Marrakech Budget Tours

Imagine Marrakech as a lantern-lit maze: every turn asks a question—How much? How long? Is it safe?—while the answers hide like coins in the souk. This quick-FAQ guide slips those coins into your palm, turning rumors into roadmaps so your dirham travels further than the sunset over Jemaa el-Fna.
Marrakech Budget Tours

Address

N° 05 SOUIKET AMSAFFAH, Marrakesh 40000, Morocco

Phone

+212 6 67 17 49 90

Location of Marrakech Budget Tours
Reviews

5/5 (Read the Reviews)

MORE INFORMATION

I’ve been peppering the team at Marrakech Budget Tours with questions for years—everything from “Can you really see the Sahara for under 80 €?” to “Will I die of boredom on the drive?”—and every time they answer within minutes on WhatsApp (+212 6 67 17 49 90), show up on time at their tiny office on N° 05 Souiket Amsaffah, and deliver guides who somehow squeeze mint tea, camel selfies, and a sunrise over Erg Chebbi into a wallet-friendly 3-day loop that still feels private.
Monday8 AM–8 PM
Tuesday8 AM–8 PM
Wednesday8 AM–8 PM
Thursday8 AM–8 PM
Friday8 AM–8 PM
Saturday8 AM–8 PM
Sunday8 AM–8 PM

Frequently Asked Questions About Tours

How much should I realistically budget for a day-trip with Marrakech Budget Tours?

For most shared day-trips (Atlas, Ouzoud, Essaouira) you’re looking at €25–35 all-in: transport, local guide, and a simple lunch; the only extra is your bottle of water and the odd tip for the camel handler, so you can roam the whole day without breaking the €40 ceiling.

Do I have to haggle or will the quoted price on the website be the final one?

The numbers you see on www.marrakechbudgettours.com are fixed for shared groups—no last-minute “Euro here, Dirham there”; if you want a private van or a hammam add-on, they’ll tell you the new figure before you click confirm, so zero pressure to bargain in the souk-style.

Where exactly does the shuttle pick me up, and what if my riad has no street sign?

Drivers know every back-alley in the Medina; after you book, the WhatsApp team (+212 6 67 17 49 90) asks for your hotel/riad name and a Google pin, then they collect you at the nearest car-accessible gate—usually Bab Doukkala or Bab Ftouh—so you skip the maze.

Is it safe for solo female travelers, and can I join a group last-minute?

Groups are mixed, open, and run daily, so a solo traveler can literally book at 10 p.m. for the next sunrise; the guides are licensed and the vehicles tracked by GPS, meaning you get the safety of a bus tour with the flexibility of a backpacker—no single supplement either.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *