Quick Answer — Ait Ben Haddou

Ksar of Ait Ben Haddou is a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1987) in southeastern Morocco, 30 km from Ouarzazate and 180 km from Marrakech. An ancient fortified village (ksar) on the trans-Saharan trade route, built from the 11th century. Filming location for Gladiator, Game of Thrones (Yunkai), The Mummy, Prince of Persia, Kingdom of Heaven, and more. Entry: FREE. Visit: 1.5–2 hours. Best light: early morning or late afternoon. MDT: day trip from €21. Also included as Day 1 on every MDT desert tour.

Key Facts

Ait Ben Haddou at a glance
FactDetail
UNESCO statusWorld Heritage Site — inscribed 1987
TypeKsar (fortified village) — not a single kasbah
BuiltFrom the 11th century
LocationSoutheastern Morocco, on the Ounila River
From Ouarzazate30 km / ~30 minutes
From Marrakech180 km / 3.5–4 hrs via Tizi n’Tichka
Entry feeFREE — no ticket required
Visit duration1.5–2 hours
Famous filmsGladiator, Game of Thrones (Yunkai), The Mummy, Prince of Persia
RiverOunila River — cross via stepping stones or footbridge
Best seasonSpring (Mar–May) and autumn (Sep–Nov)
MDT tourDay trip from €21 · Included on every desert tour

Ksar vs Kasbah

Ait Ben Haddou is technically a ksar (Arabic: قصر, plural ksour) — a fortified village containing multiple dwellings, communal areas, granaries, a mosque, and defensive walls. A kasbah, by contrast, is a single fortified house or palace belonging to one family. The distinction matters: a ksar houses an entire community; a kasbah houses one family. In practice, both terms are widely used for Ait Ben Haddou — tourism signs, maps, and guidebooks use “Kasbah Ait Ben Haddou” freely. UNESCO’s official designation is “Ksar of Ait-Ben-Haddou.”

History

Ancient ksar of Ait Ben Haddou viewed through a stone archway showing mudbrick towers and fortified walls
Through the archway — the fortified ksar of Ait Ben Haddou, built from the 11th century

Ait Ben Haddou dates from the 11th century and served as a vital stop on the trans-Saharan trade route — the network of caravan paths linking the Sahara Desert to Marrakech and the Atlantic coast. Traders carried gold, salt, spices, and enslaved people through the Ounila River valley, and Ait Ben Haddou was a key point for rest, trade, and resupply. The ksar’s fortified walls protected the community and its stored goods.

The village reached its peak in the 17th century under the powerful Glaoui family — regional lords who controlled the mountain passes between the Sahara and Marrakech. The Glaoui expanded and reinforced many kasbahs and ksour across the region. Today, Ait Ben Haddou remains the finest and most complete example of ksar architecture in pre-Saharan Morocco — the reason UNESCO inscribed it in 1987.

Films Shot at Ait Ben Haddou

Game of Thrones filming scene at Ait Ben Haddou showing crowds and the ksar walls
Game of Thrones filming at Ait Ben Haddou — the ksar served as the city of Yunkai
Films and TV shows shot at Ait Ben Haddou
Film / ShowYearRole
Gladiator2000Scenes of Maximus’s journey through the Roman provinces
Game of Thrones2012–2014Yunkai — “the Yellow City,” Slaver’s Bay
The Mummy1999Ancient Egyptian city scenes
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time2010Persian city settings
Kingdom of Heaven2005Crusader-era Jerusalem approach
Alexander2004Ancient Middle Eastern landscapes
Jesus of Nazareth1977Biblical-era village scenes
Babel2006Moroccan village sequences
The Jewel of the Nile1985North African adventure settings

Why filmmakers choose Ait Ben Haddou: The ksar has a timeless appearance — no visible modern structures, power lines, or satellite dishes. It can pass convincingly for ancient Rome, Persia, Egypt, or a fantasy world. The nearby Atlas Film Studios in Ouarzazate (30 km away, founded 1983) provide production infrastructure — props, sets, and crew — making the region Morocco’s filmmaking hub. Ouarzazate earned its nickname “the Hollywood of Africa” for this reason.

Game of Thrones at Ait Ben Haddou

Fans of Game of Thrones will recognise Ait Ben Haddou as Yunkai — the “Yellow City” of Slaver’s Bay. The ksar appears in Seasons 3 and 4 during Daenerys Targaryen’s campaign to liberate the slave cities. The ksar’s ancient fortified walls and dramatic hilltop setting were a convincing stand-in for the fictional city. Walking through the ksar today, the resemblance is unmistakable — especially from the summit, looking down over the walls toward the river.

What to See & Do

Ksar of Ait Ben Haddou across the Ounila River with stepping stones in the foreground
The iconic view — Ait Ben Haddou across the Ounila River, reached via stepping stones or footbridge
What to see and do at Ait Ben Haddou and nearby
ActivityTimeNotes
Climb to the hilltop~30 min upPanoramic views of the ksar, river, and mountains. The highlight.
Walk the alleys30–60 minWinding lanes, terraced houses, granaries, mudbrick detail.
Cross the Ounila River5 minStepping stones (dry season) or footbridge. The iconic photo spot.
Artisan shops20–30 minBerber crafts, silver, pottery, paintings. Inside the ksar.
PhotographyAll visitBest light: early morning or late afternoon. Sunset is spectacular.
Ouarzazate + Atlas Film StudiosHalf day30 km away. Studio tours ~50 MAD. MDT day trip includes both.
Todra GorgeDay trip~2.5 hrs east. Dramatic canyon. Often combined on desert tours.
Skoura OasisHalf day~1.5 hrs east. Palm groves, kasbahs. Road to the desert.

Architecture & UNESCO

Close-up of Ait Ben Haddou's mudbrick towers showing the detailed earthen construction
Mudbrick (pisé) towers — the signature earthen architecture of Ait Ben Haddou

Ait Ben Haddou is built from pisé (tabya in Arabic) — a traditional earth-and-straw construction technique that has been used in southern Morocco for centuries. The walls are thick, providing natural insulation against the extreme desert heat. The ksar is a layered structure: terraced houses climbing the hillside, connected by narrow alleys and stairways, with communal granaries (ighrems) at the top for secure grain storage. A mosque, open squares, and defensive towers complete the layout.

UNESCO inscribed Ait Ben Haddou in 1987 as the finest example of ksar architecture in the pre-Saharan region. The earthen structures are vulnerable to erosion — heavy rains and climate change pose ongoing threats. Restoration projects funded by UNESCO and the Moroccan government have stabilised key sections, but the work is continuous. Visitors are encouraged to walk carefully, stay on marked paths, and not lean on fragile walls.

Visiting: Practical Info

Entry: FREE — no ticket required. One of the few UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the world with completely free access. The ksar is open daily from sunrise to sunset.

Duration: 1.5–2 hours is typical. Cross the river, explore the alleys, climb to the summit, browse the artisan shops, and take photos. Photography enthusiasts may spend longer.

Guides: Unofficial local guides offer their services at the entrance — typically ~100–150 MAD (€10–15). They are knowledgeable about the history and architecture but are not mandatory. Decide before entering to avoid repeated offers inside.

What to bring: Comfortable shoes (steep, uneven terrain), water, sun protection, and a camera. There are no shops inside the ksar selling water — buy before crossing the river.

Living residents: A few families still live inside the ksar, maintaining a traditional way of life. Most of the population has moved to the modern village across the Ounila River, which has restaurants, cafés, souvenir shops, and parking.

Best light: Visit in the early morning (fewer crowds, soft golden light on the east-facing walls) or late afternoon (warm sunset tones, dramatic shadows). Midday light is flat and harsh — the ksar photographs poorly and the climb is hottest.

How to Get There

From Marrakech: 180 km / 3.5–4 hours via the Tizi n’Tichka mountain pass (N9) — one of Morocco’s most scenic drives, crossing the High Atlas at 2,260 m. The best option is MDT’s Ouarzazate & Ait Ben Haddou day trip from €21, which includes transport, a guide, and a stop in Ouarzazate.

From Ouarzazate: 30 km / ~30 minutes. A quick taxi ride (~100–150 MAD) or a short drive.

On a desert tour: Ait Ben Haddou is the Day 1 stop on every MDT desert tour — whether heading to Zagora, Merzouga, or Erg Chigaga. You’ll visit it as part of the journey south, before continuing to the desert. No separate trip needed.

By bus: CTM operates daily buses from Marrakech to Ouarzazate (~4 hours, ~80 MAD), then a taxi to Ait Ben Haddou (30 km). No direct bus service to the ksar itself.

Best Time to Visit

Spring (March–May): Best season — mild temperatures (18–28°C), clear skies, the Ounila River flowing well. Green vegetation on the surrounding hills.

Autumn (September–November): Equally good — warm, comfortable, golden light. Post-summer, fewer crowds.

Summer (June–August): Very hot (35–45°C). Visit early morning only. The climb to the summit is brutal in midday heat.

Winter (December–February): Mild days (15–20°C) but cold nights. Potential for snow on the Tizi n’Tichka pass — check road conditions. Quietest season.

MDT Tours

MDT tours that include Ait Ben Haddou — March 2026
TourDurationRouteFrom
Ouarzazate & Ait Ben Haddou1 dayMarrakech → Tizi n’Tichka → ABH → Ouarzazate → return€21
2-Day Zagora Desert Tour2 daysIncludes ABH on Day 1, continues to Zagora€69
3-Day Merzouga Desert Tour3 daysIncludes ABH on Day 1, continues to Merzouga€95
Important: Ait Ben Haddou is included as a Day 1 stop on every MDT desert tour — you don’t need a separate trip unless you want a dedicated full day at the site and in Ouarzazate. If you’re booking any desert tour, you’ll visit Ait Ben Haddou automatically.
Key Takeaways

What: UNESCO World Heritage ksar (1987). Fortified village, not a single kasbah.

History: 11th century, trans-Saharan trade route, Glaoui family, 17th C peak.

Films: Gladiator, Game of Thrones (Yunkai), The Mummy, Prince of Persia, + 5 more.

Entry: FREE. Duration: 1.5–2 hrs. Guides: ~100–150 MAD (optional).

Getting there: Marrakech 180 km / 3.5–4 hrs. Ouarzazate 30 km / 30 min.

MDT: Day trip from €21. Also included on every desert tour (Day 1).

Frequently Asked Questions

UNESCO World Heritage Site (1987). A ksar (fortified village) built from the 11th century on the trans-Saharan trade route, 30 km from Ouarzazate. Mudbrick (pisé) construction. A few families still live inside. Most residents moved to the modern village across the Ounila River.
Gladiator (2000), Game of Thrones (Yunkai, 2012–2014), The Mummy (1999), Prince of Persia (2010), Kingdom of Heaven (2005), Alexander (2004), Jesus of Nazareth (1977), Babel (2006), The Jewel of the Nile (1985). Atlas Film Studios in Ouarzazate are 30 km away.
Yes — Ait Ben Haddou served as Yunkai (the “Yellow City”) in Seasons 3–4. Daenerys Targaryen’s campaign to liberate the slave cities. The ancient walls and hilltop setting were a perfect match.
Yes — completely free. No ticket office. Open sunrise to sunset daily. Unofficial guides at the entrance: ~100–150 MAD (knowledgeable but not mandatory).
1.5–2 hours. Cross the Ounila River, walk the alleys, climb to the hilltop (30 min up — panoramic views), browse artisan shops. Best light: early morning or late afternoon.
180 km / 3.5–4 hrs via Tizi n’Tichka. MDT day trip from €21. Also on every MDT desert tour (Day 1). CTM bus to Ouarzazate (~80 MAD) + taxi (30 km).
Ksar = fortified village (multiple dwellings, communal). Kasbah = single fortified house/palace (one family). Ait Ben Haddou is a ksar. Both terms are widely used in tourism. Full kasbah guide →
Yes. Day trip from €21. Also included on every desert tour: 2-day Zagora (€69), 3-day Merzouga (€95), and all longer circuits. Book →

Visit Ait Ben Haddou

UNESCO World Heritage Site. Gladiator. Game of Thrones. Free entry. From Marrakech: day trip €21 or included on every desert tour.