Is Marrakech safe after the 2023 earthquake?

The short answer

Yes. The medina was shaken but not destroyed. Most riads sustained cosmetic damage and have been repaired. The souks never closed. The lasting devastation is in remote mountain villages, not the city.

You'll see the cracks if you look. A repaired wall here, fresh plaster over old stone there, a minaret with visible restoration work. The earthquake happened — magnitude 6.8, September 2023, the strongest in Morocco in over a century. Nearly 3,000 people died. But the devastation was in the mountains, not the medina.

Marrakech's thick-walled construction proved largely resilient. The Koutoubia's minaret, built in the 12th century, survived intact. Most riads sustained cosmetic damage — cracked plaster, shifted tiles. Some required structural work. Very few were destroyed. By early 2024, the medina was largely repaired and fully operational.

The mountain villages are a different story. Amizmiz, Moulay Brahim, Talat N'Yacoub — communities where traditional stone houses collapsed onto sleeping families. Reconstruction continues. Roads that were cut have been rebuilt. But the infrastructure was fragile before the earthquake and is still recovering.

The question visitors should ask is not whether it's safe to come. It is. The question is whether to go beyond the medina and spend money where it's needed most. The mountain communities depend on the economic activity that visitors bring — trekking, guesthouse stays, guided walks. The medina will be fine without you. The villages might not be.