Discovering...
Discovering...

Rabat is the easy one. Morocco's capital is green, orderly and walkable, with one of Africa's best zoos on its doorstep, storks nesting over Roman ruins, a toy-town tram kids beg to ride, and a beach a short hop away. This guide is about the activities and days out that fill a family stay, not where to book your rooms.
Star attraction
Rabat National Zoo, home to the Atlas lion
Kids' favourite quirk
Storks nesting on the ruins at Chellah
Free and lovely
Kasbah des Oudaias and its Andalusian gardens
Cheap thrill
The Rabat–Salé tram, tickets around 6 MAD
Beach day
Temara and Plage des Nations, a short taxi south
Local taxi
Blue petits taxis; short hops roughly 8–20 MAD
Getting here
Fast, frequent trains from Casablanca and beyond
Feel
Flat, green and stroller-friendly across the centre
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 4 April 2026 Last updated 15 July 2026
Rabat feels built for families almost by accident. As the administrative capital it is spacious, green and low-key, with wide pavements, big gardens, an easy modern tram and a medina that stays calm where others overwhelm. Nothing here assaults small children the way the biggest souks can, and the distances between sights are short and mostly flat, so a stroller is genuinely usable across the centre.
That gentleness lets you slot in real culture without a fight: a Roman ruin here, a blue kasbah there, broken up by a zoo, a beach and a tram ride the kids actually request. This guide sticks to those activities and outings. If you are still weighing neighbourhoods and family rooms, the stay guides cover that; the broader sightseeing detail lives in pages like the Chellah necropolis guide.
The Rabat National Zoo, on the city's southern edge, is the headline outing and one of the best-designed zoos in Africa. It is spread across large, landscaped biome zones — Atlas mountains, savanna, wetlands, desert — and its pride of Atlas lions, the subspecies once native to Morocco, is the emotional centrepiece. It easily fills half a day and often more, with shaded paths, picnic spots and enough space for a buggy, so it works right across the age range.
For something no theme park can match, Chellah is a walled Roman and Merinid ruin on the edge of town where dozens of white storks build huge untidy nests on the old columns and minaret, clattering their bills overhead. Kids who glaze over at ancient stones light up at the storks, making this the rare monument that genuinely entertains under-tens. The table below shows how the main options play across the ages.
| Activity | Toddlers (under 5) | Ages 6–11 | Teens (12+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rabat National Zoo | Ideal — space and animals | Atlas lions and savanna | Photography and biomes |
| Chellah ruins and storks | The storks amaze | Ruins plus stork-spotting | History and atmosphere |
| Kasbah des Oudaias and gardens | Run in the gardens | Blue lanes and river view | Photos and mint tea |
| Hassan Tower esplanade | Space and mounted guards | Guards and big columns | History and the setting |
| Rabat–Salé tram | A novelty ride | Fun, easy transport | Cheap way to get around |
| Temara / Plage des Nations beach | Sand and shallows | Swimming and games | Surf and hanging out |
The Kasbah des Oudaias is Rabat's postcard: a small hilltop fortress of blue-and-white lanes above the Bouregreg river, with a tranquil Andalusian garden of orange trees, cats and fountains where children can safely potter. It is free, compact and calm, and the café terrace at the tip looks across the water to Salé — an easy, pretty stop that never overstays its welcome with young kids.
Nearby, the Hassan Tower esplanade sets an unfinished 12th-century minaret and a forest of stone columns beside the royal mausoleum, guarded by soldiers on horseback the kids will want to photograph. When everyone needs to simply run, the botanical Jardin d'Essais and the city's parks give shade and space, and the marina path along the Bouregreg is a flat, easy stroll for scooters and buggies.
Rabat rewards a slow, spread-out day more than a packed itinerary, and its flat centre plus the tram make chaining sights easy without exhausting anyone. A good rhythm gives the zoo its own morning — it genuinely fills half a day — and saves the compact monuments and gardens for a gentler afternoon, with tram and taxi hops covering the gaps so nobody walks too far.
If you would rather split the animals and the history across two mornings, the plan flexes: zoo one day, and a Chellah-Oudaias-Hassan Tower loop the next, each capped with garden or beach downtime. The outline below is the single-day version, built around the storks being liveliest early and small legs fading by late afternoon.
| Time | Plan | Why it works with kids |
|---|---|---|
| Morning | Rabat National Zoo | Space, animals and shade to start |
| Lunch | Café near the centre | Rest and refuel before culture |
| Early afternoon | Chellah ruins and storks | Birds keep kids engaged in ruins |
| Mid afternoon | Kasbah des Oudaias and gardens | Flat, free and calm |
| Late afternoon | Tram hop and a garden or riverside stroll | Easy wind-down, a fun ride home |
Rabat is mid-priced by Moroccan standards but very manageable for families, helped by the cheap tram and a stack of free or low-cost sights. The zoo is the one meaningful ticket; much of the rest — the kasbah, the gardens, the esplanade, the beach — costs nothing. Figures below are approximate mid-2026 in MAD with a rough dollar steer (about 10 MAD to 1 USD), and should be read as a guide, since entry fees are revised from time to time.
| Item | Approx MAD | USD ≈ | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rabat National Zoo (adult / child) | ~60 / ~30 | $6 / $3 | Fills half a day or more |
| Chellah entry (adult) | ~70 | ~$7 | Children reduced |
| Kasbah des Oudaias and gardens | Free | $0 | Café tea extra |
| Rabat–Salé tram ticket | ~6 | ~$0.60 | Per journey |
| Blue petit taxi, short hop | 8–20 | $1–2 | About +50% after 8pm |
| Kids' snack / fresh juice | 5–20 | $0.50–2 | Medina and café stalls |
Rabat is the easiest Moroccan capital to move around with children. The centre is flat and walkable, blue petits taxis are cheap and plentiful, and the tram links the main areas for a few dirhams; bring your own car seat for any taxi if you want one, as they are not standard. Trains make day trips effortless too — Casablanca is well under an hour away by frequent service, so a Rabat base can reach a lot without a car.
When the city has had its turn, the coast is close. The beaches at Temara and the Plage des Nations, a short taxi south, give sand, shallows and space for a proper beach afternoon, covered in the Temara beaches guide. For a ready-made timed loop of the city sights, the one day in Rabat itinerary works well with kids, and as a 2030 World Cup host city Rabat is adding hotels and transport, so book family rooms ahead.
Very. Rabat is calm, green, flat and walkable — the easiest major Moroccan city with kids. It has one of Africa's best zoos, storks nesting over the Chellah ruins, a cheap tram children love to ride, free gardens and a nearby beach. Strollers work across the centre and the medina stays relaxed, so a family can mix real culture with downtime without any struggle.
Top of the list is the national zoo with its Atlas lions and African biome zones. Add Chellah for its ruins and dozens of nesting storks, the free blue-and-white Kasbah des Oudaias with Andalusian gardens, the Hassan Tower esplanade with mounted guards, a tram ride, and a beach afternoon at Temara. It is an easy, varied mix for all ages.
Yes, it is the city's standout family day. The zoo is modern and spacious, laid out in large landscaped biomes from Atlas mountains to savanna, with the native Atlas lion as its centrepiece. Shaded paths, picnic areas and room for a buggy mean it fills half a day or more comfortably, and it suits every age from toddlers to teens who enjoy the photography.
Because of the storks. Chellah is a walled Roman and Merinid ruin where dozens of white storks build huge nests on the old columns and minaret, clattering their bills right overhead. Children who tune out of ancient history light up watching the birds come and go, which makes Chellah the rare monument that genuinely entertains under-tens as well as interesting older kids and adults.
Modest. The zoo is around 60 MAD for adults and 30 MAD for children, and Chellah about 70 MAD with kids reduced, while the Oudaias kasbah, gardens, esplanade and beach are all free. Tram tickets are about 6 MAD each, short taxi hops 8–20 MAD, and snacks 5–20 MAD, so a full day of sightseeing stays comfortably affordable.
More than any other big Moroccan city. The centre, the gardens, the Hassan Tower esplanade and the riverside marina path are all flat and buggy-friendly, and the tram helps cover longer gaps. Only the Kasbah des Oudaias and parts of Chellah have a few steps and uneven ground where a carrier is easier for under-threes, so bring both if you can.
Yes, easily. Rabat sits on Morocco's main rail line with fast, frequent trains, so Casablanca is well under an hour away and other cities are reachable for a day out without hiring a car. The station is central, and the train ride itself is part of the fun for children. It makes Rabat a low-stress base for exploring the wider region.
Spring (March to May) and autumn (September to October) are ideal — mild, green and comfortable for walking and gardens. Summer is warm but tempered by the Atlantic breeze and good for the beach, while winter is cool and can be wet. Whenever you go, the flat, shaded city is forgiving, so pace it slowly and pair sights with garden or tram breaks.
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