Can you show affection in public in Morocco?

The short answer

Public displays of affection are culturally out of place and technically punishable under Article 483 of the Penal Code. This applies to everyone — Moroccan and foreign, married and unmarried. Walking side by side is fine. Kissing or embracing in public draws disapproval and, rarely, legal attention. Private space is where intimacy lives in Moroccan culture.

Your riad has thick walls for a reason. Use them.

Morocco draws a very clear line between what belongs to private space and what belongs to everyone. Affection — even between married couples — sits firmly on the private side. This isn't a rule aimed at visitors. Watch Moroccan newlyweds in the medina: they walk together, they're clearly *together*, but the tenderness is kept for home. The street is shared space, governed by a collective sense of modesty that runs deep. Once you see it that way, it stops feeling like a restriction and starts making a kind of beautiful sense.

The law does back this up. Article 483 of the Penal Code covers *outrage à la pudeur publique* — public indecency — with penalties of one month to two years. It's been used against couples of all kinds for kissing or prolonged physical contact in public. Article 490 criminalises sexual relations outside marriage. Tourists are rarely targeted, but the legal basis exists, and enforcement gets less predictable the further you are from tourist areas.

The calibration is this: walking close, a light touch, a hand on the small of the back — all fine. Kissing, sitting wrapped around each other, anything that would make a Moroccan grandmother look away — that's where you've crossed the line. The test is gentler than you'd think. Just keep the visible part warm rather than hot.

Behind your riad door, on a private rooftop, in your room with the lantern light and the sound of the courtyard fountain below — entirely different world. Morocco essentially invented the concept of the interior paradise. The architecture is designed to give you privacy that the street never will. Couples who've been here a while tend to say the privacy makes it better, not worse.