Quick Answer — Is Alcohol Available in Morocco?

Yes. Alcohol is legal in Morocco. Available in licensed bars, hotel bars, restaurants, and specialised liquor shops in cities. Not in regular grocery stores. 3 Moroccan beers: Casablanca Beer, Flag Special, Stork (~25–40 MAD / €2.50–4). Wine: Meknes and Essaouira regions, ~80–150 MAD / €8–15 per bottle. Spirit: Mahia (fig-based, aniseed-flavoured). Legal age: 18. Liquor shop hours: 10 AM – 8 PM. Ramadan: most venues stop selling. Desert camps: limited — ask MDT when booking.

Where to Find Alcohol

Where to buy alcohol in Morocco — by venue type
VenueWhat’s AvailableNotes
Licensed bars & restaurantsBeer, wine, spirits, cocktailsTourist areas in Marrakech, Casablanca, Fes, Essaouira. Look for venues with a liquor licence.
Hotel barsFull range4–5★ hotels always serve alcohol. Budget hotels rarely do.
Specialised liquor shopsBeer, wine, spirits (takeaway)Shuttered storefronts, often no signage. Hours: 10 AM – 8 PM. Closed Fridays midday in some areas.
SupermarketsBeer, wine (separate section)Carrefour, Marjane, Acima — in major cities only. Separate alcohol counter.
RiadsSome serve beer/wineDepends on licence. Ask before arrival. Many allow BYO. Riad guide →
Desert campsLimited or noneStandard camps: usually no. Luxury camps: often yes. Ask MDT when booking.
Rural areas / small townsRarely availableOutside major cities, alcohol is very hard to find. Buy in the city before travelling.

What to expect in a Moroccan bar: Bars serving alcohol are often discreet — curtained entrances, tinted windows, no visible signage from the street. This is by design, not because they’re illegal. Inside, they function like any bar. In the Guéliz (new town) area of Marrakech, Casablanca’s Corniche, and Essaouira’s harbour area, bars are more visible and Western-style.

Specialised liquor shop in Morocco with shelves of beer, wine, and spirits
Moroccan liquor shop — shuttered storefronts, often with minimal signage, open 10 AM – 8 PM

Moroccan Beers, Wines & Spirits

Selection of Moroccan beer brands including Casablanca Beer, Flag Special, and Stork
Morocco’s three main beer brands — Casablanca Beer, Flag Special, and Stork

Beer

Morocco produces three widely available beers: Casablanca Beer (the most popular — a crisp, clean lager and Morocco’s iconic brand), Flag Special (a traditional lager with a deeper malt character, the everyday choice for locals), and Stork (a lighter pilsner, good for hot afternoons). All three are brewed by Société des Brasseries du Maroc. Expect to pay ~25–40 MAD (€2.50–4) in a shop, or ~40–70 MAD (€4–7) in a bar or restaurant. International brands (Heineken, Kronenbourg) are also available in tourist venues.

Wine

Wine tasting event at a Moroccan vineyard with traditional setting
Moroccan wine tasting — the country’s wine industry is centred in Meknes and Essaouira

Morocco has a growing wine industry with vineyards concentrated in two regions: Meknes (the largest — home to Chateau Roslane, Domaine de la Zouina, and Celliers de Meknes) and Essaouira (home to Val D’Argan). Moroccan wines include robust reds (Syrah, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot), crisp rosés (popular in summer), and white wines. Quality has improved significantly in recent years. A bottle costs ~80–150 MAD (€8–15) in shops, more in restaurants. MDT offers wine-tasting stops on the Essaouira day trip (Val D’Argan) and the Marrakech-to-Chefchaouen tour (Chateau Roslane).

Spirits

Mahia is Morocco’s traditional spirit — a fig-based eau-de-vie flavoured with aniseed, historically produced by Moroccan Jewish communities. It’s strong, clear, and usually homemade. Finding it in licensed venues is rare, but some specialised bars and riads serve it. Imported spirits (vodka, gin, whisky) are available in hotel bars and liquor shops at ~150–400 MAD (€15–40) per bottle.

Best value: Buy from liquor shops or supermarket alcohol counters (Carrefour, Marjane) for the lowest prices. Hotel bars and tourist restaurants apply a 50–100% markup. A Casablanca Beer that costs 25 MAD in a shop may cost 60 MAD in a hotel bar.

Rules & Etiquette

Legal age: 18. Carry ID (passport or copy) when buying or entering licensed venues.

Liquor shop hours: Typically 10:00 AM – 8:00 PM, Monday to Saturday. Some close Friday afternoons. Closed on Sundays and public holidays. During Ramadan, most liquor shops and restaurants stop selling alcohol entirely for the month — some hotel bars continue for guests discreetly.

Public intoxication: Illegal and enforced. Fines and possible short-term detention. Being visibly drunk in the medina or near a mosque is deeply disrespectful and will draw police attention.

Etiquette: Be discreet — don’t walk through the medina carrying visible bottles or cans. Don’t drink in public spaces, parks, or near mosques. If invited to a Moroccan home, don’t assume alcohol is welcome — follow your host’s lead. Many Moroccans don’t drink for religious reasons; never pressure anyone to join you.

Alcohol on Desert Tours

Traditional mint tea served around a campfire in the Sahara Desert
Mint tea around the campfire — “Moroccan whiskey” and the social heart of every desert evening

Standard desert camps (included in shared tours) typically do not serve alcohol — the Berber camp hosts are Muslim and the camps don’t hold liquor licences. Luxury desert camps (upgrade option on private tours) often do serve wine and beer with dinner — ask MDT when booking if this matters to you.

Can you bring your own? Usually yes — buy in Marrakech before departure and bring it in your luggage. Check with your operator. Be discreet and respectful — drink in your tent or at the communal fire, not in front of camp staff who are fasting or abstaining.

Wine glasses served at a luxury desert camp in the Moroccan Sahara at sunset
Wine at a luxury desert camp — some upgraded camps serve alcohol with dinner under the Sahara stars

The real star of desert evenings is mint tea — nicknamed “Moroccan whiskey” for its cultural importance and ritual preparation. Three glasses served from height, sweet and strong. Sharing mint tea around the campfire with your Berber hosts is often the most memorable social moment of a desert tour — no alcohol needed.

Price Guide

Alcohol prices in Morocco — shop vs bar/restaurant, March 2026
DrinkShop PriceBar/Restaurant
Moroccan beer (Casablanca/Flag/Stork)25–40 MAD (€2.50–4)40–70 MAD (€4–7)
Imported beer (Heineken, Kronenbourg)35–50 MAD (€3.50–5)50–80 MAD (€5–8)
Moroccan wine (bottle)80–150 MAD (€8–15)150–300 MAD (€15–30)
Glass of wine40–80 MAD (€4–8)
Spirits (imported, bottle)150–400 MAD (€15–40)Per drink: 50–100 MAD
Cocktail60–120 MAD (€6–12)
Key Takeaways

Legal: Yes — alcohol is legal in Morocco. Licensed venues only.

Where: Bars, hotel bars, restaurants, liquor shops (10 AM – 8 PM), Carrefour/Marjane.

Beers: Casablanca Beer, Flag Special, Stork. ~25–40 MAD in shops.

Wine: Meknes (Chateau Roslane) + Essaouira (Val D’Argan). ~80–150 MAD/bottle.

Rules: Age 18. Be discreet. No public intoxication. Restricted during Ramadan.

Desert: Standard camps: no. Luxury camps: often yes. BYO usually fine. Ask MDT.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Production and consumption are legal. Available in licensed bars, hotels, restaurants, and specialised shops. Legal age: 18. Public intoxication is illegal. Sales restricted during Ramadan.
Licensed bars + restaurants, hotel bars, specialised liquor shops (10 AM – 8 PM), and supermarkets with alcohol sections (Carrefour, Marjane, Acima) in major cities. Not in regular grocery stores. Very limited outside cities.
Casablanca Beer (crisp lager, most popular), Flag Special (deeper malt), Stork (lighter pilsner). All brewed by Société des Brasseries du Maroc. ~25–40 MAD in shops, 40–70 MAD in bars.
Yes — wine regions: Meknes (Chateau Roslane) and Essaouira (Val D’Argan). MDT offers tastings on the Essaouira day trip and Chefchaouen desert tour.
Extremely limited. Most bars, restaurants, and liquor shops stop selling entirely. Some hotel bars serve guests discreetly. Public drinking during Ramadan is deeply disrespectful. Full Ramadan guide →
Standard camps: usually no. Luxury camps: often yes (wine/beer with dinner). BYO: usually fine — buy in Marrakech beforehand. Ask MDT when booking. The alternative: mint tea = “Moroccan whiskey.”
Yes — customs allows 1 litre of spirits + 1 litre of wine per person, duty-free. Declare anything above this limit. Bringing alcohol through customs is legal for tourists; the allowance is enforced at airports and border crossings.

Wine Tasting on an MDT Tour

Visit Val D'Argan (Essaouira) or Chateau Roslane (Meknes) — Moroccan wine paired with local food, included on select tours.