Guide 06 of 08

The Rituals

What nobody explains before you arrive

Hammam, henna, shoes, photography, Ramadan, Eid, and what to wear.

11 observations

01

How does a Moroccan hammam actually work?

Three rooms, each hotter than the last. You steam, lather with black olive soap, and then someone scrubs your skin with a coarse glove until visible rolls of dead skin come off. It's startling the first time. Locals do this weekly — it's hygiene infrastructure, not a spa experience. Entry runs 15–20 dirhams.

You strip to your underwear in a changing room with strangers, walk into a steam-filled stone chamber, sit on the floor, and a person you've never met scrubs your skin off with a rough glove until grey rolls of dead cells pile up on your arms like eraser shavings.

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02

What's the difference between a local hammam and a spa hammam?

A local hammam costs 20 dirhams. You sit on the floor with strangers, someone scrubs you hard, and you emerge feeling like you've been reassembled. A spa hammam costs 400–800 dirhams, offers private rooms, couples treatments, softer scrubs, and English-speaking staff. The spa removes the friction. The local hammam is the friction.

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03

Should you take your shoes off when entering a Moroccan home?

In homes, riad living areas, and mosques — yes. The cue is almost always visible: a row of shoes near the door, a mat, or your host already in slippers. Shops and commercial spaces don't expect it. Zellige tiles and handwoven rugs are kept meticulously clean, and shoes stay at the threshold.

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04

What should I wear in Marrakech?

Shoulders and knees covered gets you through anywhere comfortably. Loose, light fabrics make more sense than sunscreen in 42°C. Closed-toe shoes survive medina cobblestones better than sandals. Women don't need to cover their hair. The dress code is as much about heat management as culture.

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05

Can you photograph people in Morocco?

Photography etiquette in Morocco runs on one principle: ask first. Point at your camera, raise your eyebrows — most people will nod yes or wave no. Performers in the squares expect 10–20 MAD for the privilege. Architecture, food, and market stalls are generally fine. It's the faces that carry weight.

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06

Why do women grab your hand and start drawing henna on it?

Women near Jemaa el-Fna grab your hand and apply henna paste before you've said a word — once it's on your skin, you're expected to pay 200–500 dirhams. The paste goes on fast. Pulling your hand back early is the only thing that stops it. Real henna art happens in completely different settings, usually arranged through a riad.

You're walking through Jemaa el-Fna or near a mosque entrance. A woman smiles, takes your hand, and before you've said yes, she's squeezing henna paste onto your skin. You didn't agree to this. She's already drawing.

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07

Why does time feel elastic here?

Morocco operates on relationship time, not clock time. Meetings start when everyone arrives. Meals happen when food is ready. Schedules serve social harmony, not efficiency. The discomfort tourists feel is the gap between industrial time and social time.

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08

What is Ramadan, and how does it affect your visit?

The Islamic month of fasting from dawn to sunset, observed by most Moroccans. In 2026 it falls approximately 18 February – 19 March. Most tourist businesses in urban areas stay open. Shops may close briefly at sunset so staff can break their fast. Visitors aren't expected to fast — most are simply discreet about eating and drinking in public during daylight hours.

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09

What happens during Eid al-Adha in Morocco?

Eid al-Adha (Eid el-Kbir or Fête du Mouton) is Morocco's most important religious holiday. Families sacrifice a sheep to commemorate the Prophet Ibrahim's obedience to God. In 2026 it falls around 27 May; in 2027, around 17 May. Most urban businesses stay open but may close for part of the morning. The holiday lasts two to three days, with festive atmosphere for about a week.

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10

When are public holidays in Morocco, and do shops close on Fridays?

Morocco has 11 fixed public holidays and 4 Islamic holidays that shift annually by the lunar calendar. Friday is the weekly prayer day — banks and government offices close, souks and tourist-facing shops carry on. During Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, some businesses close for up to three days. The rhythm is different, not disrupted.

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11

What is the tourist tax in Morocco?

Morocco charges a taxe de séjour of approximately 25 MAD (~€2.50) per guest per night. Children under 12 are exempt. Some properties fold it into the room rate; others add it at checkout, which is when most people discover it exists. It's a government levy under Law 30-89 — the equivalent of a city tax you'd find in most European capitals.

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