so it is better suited as a lunch stop than an extended working session. For a broader picture of connectivity in Morocco, see our guide on Wi-Fi across Morocco.

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