Last updated: November 2025
Morocco is relatively straightforward to enter for citizens of most Western countries. The country does not require a visa for short-term visits from over 60 nationalities, including all EU and Schengen countries, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and most of South America. If you hold one of those passports and you are visiting as a tourist, you show up at the border, get stamped in, and you have 90 days.
The situations where entry becomes complicated are specific: certain passport nationalities require a visa in advance, the 90-day limit is sometimes enforced more strictly than it once was, and the distinction between visiting as a tourist versus residing or working illegally is something that border officers are increasingly attentive to. Understanding the rules clearly before you travel prevents problems.
At a Glance
| Visa-free access | 60+ nationalities including EU, US, UK, Canada, Australia |
| Standard stay allowed | 90 days per entry (some nationalities 30 days) |
| Passport validity required | 6 months beyond entry date recommended |
| Entry points | Airport, land border (Spain/Ceuta/Melilla), ferry port |
| Border stamp location | Passport; keep your entry card |
| Overstay consequences | Fine, potential travel ban, difficulty renewing future stays |
Who Can Enter Without a Visa
Citizens of the European Union, Schengen Area countries, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and the Gulf states (among many others) can enter Morocco without a visa for tourism. The standard period granted is 90 days. On arrival, the border officer stamps your passport and fills in an entry card that you should keep with your documents until you leave.
The 90 days is counted from the date of entry and applies per entry. There is no formal requirement to be outside Morocco for a minimum period between visits, but border officers have discretion and patterns of repeated short visits can trigger scrutiny. If you are planning multiple visits in the same year, having a clear explanation of your travel purpose is sensible.
Who Needs a Visa in Advance
Citizens of many African countries, several Asian countries, and some others require a visa to enter Morocco. The Moroccan embassy or consulate in your home country handles visa applications. Requirements typically include a completed application form, passport photos, proof of accommodation, financial means evidence, and a return ticket. Processing times vary but allow at least two weeks.
Algerian citizens face a unique restriction: the land border between Algeria and Morocco has been closed since 1994 and shows no sign of reopening. Algerian nationals can enter by air or sea but not overland.
What Happens at the Border
Arrival by air is the most straightforward. At the immigration desk you present your passport, receive a stamp, and fill in an arrival card if one is offered (practice varies by airport). The question about purpose of visit should be answered as ‘tourism.’ Officers occasionally ask about planned activities or proof of accommodation, particularly for solo young male travelers, but this is routine rather than suspicious.
Land border crossings at Ceuta and Melilla, Ceuta and Melilla on Morocco’s northern coast, can be busy and occasionally chaotic. The Beni Enzar crossing at Melilla and the Tarajal crossing at Ceuta are the main pedestrian entry points. Crossing by car adds a wait for vehicle inspection. Patience is the only required resource at these crossings.
The 90-Day Limit: What Happens If You Overstay
Overstaying your 90 days is technically an offense that carries a fine at the border when you eventually leave. The fine is not enormous, but overstaying can create complications for future entries and in theory can result in a formal ban. The Moroccan authorities have become more systematic about tracking this in recent years.
For those who want to stay longer than 90 days, the options are: doing a visa run (leaving and re-entering), applying for a visa extension while in Morocco (rarely granted for tourists), or applying for a residency permit (the Carte de Séjour). The staying longer in Morocco guide covers these options in detail.
The eVisa System (AEVM)
Morocco launched an electronic visa system in 2022, available through the official portal at acces-maroc.ma. The eVisa is a single-entry authorization valid for 30 days, aimed at nationals who do not qualify for visa-free entry. Eligibility requires either a valid residence permit from a qualifying country (US, Canada, EU/Schengen, UK, Australia, Japan) or a valid multiple-entry visa from one of these countries.
The application is completed online and requires a digital passport photo, a scan of your passport data page, proof of accommodation in Morocco, proof of travel insurance, and a copy of your qualifying visa or residence permit. The processing fee is approximately 220 MAD (about 22 USD) for a single entry. Processing typically takes three to five business days, though the official website advises applying at least two weeks before travel.
It is worth noting that the eVisa covers tourism and business visits only. It does not grant the right to work, study, or reside in Morocco. For stays beyond 30 days, holders would need to apply for an extension at a local police station, though the extension process for eVisa holders is not as well established as for visa-free travelers.
Passport and Documentation Details
Your passport must be valid for at least six months beyond your planned entry date and must have at least one blank page for the entry stamp. Moroccan border officers will occasionally check for return tickets or proof of accommodation, though this is not consistent. Having a hotel booking confirmation or a printed itinerary available is prudent.
Customs declarations are required if you are carrying more than the equivalent of 100,000 MAD in foreign currency (approximately 10,000 USD). You must declare the amount on a form provided at the border. Failure to declare can result in confiscation of the undeclared portion. Moroccan dirhams cannot legally be imported or exported, so do not bring dirhams from a previous trip.
If you lose your passport while in Morocco, contact your country’s embassy or consulate immediately. The US Consulate in Casablanca and the US Embassy in Rabat can issue emergency travel documents. Most European embassies are located in Rabat. Obtaining a police report for the lost passport is required and should be done at the nearest commissariat (police station) in the area where the loss occurred.
Practical Tips
- Keep your entry arrival card in your passport for the duration of your stay. You may be asked for it at hotels and when you exit.
- Ensure your passport has at least six months of validity beyond your planned entry date. Morocco enforces this and airlines will deny boarding.
- For visa-required nationalities, apply a minimum of three weeks before travel to allow for processing time.
- The land borders at Ceuta and Melilla can close unpredictably during periods of tension or political events. Have a contingency plan if crossing overland.
- If you are asked at the border about work or income sources and you do remote work, ‘tourism’ is the correct answer for a 90-day stay.
Have questions about entry requirements or visas? Ask the MoroccoMag community for real-world experiences.
Accuracy note: Visa rules, residency requirements, and administrative procedures in Morocco can change without much notice. The information above reflects the situation at the time of writing. Always verify current requirements with the relevant Moroccan authorities or a qualified immigration professional before making plans.