The best surf lodge in Taghazout is the one that matches your level — a boutique camp with video coaching at Anchor Point is wasted on a first-timer who needs a foamie and gentle white-water. Get that match right and Taghazout delivers: consistent Atlantic swell, warm Moroccan evenings, and rooftop dinners that taste better when your arms are already tired from paddling.
Taghazout was a fishing village until European surfers started arriving in the 1970s. The old part of town is still recognisably that: whitewashed houses climbing a rocky headland, cats asleep on painted steps, the smell of argan oil and salt. The newer Taghazout Bay development sits a kilometre north and feels different — resort-hotel architecture, manicured paths, the odd branded beach club. Most surf lodges sit somewhere between the two, within walking distance of multiple breaks.
Below, the lodges are grouped by tier — budget, mid-range and premium — with an honest breakdown of what each level includes, what it costs (all prices are indicative for 2026 and subject to change), and which type of surfer each suits best. Getting there, the best season, and the local breaks are all covered in the FAQs at the bottom.