Common Scams in Morocco and How to Avoid Them

A guide to the most common scams targeting tourists in Morocco and practical, non-paranoid tips on how to recognize and avoid them.

Last updated: December 2025

Scams targeting tourists in Morocco are real and well-documented, but they are not unique to Morocco and they are largely avoidable with a bit of prior knowledge. The vast majority of interactions with Moroccan people are straightforwardly friendly. Knowing what the common setups are means you can recognize them early rather than only understanding what happened afterward.

The scams below are the ones most frequently reported in the main tourist cities, Marrakech and Fes in particular. None of them involve violence or physical threat. They rely on social pressure, confusion, and the natural human desire to avoid conflict. Recognizing that pattern is half the work of avoiding them.

At a Glance

Most common scam location Marrakech Jemaa el-Fna and Fes medina gates
Most common type False guide, commission carpet shop, fake directions
Best defense Polite firmness, agreed prices upfront, downloaded maps
Risk level Low for violent crime; moderate for petty scams in tourist areas
If scammed Walk away; police touristique available in main cities
Prevention Research beforehand, stay oriented, trust instincts

The False Guide

Someone approaches, asks where you are from, makes conversation, offers to show you something interesting. Within a few minutes you are in an unfamiliar part of the medina with someone who is now your guide. At the end of the tour, a fee is demanded, sometimes aggressively. The setup works because it feels like a friendly encounter until it doesn’t.

The response: decline companionship at the medina gates. ‘No thank you, I’m meeting friends’ or simple silence works. Once you have already walked with someone for ten minutes, agreeing a fee upfront retroactively and paying a small amount to end the interaction is usually the path of least friction.

The Carpet Shop Commission Circuit

This is systemic rather than a scam in the pure sense: many people in tourist areas, including taxi drivers, café workers, and hotel staff, receive commissions for delivering customers to certain shops. When someone offers to take you to ‘his cousin’s shop’ or a ‘special cooperative,’ the price you pay there will include a commission margin regardless of what you are told about fixed prices or government rates. This is not illegal and the goods are real. But you will pay more than you would walking in independently.

The Snake Charmer and Henna Photo Demand

On Jemaa el-Fna, snake charmers and henna artists are present for the purpose of extracting money from tourists. Stopping to look at a snake near a charmer, or letting a woman approach with henna paste, creates an expectation of payment that is enforced sometimes aggressively. The standard is simple: do not stop. If you want a photo, agree on a specific price in advance and pay only that amount.

The Restaurant Menu Bait

In heavily tourist-facing areas, restaurants sometimes quote verbal prices that do not match the written menu, or provide menus with prices different from what is charged. The defense: ask to see a menu with prices before sitting down, and check the final bill against the menu. Disputed bills at tourist restaurants are common enough that this is worth two minutes of attention.

The Fake Spice Vendor Tour

A variation on the false guide: someone offers to take you to the spice market or the tanneries ‘for free, just to see.’ The tannery view terraces require going through leather shops. The spice ‘tour’ ends with a high-pressure selling session. Neither of these is inherently scammy but both are worth going into with clear expectations: you will be asked to buy something, the prices will reflect that expectation, and you can say no.

The Taxi Non-Meter Overcharge

Petit taxis in Marrakech and Fes sometimes refuse to use the meter and quote fixed rates to tourists that are two to three times the metered fare. Insisting on the meter is your right. If the driver refuses, get out and find another taxi. Careem and InDriver are the most practical alternative in cities where these apps operate, as the price is set before you start moving.

The Fuel Scam at Gas Stations

This one catches drivers off guard. At some gas stations, particularly along rural highways, the attendant may not fully reset the pump before filling your tank. The meter starts at a higher number, and you pay for fuel you did not receive. The prevention is simple: watch the pump reset to zero before the attendant begins filling. Most gas stations are honest, but this scam is reported frequently enough on the Tangier-Marrakech and Marrakech-Ouarzazate routes to be worth watching for.

A related variation occurs when the attendant uses slight-of-hand while making change, counting out bills quickly and hoping you do not notice a missing 50 or 100 dirham note. Count your change carefully, especially when paying with large bills. This is not unique to Morocco and happens in countries worldwide, but it is more likely at highway stops with high tourist traffic.

How to Respond Without Escalating

The most effective response to any scam attempt is calm, clear refusal. A firm “la, shukran” (no, thank you) or “non, merci” with a smile and continued walking works in the vast majority of situations. Do not engage in lengthy arguments or get angry. Scammers rely on confusion, guilt, and social pressure. Walking away removes all three.

If someone grabs your arm, leads you through alleys claiming to know a shortcut, or insists they were your official guide, stop, say no clearly, and walk in the opposite direction toward a main street or any open shop. Shop owners are generally helpful if you look lost or uncomfortable. Asking a shopkeeper for directions is almost always safer than accepting help from someone who approached you on the street.

Keep perspective. The vast majority of Moroccans you interact with, from hotel staff and taxi drivers to restaurant owners and shopkeepers, are genuinely kind and honest. The scam operators are a small minority concentrated in the highest-tourist-traffic areas of a handful of cities. In smaller cities and rural areas, aggressive scams are virtually nonexistent. Moroccans in general are hospitable people, and most interactions with locals will be positive.

Practical Tips

  • Download an offline map of the medina (Maps.me works well) before you go in. Navigation confidence removes the vulnerability that street touts rely on.
  • Agree prices upfront for any service: taxis, photos, guides, restaurant meals. Do it before, not after.
  • The tourist police (police touristique) in major cities do respond to tourist complaints. Having the number is useful: 0524 384601 in Marrakech.
  • Not every person who approaches you in a medina has a scam in mind. But the ones who do rely on appearing like the ones who don’t. ‘No thank you’ is never rude.
  • The first price offered for anything in a souk is not the real price. This is not a scam, it is the negotiation culture. The scam version is when the final agreed price is then disputed at checkout.
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Accuracy note: Travel information, prices, and practical details in Morocco can change. This article reflects conditions at the time of writing. Verify current details before planning your trip.