Chefchaouen Travel Guide: Morocco’s Blue City
Chefchaouen is Morocco’s most visually distinctive city — a mountain medina in the Rif ranges where the buildings, stairs, walls, and doorways are painted in graduated shades of blue from pale powder to deep cobalt. It is the most photographed city in Morocco after Marrakech and the one that surprises visitors most, because the photographs, however good, do not convey the scale of the blueness or the quality of the mountain light that falls through its narrow lanes.
Why it is blueWhy Is Chefchaouen Blue?
The honest answer is that the origin of Chefchaouen’s blue walls is contested. The most commonly repeated explanation is that the blue paint was introduced by Jewish refugees who fled Spain during the Inquisition in 1492 and settled in Chefchaouen — blue representing the sky and heaven in Jewish tradition. A more recent explanation attributes the practice to the 1930s when the city’s Jewish community systematically painted buildings blue, partly as a mosquito deterrent (the insects are reportedly repelled by certain blue pigments) and partly as a visual marker of the Jewish quarter.
What is certain is that the practice has been maintained and extended throughout the 20th and 21st centuries — partly through genuine community tradition and increasingly because blue Chefchaouen became the most shared image from Morocco on social media from around 2015 onward. The city’s authorities actively maintain and encourage the painting as a tourism differentiator. The result is a medina where every surface, every staircase, and every flower pot is part of the same chromatic scheme.
What to do
What to Do in Chefchaouen
Chefchaouen’s medina is small enough to navigate without a guide and compact enough that getting lost is a 10-minute problem rather than a serious one. Walk up. The medina climbs the hillside and the higher lanes are quieter, more residential, and more photographically interesting than the lower tourist zone.
The main square at the centre of the medina with the 15th-century Grand Mosque and a row of cafe terraces. This is the social centre of the city — where locals and visitors share the same space. Morning coffee here before the day-trippers arrive is the best hour in Chefchaouen.
A 30-minute walk uphill from the medina through the cemetery leads to the ruined Spanish Mosque on the hill above the city. The view from here — the blue medina below, the Rif mountains behind, the valley extending north — is the best in Chefchaouen. Go at sunset.
A 10-minute walk from the medina gate, the Ras el-Ma spring and small waterfall is where local women do laundry and children play in the cold mountain water. A completely non-touristy spot that shows another side of the city. The walk up the stream above it continues into the cedar forest on the hillside.
Chefchaouen is one of the best places in Morocco to buy woven blankets, djellabas, and Rif-style woven bags. The craft tradition here is distinct from the southern Morocco souks — cooler colours, different weaving patterns, and a less aggressive sales environment than Marrakech or Fes.
The 15th-century kasbah on the main square houses a small ethnographic museum with good exhibits on the Rif Berber culture of the surrounding mountains. The rooftop terrace has views over the medina roofscape. Entry is around 10 MAD and the kasbah garden is worth seeing even if you skip the museum.
Practical information
Practical Guide to Visiting Chefchaouen
When to Visit
Chefchaouen is at 600 metres altitude in the Rif mountains and has a distinctly different climate from the rest of Morocco. Spring (March to May) and autumn (September to November) are the most comfortable — warm days, cool evenings, and the mountain light at its best. Summer weekends bring large numbers of Moroccan domestic tourists, which changes the atmosphere of the medina significantly. Winter is cold — temperatures can drop below 5°C at night — but the city is quieter than at any other time of year and the mountain mist creates an entirely different visual quality.
How Long to Spend
One full day and one night is the minimum to see Chefchaouen properly. Arrive by early afternoon, spend the late afternoon walking the medina, watch the sunset from the Spanish Mosque viewpoint, eat dinner in the plaza, and wake up the following morning before the day-trip groups arrive from Fes and Tangier. Two nights gives you a free morning for the Ras el-Ma walk and the cedar forest above the city.
Getting There
Chefchaouen is 4 hours from Tangier, 3.5 hours from Fes, and approximately 5 hours from Casablanca by private vehicle. It sits naturally between Tangier and Fes on a north-to-south Morocco circuit. On Pro Morocco Tours 9-day and 10-day circuits from Casablanca, Chefchaouen is Day 2 or 3 — the overnight that transitions from the Atlantic coast to the imperial cities before the drive south to the Sahara.
Visit Chefchaouen on a Morocco Desert Tour
Pro Morocco Tours 9-day and 10-day circuits from Casablanca include an overnight in Chefchaouen before the drive south through Fes and on to the Sahara at Erg Chebbi.
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