Discovering...
Discovering...
SIM cards from 30 MAD, nationwide 4G, free WiFi at hotels and cafes, and growing 5G networks. Your complete guide to staying connected from Tangier to the Sahara.
Morocco has invested heavily in telecommunications infrastructure. Three carriers — Maroc Telecom, Inwi, and Orange — compete vigorously, keeping prices low. A tourist SIM with 7-10 GB of 4G data costs as little as 30-50 MAD ($3-5), making Morocco one of the most affordable countries for mobile data.
In major cities, you will find fast 4G virtually everywhere and expanding 5G. Free WiFi is available at most hotels, riads, cafes, and restaurants. Coworking spaces offer fiber connections of 50-100 Mbps. Even in smaller towns like Essaouira and Chefchaouen, staying connected is straightforward. Challenges arise only in remote areas — the Sahara, Atlas Mountains, and rural south — though Maroc Telecom usually provides basic coverage along major roads.
Morocco has three mobile network operators, all offering affordable prepaid SIM cards for tourists with no contract required.
Best coverage, largest network (~43% share)
Best value, youth-focused (~26% share)
Solid all-around choice (~31% share)
All three carriers have kiosks at arrivals in Mohammed V (Casablanca), Menara (Marrakech), Ibn Battouta (Tangier), and Fes-Saiss. Easiest option.
Moroccan law requires ID for SIM registration. Staff will photocopy or scan your passport.
Most SIM purchases require Moroccan dirhams. Airport exchange counters are open for arrivals.
A head-to-head comparison to help you choose the right carrier for your trip.
| Feature | Maroc Telecom | Inwi | Orange |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tourist SIM Cost | From 50 MAD (~$5) | From 30 MAD (~$3) | From 40 MAD (~$4) |
| Tourist SIM Data | 10 GB / 30 days | 7 GB / 14 days | 8 GB / 30 days |
| 10 GB Monthly | From 60 MAD | From 45 MAD | From 50 MAD |
| 50 GB Monthly | From 200 MAD | From 170 MAD | From 185 MAD |
| 4G Coverage | Best (95%+ cities) | Good (90% cities) | Good (92% cities) |
| Rural Coverage | Best nationwide | Limited | Moderate |
| 5G Available | 4 cities | 2 cities | 3 cities |
| English Support | Limited | Limited | Best |
| Best For | Road trips, rural | Budget, cities | All-around balance |
Maroc Telecom
Choose for rural areas, Sahara, Atlas Mountains, and road trips across Morocco.
Inwi
Choose for city-only trips when you want the most data per dirham spent.
Orange
Choose for solid balance of coverage, price, and English-language support.
All prices are starting prices. Seasonal pricing and promotional offers can change. Prices verified March 2026.
If your phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS and later, most recent Samsung Galaxy, Google Pixel 3+), you can set up a Morocco data plan before boarding your flight.
WiFi is widely available across Morocco, but quality varies significantly by location type and region.
Usually included in room rate. Fiber connections common in newer properties.
Thick medina walls can weaken WiFi signal. Speed varies wildly between riads.
Often shared among many guests. Can slow down during evening hours.
Most tourist-area cafes offer free WiFi. Order regularly to maintain goodwill.
Dedicated fiber lines. Day passes from 80 MAD. Monthly from 800 MAD.
Free WiFi at major airports (30-60 min sessions). Mohammed V and Menara have decent coverage.
Internet speeds in Morocco vary dramatically between cities and rural areas.
| Region | WiFi/Fiber | Mobile 4G | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casablanca | 40-100 Mbps | 25-60 Mbps | Excellent |
| Rabat | 30-80 Mbps | 20-50 Mbps | Excellent |
| Tangier | 25-70 Mbps | 20-45 Mbps | Very Good |
| Marrakech | 20-60 Mbps | 15-40 Mbps | Good |
| Fes | 15-50 Mbps | 12-35 Mbps | Good |
| Agadir | 15-45 Mbps | 12-30 Mbps | Good |
| Essaouira | 10-30 Mbps | 8-25 Mbps | Moderate |
| Chefchaouen | 8-20 Mbps | 5-15 Mbps | Moderate |
| Sahara (Merzouga) | 3-10 Mbps | 3-10 Mbps | Limited |
| Atlas Mountains | 2-8 Mbps | 2-8 Mbps | Limited |
Note: Speeds vary by time of day, network congestion, and specific location. Coworking spaces and fiber-connected hotels generally deliver speeds at the higher end.
What to expect to pay for mobile data in Morocco, from budget tourist SIMs to digital nomad packages.
All prices are starting prices. Seasonal pricing and promotional offers can change.
| Plan Type | Data | Validity | Price | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tourist SIM (starter) | 7-10 GB | 14-30 days | From 30 MAD | Cheapest entry point for tourists |
| Weekly top-up | 2-3 GB | 7 days | From 20 MAD | Quick recharge for light users |
| Standard monthly | 8-12 GB | 30 days | From 50 MAD | Good for 2-week trips |
| Heavy use monthly | 20-25 GB | 30 days | From 100 MAD | Social media, maps, and video calls |
| Nomad package | 50-60 GB | 30 days | From 200 MAD | Digital nomad and remote workers |
| eSIM basic | 1 GB | 7 days | From $4.50 | Short trip, light data needs |
| eSIM standard | 5 GB | 15 days | From $15 | Most popular eSIM plan |
| eSIM unlimited | Unlimited | 10 days | From $34 | Holafly unlimited (fair use applies) |
Understanding VPN use, VoIP access, and online privacy while traveling in Morocco.
VPN use is legal in Morocco and widely used by businesses, remote workers, and travelers. Morocco blocks VoIP calling at the carrier level — WhatsApp, FaceTime, and Zoom calls may be blocked on mobile data. A VPN typically bypasses these restrictions. The blocking is intermittent, stricter on mobile data than WiFi.
Protect data on cafe, hotel, and airport WiFi.
Bypass VoIP blocking for WhatsApp and FaceTime calls.
Access home Netflix, Hulu, or BBC iPlayer library.
Connect to company VPN for work system access.
Prevent account lockouts from foreign logins.
Privacy on hostel and shared accommodation WiFi.
Best overall. Fast speeds, reliable, many servers.
Fastest speeds. Best for video calls and streaming.
Best budget option with unlimited devices.
Important: Download and configure your VPN before arriving in Morocco. Set it to auto-connect on untrusted networks.
Morocco is becoming a top digital nomad destination with affordable coworking, fast fiber internet, and a convenient time zone for European and US clients.
Fastest internet in Morocco. WeWork, New Work Lab, and Cowurk offer 100 Mbps fiber connections.
Government-backed Technopark with fiber internet. Clean, modern city with excellent infrastructure.
Largest nomad community in Morocco. Le 18, Sun Desk, and Kech Cowork offer reliable WiFi.
Fast-growing tech scene near Spain. The Loft and Technopark offer high-speed connections.
Laid-back surf-and-work culture. Best for those comfortable with slightly slower speeds.
Sun Desk is purpose-built for digital nomads with dedicated fiber lines. Surf village vibes.
Dedicated fiber (30-100 Mbps). Most reliable for video calls and file transfers.
Maroc Telecom 50 GB plan (from 200 MAD/month). Essential backup for meetings.
4G router (from 300 MAD) with local SIM. Better antenna for weak signal areas.
Heading to the Sahara, Atlas Mountains, or rural villages? Here is what to expect and how to prepare for limited connectivity.

Merzouga: Maroc Telecom provides 3G/4G in town. Signal drops once you enter the dunes. Most luxury camps have no internet or very slow satellite WiFi.
Zagora / Erg Chigaga: More remote than Merzouga. Plan to be offline for 1-2 nights at desert camps.

Imlil / Toubkal: Imlil village has decent Maroc Telecom 3G/4G. Signal weakens on the ascent. The Toubkal refuge has no cellular coverage.
Dades / Todra Gorges: Coverage at gorge entrances. Signal drops inside canyons. Larger hotels have WiFi.
Tourist SIM cards in Morocco cost from 30 MAD (~$3) for Inwi, 40 MAD (~$4) for Orange, and 50 MAD (~$5) for Maroc Telecom. These include 7-10 GB of data and are available at airport kiosks, carrier stores, and corner shops.
Yes, most hotels and riads in Morocco offer free WiFi. Luxury hotels typically provide 20-80 Mbps, while traditional riads in medinas average 5-25 Mbps. Thick medina walls can weaken signals, so ask for a room near the router if connectivity matters.
Yes, international eSIM providers like Airalo, Holafly, and Nomad eSIM offer Morocco data plans starting from $4.50 for 1 GB. Local Moroccan carriers do not yet offer eSIM directly, but third-party eSIMs connect to Maroc Telecom or Orange networks.
VPN use is legal in Morocco. A VPN is recommended for public WiFi security and for bypassing carrier-level VoIP blocking on mobile data. WhatsApp, FaceTime, and Zoom calls may be blocked on mobile networks but usually work fine over WiFi.
Connectivity in the Sahara is very limited. Towns like Merzouga have 3G/4G from Maroc Telecom, but signal drops once you enter the dunes. Most desert camps have no internet or very slow satellite WiFi. Plan for 1-2 days offline.
Maroc Telecom has the best overall coverage, especially in rural areas, the Sahara, and Atlas Mountains. For cities only, all three carriers (Maroc Telecom, Inwi, Orange) perform well. Inwi offers the best data-per-dirham value in urban areas.
Major cities like Casablanca and Rabat offer 40-100 Mbps fiber and 20-60 Mbps mobile 4G. Tourist cities like Marrakech and Fes average 15-50 Mbps. Rural and mountain areas get 2-10 Mbps. Morocco ranks well among African countries for internet speed.
Yes, Morocco is increasingly popular with digital nomads. Casablanca, Rabat, and Tangier offer fiber internet at coworking spaces (50-100 Mbps). Marrakech has the largest nomad community. Coworking day passes cost from 80 MAD (~$8). The cost of living is low and the time zone is convenient for European and US clients.
Carriers, apps, emergency numbers, data saving.
Read moreDetailed prepaid SIM comparison for tourists.
Read moreCoworking, cost of living, remote work cities.
Read moreStep-by-step buying and activation instructions.
Read moreLiving and working remotely in Morocco.
Read moreExplore more practical guides for an unforgettable experience in Morocco.