Quick Answer

Todgha Gorges (also spelled Todra — same place) are dramatic limestone canyons with 300m cliffs, 15km from Tinghir in the eastern High Atlas. Entry is free. Hiking (1–8h, all levels), world-class rock climbing (100+ routes), Berber villages, and riverside cafés. Best months: March–May and September–November. Most visitors see it as part of a 3-day Merzouga desert tour (from €85) — it's a standard Day 2 stop. Guide hire: ~200–300 MAD (€20–30) per half day.

What Are Todgha Gorges?

Golden sunrise lighting 300m Todgha Gorge cliffs and Berber rug stalls near Tinghir
Sunrise over Todgha Gorge — 300m cliffs glowing orange and gold

Todgha Gorges (sometimes spelled Todra Gorges — both are transliterations of the same Arabic/Berber name تودغى) are a series of limestone river canyons in the eastern High Atlas Mountains near the town of Tinghir. Carved by the Todgha River over millennia, the cliffs rise up to 300 metres in some sections — among the most dramatic in North Africa.

The gorge features crystal-clear waters flowing through a narrow canyon, surrounded by golden-red rock walls. It’s a paradise for rock climbers (100+ routes on ideal limestone), hikers (trails for all levels), and cultural travelers (Berber villages, traditional crafts, riverside hospitality). The layers of sedimentary rock reveal millions of years of geological history.

Location: 15km from Tinghir, which sits halfway between Marrakech and Merzouga. Coordinates: 31.59°N, 5.58°W. Whether you’re coming from Marrakech or the Sahara, Todgha is a natural stopover on the route.

Todgha on Desert Tours

Todgha Gorges is a standard stop on Day 2 of every 3-day and 4-day Merzouga desert tour from Marrakech. You’ll walk through the gorge for 30–60 minutes, have lunch at a riverside café, then continue east to Merzouga for the camel trek and desert camp.

MDT tours that include Todgha Gorges — March 2026
TourDurationTodgha StopFrom
Shared 3-Day Merzouga3 daysDay 2 (30–60 min walk)€85
Private 3-Day Merzouga3 daysDay 2 (flexible time)€195
Private 4-Day + Todgha4 daysDay 2 (extended visit)€280
Fes → Marrakech via Desert3 daysDay 2€195
More time at Todgha? The 4-day tour gives you an extended visit — enough for a proper hike or a climbing session. The 3-day includes a walk-through but less time to explore deeper.

Hiking Trails & Itineraries

Hiker surveying rugged Todgha Valley from High Atlas overlook above the gorge
Viewpoint above Todgha Valley — the Advanced trail rewards with this panorama
Todgha Gorges hiking trails — all levels
LevelTrailDurationHighlightsGuide Needed?
BeginnerGorge Floor Trail1–2 hoursFlat river walk, 300m cliff views, cafésNo
IntermediateTinghir Loop4–5 hoursVillage views, palm groves, oasisRecommended
AdvancedHigh Atlas Climb7–8 hoursMountain vistas, remote Berber terrainEssential

Tips: Always carry water and sun protection. Wear sturdy footwear — the gorge floor is rocky. Morning light is best for photography. The Gorge Floor Trail is suitable for families and wheelchair-accessible for the first section.

Guide costs: ~200–300 MAD (€20–30) per half day for a local hiking guide. Book through your guesthouse or in Tinghir. Guides add cultural context and know the best viewpoints.

Rock Climbing — World-Class Routes

Climber on vertical limestone multi-pitch route in Todra Gorge
Multi-pitch climbing on Todra’s vertical limestone — 100+ routes from beginner to expert

Todgha Gorges attracts climbers from around the globe for its vertical walls, ideal limestone conditions, and 100+ routes ranging from beginner to expert. The rock is high-quality, well-featured, and mostly bolt-protected on sport routes. Grades range from French 3 (beginner) to 8a+ (elite) — the standard grading system used here.

Classic routes: “Etoile des Gorges” (multi-pitch, French 5c–6a, intermediate — the most popular), “Le Rappel” (single pitch, French 4, beginner-friendly), “Pilier du Couchant” (multi-pitch, 6b+, advanced). The main climbing area is in the narrowest section of the gorge where the walls are closest.

Gear rental: ~150–200 MAD per session. Available in Tinghir and at local climbing shops near the gorge entrance. Certified guides: ~300–500 MAD for a half-day guided session. Highly recommended for first-timers.

Safety: Always check weather — flash floods can occur in rainy season. Let someone know your route. Hire a certified guide if you’re new to outdoor climbing.

Climbing tip: The best rock conditions are October–April when temperatures are mild. Summer afternoons make the south-facing walls too hot to touch. Bring your own harness and shoes if you have them — rental gear is functional but basic. The gorge has no mobile signal in the narrowest sections.

Berber Culture & Villages

Berber woman with pack-donkey inside Todgha Gorge — traditional Amazigh life
Amazigh woman transporting supplies by donkey — traditional life continues in the gorge

The Todgha Valley is home to Amazigh (Berber) communities who have lived in harmony with this landscape for generations. They maintain traditional farming, artisanal crafts, and a hospitality culture that welcomes visitors with mint tea and genuine warmth.

Walking through the palm groves and villages near the gorge gives you a glimpse of traditional irrigation channels (khettaras), mud-brick kasbahs, and daily life far removed from the tourist trail. The Tinghir Loop hiking trail passes through several of these communities. For deeper cultural context, see our Morocco culture and etiquette guide.

Geography & Natural Features

Visitor drinking from crystal spring seep in Todgha Gorge wall
Crystal-clear spring water seeping from the canyon wall — drinkable and cold year-round

The towering limestone cliffs glow in hues of orange, pink, and gold, especially at sunrise and sunset — a photographer’s dream. During spring, the Todgha River rushes through the gorge floor, forming shallow pools and streams. In drier months, it reduces to a trickle, revealing polished stones and walkable paths.

The gorge edges and surrounding valleys are dotted with palm groves, olive trees, and resilient desert flora. Birdwatchers may spot kestrels, eagles, and other birds of prey soaring between the cliffs. The area is significant for tectonic and erosional research — layers of sedimentary rock reveal the region was once an ancient seabed.

Best Time to Visit

Best

Spring — Mar to May

20–30°C. River flowing, wildflowers, ideal for hiking and climbing. Clear skies. The sweet spot.

Best

Autumn — Sep to Nov

20–28°C. Post-summer, fewer crowds. Perfect climbing conditions. October is ideal.

Hot

Summer — Jun to Aug

38–42°C afternoons. Mornings still fine. Avoid midday hiking. The gorge provides shade.

Doable

Winter — Dec to Feb

15–20°C days, cold nights. Pleasant walking. Pack warm layers for evenings. Snow possible on surrounding peaks.

Getting There

From Marrakech: 6–7 hours via Tizi n’Tichka pass and Dades Valley. Most visitors see Todgha as part of a 3-day Merzouga desert tour — no separate planning needed.

From Fes: 8–9 hours via Errachidia and Erfoud — more desert-laden. Our Fes-to-Marrakech tour includes the stop.

Public transport: Buses and shared taxis run regularly to Tinghir, from where a local taxi to the gorges costs ~30–50 MAD.

Independently: Rental car works — the road from Tinghir to the gorges is paved and well-maintained. The gorge has free parking.

Todgha vs Dades Gorges

Todgha Gorges vs Dades Gorges — quick comparison
FeatureTodghaDades
Cliff heightUp to 300mUp to 200m
LandscapeNarrow canyon, vertical wallsWinding valley, serpentine road
Rock climbing⭐ World-class (100+ routes)Limited
WalkingCanyon floor (flat, easy)Road viewpoints (driving)
Famous forClimbers, hikers, riverSnaky road photo, kasbahs
PhotographyVertical cliff portraitsWinding road aerial shots
Distance apart~60km (1h drive) — visit both on the same tour day

Both gorges are visited on MDT desert tours — Dades on Day 1 (evening), Todgha on Day 2 (morning). They’re complementary, not competing.

Where to Stay & Eat

Kasbah-style eco-lodge under starry sky inside Todgha Gorge
Canyon eco-lodge at night — rooftop terraces with gorge views

Budget (150–250 MAD/night): Hostels and small auberges with clean rooms, shared bathrooms. Ideal for backpackers and climbers.

Mid-range (250–500 MAD): Guesthouses and riads with private rooms, hot showers, optional meals, and rooftop terraces with gorge views. Excellent value.

Luxury (500+ MAD): Boutique eco-lodges blending comfort with sustainability. Some include guided tours and spa facilities.

Where to Eat

Recommended restaurants at Todgha Gorges
RestaurantLocationPriceKnown For
Etoile des GorgesInside gorge40–80 MADTagines, canyon terrace views
Chez MichèleInside gorge30–70 MADCouscous, pastilla, river-side seating
Guesthouse dinnersTinghir / gorge50–100 MADHome-cooked Berber food, best value

After Todgha, the desert tour route continues east through Erfoud and Rissani to Merzouga and the Erg Chebbi dunes — where the sunset camel trek and desert camp await. The contrast between the gorge’s cool shade and the Sahara’s golden heat makes the transition unforgettable.

Photography Tips

Travelers posing beneath rose-gold Todgha Gorge cliffs on the river walkway
Golden-hour light on the canyon walls — the gorge glows orange for about 30 minutes

Best times: Early morning and late afternoon — golden hues on the canyon walls, softer shadows, fewer tourists. The gorge faces roughly north-south, so direct sunlight enters the narrowest section only briefly.

Top spots: the gorge entrance (dramatic perspective with both walls framing the canyon), the footbridge crossing the river, and the higher trail viewpoints (wide-angle view of the canyon and valley below). Bring a wide-angle lens — the walls are so close that a phone camera captures the scale well too.

Golden hour window: The canyon walls glow orange for roughly 30 minutes at sunrise and sunset. The narrowest section gets direct sunlight briefly — time your visit for this. A tripod helps for the low-light conditions early/late. Include a person in your shots for scale — the 300m walls are hard to convey without a human reference point.

Safety & Packing

Packing: Sunscreen, sunglasses, reusable water bottle, sturdy hiking boots, warm layers for chilly nights, basic first-aid kit, headlamp for early treks. Full list: What to Pack for a Morocco Desert Tour.

Safety: Stick to marked trails. Flash floods can occur in rainy season — check weather and ask locals. Avoid climbing without proper gear. The gorge floor is safe for walking year-round.

Health: Tinghir has pharmacies and a hospital. Nearest major medical centres: Ouarzazate or Errachidia. Phone signal: patchy in the gorge — download offline maps before arriving. Morocco SIM card guide.

Key Takeaways

What: 300m limestone gorge, free entry, 15km from Tinghir. Also called Todra.

Activities: Hiking (3 levels), rock climbing (100+ routes), Berber villages, photography.

On tour: Standard Day 2 stop on 3-day and 4-day Merzouga tours from €85.

Best months: March–May and September–November.

Costs: Free entry. Guide ~200 MAD. Meals 30–80 MAD. Accommodation 150–500+ MAD.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — different transliterations of the same Arabic/Berber name. “Todra” is more common in French sources, “Todgha” in English. Same gorge, same place.
Yes — 300m cliffs, crystal river, world-class climbing, Berber villages. A highlight of any Merzouga desert tour. Most visitors spend 1–2 hours; hikers/climbers can spend a full day.
Entry: free. Guide: ~200–300 MAD. Climbing guide + gear: ~150–500 MAD. Accommodation: 150–500+ MAD/night. Meals: 30–80 MAD. Most visitors see it on a desert tour (from €85) which includes the stop.
March–May and September–November. 20–30°C, clear skies, ideal hiking and climbing. Summer mornings OK. Winter days pleasant but cold nights.
Yes — standard Day 2 stop on the 3-day and 4-day Marrakech-to-Merzouga tours. Walk the gorge, lunch at a café, then continue to Merzouga for the camel trek.
Not really — the river is shallow. Wading and cooling off is possible in spring/early summer. Crystal-clear and cold, fed by mountain springs.
Yes — generally very safe. Stick to marked trails. Watch for flash floods in rainy season. Don’t climb without gear/guide. The gorge floor walk is safe for all ages.
Different experiences. Todgha: narrow canyon, 300m walls, climbing, river walk. Dades: winding valley, serpentine road, kasbahs. They’re 60km apart — most tours visit both.

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