Discovering...
Discovering...

Fes intimidates parents on paper: the world's largest car-free medina is a nine-thousand-lane maze with donkeys, steps and no room for a pushchair. In practice it is one of the most rewarding Moroccan cities for children, if you plan the day around crafts, gardens and short bursts. This guide covers the activities and days out, not where to sleep.
Medina reality
Fes el-Bali is the largest car-free urban area on earth
Strollers
Impractical in the medina — a baby carrier wins
Best free run-around
Jnan Sbil gardens, on the medina's edge
Hands-on hit
Pottery and zellige workshops in the Ain Nokbi quarter
Big day trip
Volubilis Roman ruins via Meknes, about 1 hour
Local taxi
Red petits taxis; short hops roughly 10–25 MAD
Guide hire
Half-day licensed guide about 150–300 MAD
Best seasons
Spring and autumn; summers bake inland
Where to stay
Covered in stay guides, not here
Amelia Hart· Itineraries & Trip Planning Editor
British writer who has built and road-tested Morocco itineraries for everyone from honeymooners to families. She covers multi-day routes, costs, the best time to visit and how to plan a first trip. Casablanca · 9+ years covering Morocco
Published 5 November 2025 Last updated 15 July 2026
Fes el-Bali is genuinely the largest car-free urban area on earth, a walled tangle of thousands of lanes where laden mules still have right of way and Google Maps gives up. That sounds like a nightmare with children, and for a full day of aimless wandering it would be. The trick is to treat the medina as a series of short, purposeful missions with a colourful reward at the end of each, rather than a single endurance march.
Kids respond to Fes through their senses: the shock of the tanneries, the clatter of a potter's wheel, mint tea poured from a height, a garden full of orange trees. Anchor the day around two or three of those and the walking between becomes an adventure instead of a slog. This guide sticks to the activities and outings; if you are still choosing a base, the family-room and riad decisions live in the separate stay guides.
The Chouara tannery is the theatrical showstopper. You view the honeycomb of dye pits from the balconies of surrounding leather shops, which hand you a sprig of mint to hold against the powerful smell. Children are usually equal parts horrified and fascinated, and it takes ten minutes, which is exactly right. The real winner, though, is a hands-on craft: the potters' quarter at Ain Nokbi, just outside the walls, has workshops where kids can watch the wheel and often have a go at shaping clay or laying zellige mosaic pieces.
For calmer culture, the Bou Inania and Al-Attarine medersas reward a short visit with dazzling carved cedar and tilework, best kept brief for younger ones. The Borj Nord fortress on the hillside pairs a panoramic view over the whole medina with an arms museum of cannons and old weaponry that tends to grip older kids. Below is how the main options land across the age bands.
| Activity | Toddlers (under 5) | Ages 6–11 | Teens (12+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chouara tannery terrace | Brief; mint sprig for the smell | Fascinating spectacle | Great photos and craft interest |
| Pottery / zellige workshop | Watch the wheel | Best age — have a go | Real skill and buying interest |
| Jnan Sbil gardens | Ideal — space to run | Picnic and pond | Shady downtime spot |
| Bou Inania / Al-Attarine medersa | Quick look only | Short, colourful visit | Architecture and history |
| Borj Nord viewpoint + arms museum | Panorama, easy access | Cannons and big view | Weapons museum and views |
| Volubilis + Meknes day trip | Long; nap in the car | Roman mosaics and storks | Ruins and Roman history |
Every Fes family day needs a decompression valve, and the Jnan Sbil gardens are it — a large, free public park of palm avenues, orange trees, a water feature and shaded benches wedged between Fes el-Bali and Fes el-Jdid. After a morning of narrow lanes, letting children simply run here for an hour resets the whole mood. Bring a picnic; there is space and shade and, crucially, room for a buggy if you brought one for outside the medina.
When the medina has done its job and everyone needs sky and space, the Volubilis and Meknes day trip is the obvious escape, roughly an hour each way. Volubilis is an open, walkable Roman city where kids can wander mosaic-floored houses and spot the storks that nest on the ruined columns, with none of the medina's claustrophobia. Pair it with a stop in nearby Meknes for the giant Bab Mansour gateway and the vast Heri es-Souani granary halls.
Fes is one of Morocco's better-value cities and noticeably cheaper than Marrakech, which shows up fastest in food and monument tickets. Most children's meals, snacks and short taxi hops are pocket change, and several of the best things — the tannery view, the gardens, wandering the souks — cost little or nothing. The figures below are approximate mid-2026 guides in MAD, with a rough dollar steer (about 10 MAD to 1 USD); label them a starting point, not a fixed tariff, since fees drift.
| Item | Approx MAD | USD ≈ | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medersa / museum entry (adult) | 20–70 | $2–7 | Children often reduced or free |
| Tannery terrace view | Free (tip 10–20) | $0–2 | Via the leather shop balconies |
| Jnan Sbil gardens | Free | $0 | Public park; closes in the evening |
| Kids' snack (msemen, fresh juice) | 5–20 | $0.50–2 | Medina and gate-side stalls |
| Petit taxi, short hop | 10–25 | $1–2.50 | Red taxis; about +50% after 8pm |
| Half-day licensed guide | 150–300 | $15–30 | The best-value family upgrade |
The honest answer on wheels: a stroller is a liability inside Fes el-Bali. The lanes are cobbled and stepped, crowds surge, and a shouted "Balak!" means a mule train is coming through and you need to flatten against a wall fast — impossible with a pushchair. A soft baby carrier or a hip seat is the way to move an under-three through the medina, freeing your hands and keeping the child up out of the crush.
Outside the walls it is a different city: the Ville Nouvelle, the gardens and the ramparts drives are all buggy-friendly, and red petits taxis are cheap, plentiful and happy to ferry a family the short distances between sights. For deeper help on not getting lost, the Fes medina navigation guide breaks down the gates and landmark spine in detail.
The winning shape is medina in the morning, green space or a museum after lunch, and a taxi rather than a walk for the final sight when legs are done. Keep the ambitions modest: two or three anchor activities is plenty for a day with children, and the leftover wandering will fill itself. For a ready-made timed route you can adapt, the one day in Fes itinerary gives an hour-by-hour spine.
Season matters more here than on the coast. Fes sits inland and summers are genuinely hot for children, while winter nights are cold; spring (March–May) and autumn (September–October) are the family sweet spot, warm by day and cool enough to walk. The best time to visit Fes page has the month-by-month detail. Demand is climbing citywide as Fes gears up as a 2030 World Cup host city, so book family rooms earlier than you used to.
Families with a few days can also break up the medina intensity with a Middle Atlas day. An hour or so south, the cedar forests near Azrou shelter troops of wild Barbary macaques that delight children, while the alpine-feeling town of Ifrane, with its lake and tidy parks, is a cool green change of scene; the Middle Atlas lakes and Ifrane guide covers the area.
| Time | Plan | Why it works with kids |
|---|---|---|
| 09:00 | Enter at Bab Boujloud and walk down Talaa Kebira | Cooler, quieter, downhill spine |
| 10:30 | Chouara tannery terrace, then a pottery workshop | Colour and hands-on before tiring |
| 12:30 | Lunch in a medina riad courtyard | Shade, toilets and a proper sit-down |
| 14:30 | Jnan Sbil gardens run-around | Space to burn off energy |
| 16:00 | Borj Nord viewpoint by taxi | Big view, no walking maze |
Yes, with the right approach. The medina is a stepped, crowded maze where strollers do not work, so bring a baby carrier for under-threes and plan short, sensory bursts — the tanneries, a pottery workshop, the gardens — rather than long walks. Outside the walls, the Ville Nouvelle and Jnan Sbil gardens are buggy-friendly and calm, and cheap taxis cover the gaps.
Realistically, no. Fes el-Bali is the world's largest car-free urban area, full of cobbles, steps, narrow lanes and mule traffic, and pushing a stroller through it is exhausting and unsafe when a mule train comes past. A soft carrier or hip seat is far better inside the walls. Save the buggy for the modern city, the gardens and the ramparts roads outside.
The reliable trio is the Chouara tannery terraces for spectacle, a hands-on pottery or zellige workshop in the Ain Nokbi quarter, and the free Jnan Sbil gardens to run off energy. Add the Borj Nord viewpoint and arms museum for older children, and a Volubilis and Meknes day trip for Roman ruins, mosaics and nesting storks.
For most families, yes. A half-day licensed guide costs roughly 150–300 MAD and removes the stress of navigation, keeps the pace child-friendly and steers you past pushy sales workshops. Agree the route and finish time in advance and mention you have young kids. It is arguably the best-value upgrade for a family day in the medina.
Less than you might fear. Monument tickets run about 20–70 MAD for adults with children often reduced or free, snacks are 5–20 MAD, and short petit-taxi hops are 10–25 MAD. Many highlights — the tannery view, the gardens, souk wandering — are free or tip-only. Fes is clearly cheaper than Marrakech across meals and tickets.
It is one of the best. Volubilis is an open, walkable Roman city about an hour from Fes where children can roam mosaic-floored houses and spot storks nesting on the columns, with none of the medina's crush. Combine it with Meknes for the huge Bab Mansour gate and the cavernous Heri es-Souani granary, and hire the site guide to bring the mosaics to life.
Spring (March to May) and autumn (September to October) are ideal, warm by day and cool enough for comfortable medina walking. Fes is inland, so July and August are genuinely hot for kids and winter nights are cold. Whenever you go, do the walking in the cooler morning and rest in the afternoon heat, and book rooms early as World Cup demand rises.
Easily managed. Grilled chicken and meat skewers, bread, chips, plain couscous, fruit and yoghurt are everywhere, and riad restaurants around the medina do calm, shaded sit-down lunches with real toilets — a genuine plus mid-visit. Medina stalls sell cheap msemen (flaky pancakes) and fresh orange juice that most children happily accept between sights.
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