What is the tourist tax in Morocco?

The short answer

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.

Ah, the checkout surprise. You thought the bill was settled and then a little extra line appears. It's not an invention — it's a government levy. But someone probably should have mentioned it earlier.

Morocco has a *taxe de séjour* — a city tax on overnight stays, charged per person, per night. For riads and guesthouses it runs around 25 MAD (roughly €2.50 per person). Luxury hotels pay more — up to 30+ MAD depending on classification and city. Children under 12 skip it entirely. It's a government levy under Law 30-89, collected by every licensed accommodation and funnelled to the municipality for tourism infrastructure. Completely legitimate. Not negotiable.

Some properties include the tax in their room rate. Others don't. And there's no rule about which approach to take. So a room listed at €80 might mean €80 total at one riad and €80 plus €5 per person per night at another. For a couple staying four nights, that's a €40 difference materialising at the worst possible moment — when you're trying to leave for the airport.

Booking confirmations usually mention *taxe de séjour*, *city tax*, or *local tax*. If you spot "exclusive of local taxes" in the fine print, that's your cue. If nothing is mentioned, a quick message to your host before arrival clears it up in seconds. The tax is usually paid in cash — dirhams — at check-in or check-out. No drama required.