Morocco Food and Culture

Hammam in Morocco: What to Expect at a Traditional Bathhouse


By Pro Morocco Tours 7 min read Updated March 2026

A hammam in Morocco is not a spa. It is a bathhouse — a centuries-old institution at the centre of Moroccan community life, used weekly by most Moroccans as a practical and social ritual. First-time visitors often do not know what to expect and either avoid it or arrive underprepared. This guide covers the process step by step, the difference between public and riad hammams, what to bring, and what makes it worth doing at least once on a Morocco trip.

Two types

Public Hammam vs Riad Hammam: Which to Choose


Option 1

Public Hammam

15 to 30 MAD entry + tip
  • Used by local Moroccan families weekly
  • Separate sections for men and women
  • Basic facilities — marble slabs, hot and cold water
  • A kessa attendant scrubs you (extra tip)
  • Buy black soap at the entrance or nearby
  • More authentic experience
  • Requires confidence navigating without English
  • Best done with local guidance the first time
Option 2

Riad or Tourist Hammam

150 to 400 MAD — book in advance
  • Private or semi-private session
  • English-speaking staff and clear instructions
  • All products provided — soap, kessa glove, ghassoul clay
  • Optional massage after the scrub
  • Cleaner facilities and consistent temperature control
  • Less authentic but far more comfortable first experience
  • Book through your riad or via the hotel concierge
  • Best choice for first-time visitors

The recommendation for a first hammam experience in Morocco is the riad or tourist version. The public hammam is the more culturally significant experience and worth doing on a return visit — but for a first time, the unfamiliarity of the environment combined with no shared language makes it easy to do things wrong or feel uncomfortable. The riad hammam gives you the experience in a guided, comfortable context and still uses the traditional products and process.


Step by step

What Happens Inside a Moroccan Hammam


The hammam process follows a consistent sequence regardless of whether you are in a neighbourhood hammam in the Fes medina or a riad bathhouse in Marrakech. The products and the physical process are the same — what changes is the environment and the level of guidance.

1
Undress and enter the warm room
You change in a small anteroom and enter the hammam wearing your swimsuit or wrapped in a fouta (a lightweight cotton sarong). Most riad hammams provide a fouta. The warm room prepares your skin for the heat — spend 5 to 10 minutes here before moving to the hot room.
2
Soak in the hot room
The hot room (al-bayt al-harr) operates at around 40 to 50 degrees Celsius in a traditional hammam. The steam and heat open your pores and soften dead skin cells in preparation for the scrub. Spend 10 to 15 minutes here. Drink the water provided — it is easy to dehydrate in the heat.
3
Black soap application
Beldi or black soap — a thick, olive oil-based soap made from fermented olives with a distinctive dark colour and earthy smell — is applied to the entire body and left on for several minutes to continue softening the skin. It is not rinsed off immediately. This is the stage most Western visitors find unfamiliar — it looks and smells quite different from commercial soap but does not sting or irritate.
4
The kessa scrub
A kessa is a rough exfoliating mitt worn over the hand. An attendant (or you, if doing it yourself) scrubs the soap off in long firm strokes. This removes the dead skin cells loosened by the heat — the quantity of dead skin that rolls off is genuinely surprising the first time. The pressure is firm but adjustable. In a riad hammam, the attendant will ask how hard you want the scrub.
5
Ghassoul clay mask (optional)
Ghassoul is a volcanic clay from the Atlas Mountains used as a body and hair mask. It is mixed with rose water and applied after the scrub, left for a few minutes, and rinsed off. It leaves the skin noticeably smooth. More common in riad hammams than in public hammams. Optional but worth doing if available.
6
Rinse and cool down
A thorough rinse with warm water, then progressively cooler water to close the pores. At a public hammam this is done at marble basins with buckets. At a riad hammam, a shower. Spend a few minutes in the cool room before dressing — standing up too quickly in the heat causes dizziness.
7
Rest and mint tea
After a hammam, most Moroccans rest wrapped in towels in the anteroom for 15 to 20 minutes before dressing. At a riad hammam, this stage typically includes mint tea. Do not rush it — the post-hammam rest is part of why Moroccans do this weekly. The combination of heat, scrub, and cooling leaves the skin and the body in a state that is genuinely different from a shower.

What to bring

What to Bring to a Hammam in Morocco


  • Swimsuit or underwear you do not mind getting wet — this is what you wear inside
  • Flip flops — essential for the changing room and the hammam floor
  • A change of clothes for after — you will want clean clothes after the scrub
  • Small change for tips — tip the scrub attendant at a public hammam (20 to 30 MAD is standard)
  • A towel — provided at riad hammams, bring your own at public hammams
  • Black soap and a kessa glove — buy at the hammam entrance or at a pharmacy beforehand for around 10 to 15 MAD each
  • Water bottle — you will sweat significantly in the heat
What riad hammams provide At a riad or tourist hammam, black soap, the kessa glove, ghassoul clay, rose water, a fouta wrap, and towels are all typically provided. The booking fee covers the full session including these products. Ask when booking what is included so you know what to bring and what to leave at the riad.

The Right Time to Visit a Hammam on a Morocco Desert Tour

The hammam makes most sense either at the beginning of your Morocco trip — in Marrakech before the desert tour starts — or at the end, on your return day. After two or three days on dusty roads, a camel trek in the dunes, and desert camp nights, a proper hammam scrub in Marrakech on the final day is genuinely the right way to end the journey. Your riad can book it for you on the morning of your return — tell them you want to go after arriving back from the desert and they will arrange a session for the afternoon.

Health note Avoid the hammam if you have open cuts, sunburn, sensitive skin conditions, or respiratory issues that might be affected by steam. Pregnant women should check with their doctor before visiting a traditional hammam. The high heat is not suitable for everyone.

Experience Morocco Beyond the Desert

Pro Morocco Tours plans desert tours that include the best of southern Morocco — and your driver-guide can recommend the right hammam in Marrakech for your first visit.

Browse Morocco Desert Tours