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Things to Do in Casablanca — 15 Best Attractions, Prices & Day Trip Guide (2026)
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Things to Do in Casablanca — 15 Best Attractions, Prices & Day Trip Guide (2026)

Visit Kingdom of Morocco teamJune 2026

15 Best Attractions

Casablanca blends Art Deco grandeur, Moorish heritage, and modern commerce in a way no other Moroccan city does. Here’s everything worth seeing, with entry fees and time needed.

15 best things to do in Casablanca with entry fees
# Attraction Type Time Entry
1 Hassan II Mosque Mosque · Landmark 1–1.5 hrs ~130 MAD (tour)
2 Old Medina + Sqala Historic Quarter 1–2 hrs Free
3 Rick’s Café Restaurant · Bar 1.5–2 hrs Dinner ~200–500 MAD
4 Corniche Promenade · Beach 1–2 hrs Free
5 Mohammed V Square Art Deco · Square 30 min Free
6 Quartier Habous New Medina 1–1.5 hrs Free
7 Central Market Market · Food 1 hr Free (food ~80–150 MAD)
8 Sacré-Cœur Cathedral Art Deco · Cultural 30–45 min Free / donation
9 Morocco Mall Shopping · Aquarium 2–3 hrs Free (aquarium ~50 MAD)
10 Mahkama du Pacha Architecture 30 min Free (exterior)
11 Arab League Park Park · Gardens 30–60 min Free
12 Villa des Arts Art Museum 45 min ~20 MAD
13 Museum of Moroccan Judaism Museum 30–45 min ~20 MAD
14 Notre-Dame de Lourdes Church · 1954 20 min Free
15 Twin Center Modern Landmark 15 min Free (exterior)

Hassan II Mosque

Interior of the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca showing ornate ceiling, marble floors, and massive columns
Hassan II Mosque interior — Africa’s largest mosque, retractable roof, 6,000+ artisans

The Hassan II Mosque is Casablanca’s defining landmark. Built in 1993 under King Hassan II, it holds several records: Africa’s largest mosque, the world’s tallest minaret (210 m), and one of the only mosques in Morocco open to non-Muslim visitors.

The mosque sits partly over the Atlantic Ocean — waves crash beneath the glass floor. The interior features a retractable roof, hand-carved cedar and stucco ceilings, 78 granite columns, Italian marble, and zellige tilework crafted by over 6,000 Moroccan artisans. Capacity: 25,000 inside + 80,000 in the courtyard.

Guided tours run at fixed times (typically 9 AM, 10 AM, 11 AM, 2 PM — closed Friday mornings). Tours last ~1 hour, cost approximately ~130 MAD (~€12). Photography allowed inside. The exterior and esplanade are free and spectacular at sunset.

Old Medina & Habous

Courtyard fountain in Quartier Habous, Casablanca's New Medina with arches and greenery
Quartier Habous — the “New Medina,” designed in the 1930s with wide arched streets

The Old Medina is Casablanca’s historic heart — smaller and grittier than Marrakech’s, but authentic. The Sqala, an 18th-century Portuguese-built fortress, offers Atlantic views and houses Café La Sqala — one of Casablanca’s best lunch spots (tagine ~60–80 MAD). Free to explore.

Quartier Habous (the “New Medina”) was built in the 1930s by French architects who blended Moroccan medina design with wider streets. A clean, navigable market district: pastry shops (cornes de gazelle, chebakia), olive merchants, and the Royal Palace (exterior only). Free.

Art Deco & Architecture

Mohammed V Square in Casablanca showing Art Deco buildings, fountains, and the Wilaya
Mohammed V Square — Art Deco centrepiece with the Wilaya and Palace of Justice

Casablanca has the largest collection of Art Deco architecture outside Miami — a legacy of the 1920s–1940s French Protectorate. Best seen around Mohammed V Square (Wilaya, Palace of Justice, Post Office — all free), Boulevard Mohammed V, and Anfa.

Sacré-Cœur Cathedral — a striking 1930s Art Deco church, now a cultural centre. Twin towers, geometric concrete. Occasional exhibitions inside. Free. 30 minutes.

Mahkama du Pacha — a masterpiece of Moroccan-Andalusian architecture: carved stucco, zellige, cedar, 64 ornate rooms. Exterior always accessible, interior not always open. Free.

Twin Center — Casablanca’s modern skyline symbol. Two 115 m towers by Ricardo Bofill (2000). Free to view.

Rick’s Café & Dining

Diners at Rick's Café in Casablanca with piano bar and Art Deco décor
Rick’s Café — inspired by the 1942 film. Piano bar, cocktails, Moorish-Art Deco courtyard.

Rick’s Café — inspired by the 1942 film Casablanca (Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman). Opened 2004. Moorish-Art Deco décor, live jazz, courtyard. Mains ~200–350 MAD, cocktails ~100–150 MAD. Reserve ahead — especially weekends. Boulevard Sour Jdid, Old Medina.

Where else to eat: La Sqala (fortress café, tagine ~60–80 MAD), Le Cabestan (ocean-view, mains ~150–300 MAD), Central Market seafood stalls (fish platters ~80–150 MAD — point and pick), Habous pastry shops (cornes de gazelle ~5–10 MAD each).

Corniche & Coast

Sunset at the Casablanca Corniche promenade along the Atlantic Ocean
Corniche at sunset — Atlantic promenade, restaurants, and beach clubs

The Corniche stretches along the Atlantic from the mosque to Ain Diab, Casablanca’s beach district. Restaurants, cafés, beach clubs, luxury hotels. Free to walk. Best at sunset.

Ain Diab — public beaches free; private beach clubs ~50–150 MAD for sunbed. Water: 18–22°C (Atlantic, refreshing). Swimming best June–September.

More to See

Morocco Mall — the largest shopping mall in Africa. 600+ stores, aquarium (~50 MAD), ice rink, IMAX. Ain Diab. Free entry.

Arab League Park — Casablanca’s largest green space. Palms, fountains, tranquility. Free.

Villa des Arts — contemporary art in a beautiful Art Deco villa. ~20 MAD.

Museum of Moroccan Judaism — the only Jewish museum in the Arab world. Documents Morocco’s Jewish heritage (once 250,000+ Jews). ~20 MAD. Oasis district.

Notre-Dame de Lourdes — 1954 Catholic church with extraordinary stained-glass windows (800 m²). Plain exterior, kaleidoscope interior. Free.

Getting to Casablanca

How to get to Casablanca from Marrakech, Rabat, and Tangier
From Method Duration Cost
Marrakech MDT guided day trip ~3 hrs each way €80
Marrakech ONCF train 2.5–3 hrs ~100–150 MAD
Marrakech Car (A7) ~3 hrs Fuel + tolls ~100 MAD
Rabat ONCF train ~1 hr ~50–80 MAD
Tangier Al Boraq (high-speed) ~2 hrs ~200–350 MAD
Airport (CMN) Train to Casa Voyageurs ~30 min ~50 MAD
Airport (CMN) Taxi to centre ~30–40 min ~250–350 MAD
MDT Day Trip: Marrakech → Casablanca — €80. Hotel pickup, guided Hassan II Mosque tour + Old Medina + Habous + Rick’s Café, return same day. No navigation, no tickets. The easiest way to visit Casablanca from Marrakech.

Budget Guide

Casablanca costs — March 2026
Item Budget Mid-Range Luxury
Hotel (per night) ~200–400 MAD ~500–1,000 MAD ~1,500–4,000 MAD
Lunch ~30–60 MAD ~80–150 MAD ~200–400 MAD
Dinner ~50–100 MAD ~150–300 MAD ~300–600 MAD
Hassan II tour ~130 MAD
Petit taxi ~15–40 MAD (meter)
Tram ~7 MAD
Rick’s Café ~200–500 MAD/person
Daily budget ~€25–35 ~€50–80 ~€150+

1-Day Itinerary

Morning: Hassan II Mosque guided tour (9 or 10 AM, ~1.5 hrs). Walk to Old Medina. Sqala fortress. Coffee at Café La Sqala (~30–50 MAD).

Midday: Taxi to Quartier Habous — pastry shops, olive stalls, leather goods. Lunch at a local restaurant (~60–100 MAD) or Central Market seafood (~80–150 MAD).

Afternoon: Mohammed V Square + Art Deco boulevard. Sacré-Cœur Cathedral (30 min). Optional: Morocco Mall.

Evening: Corniche at sunset. Dinner at Rick’s Café (reserve) or Le Cabestan. Return to Marrakech or hotel.

Key Takeaways

#1: Hassan II Mosque — Africa’s largest, 210 m minaret, tour ~130 MAD, open to non-Muslims.

Duration: 1–2 days. Day trip from Marrakech: MDT €80.

Architecture: Largest Art Deco outside Miami. Mohammed V Square, Sacré-Cœur, Mahkama, Twin Center.

Food: Rick’s Café (~200–500 MAD), La Sqala (~60–80 MAD), Central Market seafood (~80–150 MAD).

Unique: Museum of Moroccan Judaism (only Jewish museum in Arab world), Morocco Mall (largest in Africa).

Safety: Generally safe. Casablanca safety guide →

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Visit Kingdom of Morocco team
Visit The Kingdom of Morocco · Marrakech