Is Taghazout worth visiting if you don't surf?
The short answer
Yes — Taghazout works for beach walks, café culture, yoga, and day trips (Paradise Valley, argan cooperatives, empty beaches north toward Cap Ghir). What it doesn't have: a medina, monuments, or nightlife. It's a small coastal village best suited to people who want simplicity, ocean, and slow days.
You don't have to get in the water to enjoy being near it.
Taghazout built its identity on surfing, but the village works for anyone who wants a slow Atlantic coast day. The beaches — Panoramas, Taghazout Beach, the quieter stretches toward Anchor Point — are wide, clean, and uncrowded outside of peak surf season. The 5-kilometre promenade south to Tamraght is a good morning walk with the Atlas foothills rising behind you.
The café culture is genuine. Taghazout runs on *nous nous* (half espresso, half steamed milk) and has developed a brunch-and-smoothie economy alongside the traditional tagine restaurants. Yoga studios and wellness retreats are everywhere — this is Morocco's centre for that particular kind of coastal wellness tourism.
Day trips fill easily. **Paradise Valley** — an hour inland — has natural rock pools set in a palm-lined canyon. The **Arganier Museum** on the road from Agadir documents the argan tree, its oil, and the women's cooperatives that produce it. The beaches north toward Cap Ghir are progressively emptier the further you go.
What Taghazout doesn't have: a medina, historical monuments, nightlife, or much to do after dark beyond eating and watching the sunset. It's a small village. If you need cultural density, this isn't where you'll find it. If you want to sit on a terrace watching the Atlantic turn gold at 6pm, there are worse places on the planet.