How to Get Your First Carte de Séjour in Morocco

A step-by-step guide to applying for your first Moroccan residency permit (Carte de Sejour), from gathering documents to the appointment process.

Last updated: February 2026

The Carte de Séjour is Morocco’s residency permit for foreign nationals. It converts your status from tourist to legal resident and opens up several practical doors: long-term lease signing in your own name, easier banking, enrollment in public healthcare through CNSS contributions, and the ability to bring family members in under a family reunification category. It does not grant work rights automatically, but it is the foundational document for living here properly.

The application process requires patience, organization, and a willingness to navigate bureaucracy that moves at its own pace. The documents required are specific, the process involves multiple visits, and the outcome is not instantaneous. That said, thousands of foreigners successfully obtain their first Carte de Séjour every year, and the process, while not smooth, is navigable with the right preparation.

At a Glance

Applied at Local préfecture de police (varies by city)
Main categories Work, study, retired/passive income, family, investment
Valid for 1 year (renewable)
Processing time 1 to 4 months typically; varies by prefecture and season
Cost Modest administrative fees, plus document preparation costs
First appointment Book through the préfecture; wait times vary

Who Qualifies

Morocco grants Cartes de Séjour under several categories. The most relevant for the expat community are: workers (with a signed employment contract with a Moroccan employer and approval from ANAPEC), self-employed or investors (registered Moroccan business), retired or passive income (proof of regular income from a foreign source), students (enrolled in a Moroccan institution), and family reunification (foreign national married to a Moroccan or to an existing legal resident).

The retired or passive income category is the most commonly used by digital nomads and remote workers who are not formally employed in Morocco. You need to demonstrate regular income from outside Morocco sufficient to support yourself. The exact income threshold varies by prefecture and by the officer you encounter; a rough expectation is that 5,000 to 10,000 MAD per month in demonstrable foreign income is the working threshold.

The Required Documents

The document list varies slightly by prefecture and category, but the core requirements for most applications are: valid passport with a copy, 4 to 6 recent passport-format photographs, completed application form (available at the préfecture), proof of address in Morocco (a lease contract in your name, or a residency certificate from your landlord notarized at the local authorities), proof of financial means (bank statements showing regular income over the past 3 to 6 months), and a certificate of non-criminal record from your home country (apostilled within the last 3 months).

Some categories require additional documents: employment contract and ANAPEC authorization for workers, marriage certificate and spouse documents for family cases, enrollment certificate for students. Everything needs to be in either Arabic or French; documents in other languages require certified translation.

The Process: Step by Step

Go to the local préfecture de police in your city of residence and request an appointment or information on the current submission process. In larger cities like Casablanca and Marrakech, the process has been partially centralized and some initial steps can be handled online. In smaller cities, you typically present in person to the foreigners’ affairs window.

Submit your complete document file. Incomplete files are returned and the clock resets. A checklist verified by someone who has recently done the same application in the same city is worth finding. Facebook groups for Morocco expats in your city (Expats in Casablanca, Living in Marrakech, etc.) are the best current source for city-specific process details.

After submission, you receive a récépissé (receipt) that serves as proof of pending application. This document is legally recognized as temporary authorization to remain in Morocco while your application is processed. Keep it with your passport.

Realistic Timelines

Processing times vary significantly. Casablanca and Rabat tend to be slower due to volume. Smaller cities can be faster. A range of 1 to 4 months is realistic for a complete application. You can follow up in person at the préfecture after the initial 4 to 6 week period.

Common Mistakes That Delay Your Application

The single most common reason for delays is document legalization. Every copy submitted with your application must be legalized (certified) at your local commune or moqataa. This is not the same as a notarized copy in the Western sense. You bring the original and the copy, the official stamps the copy to confirm it matches the original, and you pay a small fee per stamp. Many applicants underestimate how many copies need legalization and end up making multiple trips.

Another frequent mistake is submitting an expired criminal background check. Morocco requires a casier judiciaire (criminal record extract) from your home country, and most prefectures want it issued within the last three months. If your home country is slow to issue these, start the request immediately upon arriving in Morocco. Some countries allow you to request this through their embassy in Rabat or Casablanca.

Photographs are also a common rejection point. Morocco requires specific passport-style photos with a white background. Photos from automated booths sometimes do not meet the requirements. It is safer to go to a professional photographer near the prefecture, as they know exactly what is needed.

The Receipts and What They Mean

When you submit your application, you receive a receipt called a recepisse. This paper serves as temporary proof that you have applied for residency and gives you legal permission to remain in Morocco while your card is being processed. Keep this receipt with you at all times alongside your passport.

The recepisse is typically valid for one month. If your card is not ready (and it almost never is within one month), you return to the prefecture to get it renewed. Some applicants renew their recepisse four or five times before the actual card arrives. Each renewal is a visit to the prefecture, which means more waiting in line. The processing time for a first Carte de Sejour can range from two months in efficient prefectures to six months or longer in busy ones like Casablanca.

Your recepisse number will become your CIN (national identity) number, which is the Moroccan equivalent of a social security number. You will use this number for banking, contracts, and all administrative procedures for as long as you live in Morocco.

Costs and Fees

The official cost of a Carte de Sejour is 100 dirhams per year of validity, paid in fiscal stamps (timbres fiscaux) that you purchase at a tobacco shop. A first-time card is usually valid for one year, so the cost is 100 dirhams. Subsequent renewals may be granted for longer periods (two, five, or even ten years depending on your nationality and circumstances), with the fee scaling accordingly.

Beyond the official fee, factor in the cost of document legalization (a few dirhams per stamp), passport photos, criminal background check requests from your home country, and potentially a medical certificate. If you hire a translator for documents not in French or Arabic, add that cost as well. All in, the total out-of-pocket expense for a first application is typically between 500 and 1,500 dirhams, depending on how many documents need translation and legalization.

Practical Tips

  • Gather all documents before making your first appointment. Returning multiple times with partial files wastes time and goodwill.
  • The apostilled criminal record certificate from your home country has a validity of 3 months. Time your request so it does not expire before your appointment.
  • Recent local expat groups on Facebook are more current than any guide for prefecture-specific process details. What’s required in Marrakech may differ from Casablanca.
  • Bring the original and two photocopies of every document. The préfecture may keep originals or copies depending on the officer.
  • The récépissé (receipt of pending application) is your legal status document while you wait. Do not lose it.
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Accuracy note: Legal and administrative processes in Morocco can change. This article reflects general procedures at the time of writing. For anything that affects your residency status or legal standing, consult a qualified professional and verify requirements with the relevant authorities.