Common Questions
Arrival without the scams, fair prices, the crowd clock, souk days, Akchour, and the honest story of the blue.
Practical answers for visiting — and living around — Chefchaouen. Prices and times come from local sources, checked on the date at the bottom; treat dirham figures as the going rate, not a quote.
How do I get here from Tangier without being overcharged?
By bus: CTM and other companies run Tangier–Chefchaouen several times a day — about 2.5 hours, 50–65 dirhams. Book a day ahead in summer.
By shared grand taxi: the legitimate rank is Park Autasa, next to Tangier's main bus station (gare routière). A seat in a shared taxi runs around 70 dirhams; hiring the whole car, 700–850.
The known trap: drivers waiting at Tangier's train station push private transfers at 700+ dirhams, or quietly detour via Tetouan. If you arrive by train, take a petit taxi to the gare routière and pick up the bus or a shared taxi there.
I've arrived at the bus station. Now what?
The bus station sits below town. The walk up to the medina takes 15–20 minutes, all uphill — fine without bags, sweaty with them. A petit taxi (the blue ones) to Bab El Ain costs 15–20 dirhams.
If you're staying in the medina, message your riad before you arrive: the lanes are too narrow for cars, and most places will meet you at the nearest gate and carry your bags from there. It's the single biggest difference between a smooth arrival and a miserable one.
Where do I park?
Guarded lots sit just outside the medina walls — expect 10–20 dirhams a day, with the handiest ones near Bab El Ain. The medina itself is pedestrian; don't try to drive in.
When is the town quiet?
There's a daily rhythm and a yearly one.
Daily: tour buses fill the medina from roughly 10am to 5pm. Before 9am and after 5pm, the town belongs to the people who live in it — those are the hours to walk it.
Yearly: July and August are peak, and the season proper starts around the end of May. From November to March, Chefchaouen is a quiet mountain town that happens to be blue.
Is a day trip from Fes worth it?
Honestly: it's punishing. Fes is about four hours each way, so a day trip buys you eight-plus hours on the road for the medina's most crowded window.
The consistent advice from people who've done both: stay a night. You get the evening, the dawn and the sunset viewpoint — the hours day-trippers never see — and your money reaches the guesthouses and kitchens that live on overnight visitors.
When is the souk (weekly market)?
Monday and Thursday, at the edge of the medina. Farmers come down from the Rif villages with produce, herbs, cheese and animals. It's the town's working market — cheaper and more local than the medina's shops.
What's the real story with the blue?
It's argued about at home. A local historian has called the all-blue branding recent and commercial — twenty years ago many houses were white with blue accents. Residents pushed back hard, describing the traditional lime-and-indigo wash on walls going back generations.
Both things seem true: the blue is genuinely old, and there is much more of it than there used to be, because visitors came for it. Either way, the paint is on people's front doors — ask before you photograph anyone, and don't pose in doorways.
Someone offered me hashish. Is that legal here now?
No — not for you. The province is one of Morocco's historic cannabis-growing areas, and a 2021 law allows licensed farming for medical and industrial use. That law covers farmers and processors; it does not make street sale or possession legal, and possession remains a criminal offence for visitors.
The offers in the lanes are persistent but rarely aggressive. A polite, firm "la, shukran" (no, thank you) and walking on ends it.
How do I get to Akchour and the waterfalls?
Shared grand taxis make the roughly 45-minute run from town — go early, because the gorge draws around 120,000 visitors a year and the path is busy by late morning.
What the postcard doesn't show: volunteers have hauled more than eight tonnes of litter out of Akchour since 2014, and there are no bins and little enforcement on the trail. Whatever you carry in, carry out.
Is the water situation really that serious?
Yes. The region has been in drought since 2018 — it's part of why villages in the province have emptied toward Tangier. The town's own supply was secured by a major new treatment plant in 2022, so taps run, but this is a water-stressed place: short showers and reused towels aren't hotel theatre here.
Anything I should know about Fridays?
Friday midday prayer is the week's main service, and the town runs on that clock: many workshops, smaller shops and some restaurants close from late morning to mid-afternoon. It's a good morning for a quiet walk and a bad afternoon for shopping.
What are the emergency numbers?
Police: 190 from a mobile (19 from a landline). Ambulance and fire (Protection Civile): 150 from a mobile (15 from a landline). Gendarmerie Royale, for outside town and on the roads: 177.
The Who to Call tool has the hospital, water and electricity contacts.