Private timing
Families can start earlier or later, pause for mid-morning fresh orange juices, add photo stops, and completely avoid being locked into an exhausting group march.
From Morocco Travel Experts, written by Hamid El Maimouni
Updated: June 19, 2026 | Morocco family travel planning guide by Morocco Travel Experts
Direct answer: Fes with kids is best with a private guide who can keep medina walks short, choose craft stops carefully, avoid overwhelming lanes and adjust the visit around snacks, shade and rest breaks.
Fes El-Bali, the world’s largest active medieval car-free urban zone, is a sensory wonderland. For adults, the maze of over 9,000 alleys is a historic marvel; for children, it can easily feel overwhelming. This guide explains how to balance history with family comfort, pick the best private route, and unlock an enriching cultural adventure for your little ones.
Fes with kids is best with a private guide who can keep medina walks short, choose craft stops carefully, avoid overwhelming lanes and adjust the visit around snacks, shade and rest breaks. The reason a private Morocco family tour works so well is simple: the day can be adjusted around children, meals, bathroom stops, naps, walking limits and hotel comfort. Rather than dragging kids along a rigid group schedule, a private family approach treats the medina as an interactive storybook.
Families can start earlier or later, pause for mid-morning fresh orange juices, add photo stops, and completely avoid being locked into an exhausting group march.
The itinerary can reduce long drives, emphasize refreshing two-night stays, and select wider, well-ventilated souk sectors matching your children’s stamina.
A Morocco-based team can arrange child-friendly guides, vetted drivers, riads with pools, and answer practical tactical questions long before your plane lands.
Use the route below as a starting point. It can be shortened, slowed down or extended depending on flight times, child ages and how much desert, coast or city time you want.
| # | Stop | Family planning role | Child Attraction Element |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fes Medina (Bab Boujloud) | Arrival or starting base | Spotting passing donkeys and watching dynamic bread ovens at work. |
| 2 | Craft Workshops | Main route stop | Interactive look at clay wheel molding, colorful weaving, and brass etching. |
| 3 | Marinid Tombs Viewpoint | Main route stop | Open mountain breezes and wide vistas away from tight alleyways. |
| 4 | Family-friendly Riad | Finish or flexible extension | Splashing in a central courtyard dip pool and eating familiar pastries. |
These internal tour pages are useful starting points. Ask for a family-friendly version with the right pace, hotel style, vehicle type and child-specific details.

Good for first-time families who want Casablanca, imperial cities, and a structured private driver framework.

Best base route when families want premium comfort, fewer packed transit days, and a comprehensive Morocco discovery loop.

A highly scenic northern family route linking Tangier, the blue city of Chefchaouen, historic Fes, Rabat, and Casablanca.
Share your travel dates, child ages, preferred pace, hotel comfort level and any special needs. Morocco Travel Experts can then adapt a private route instead of forcing your family into a fixed itinerary.
Before locking in your travel plans, run through this practical assessment to make sure your logistics are fully optimized for smooth days.
| Item | What to confirm | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Child ages | Share exact ages before the route is built. | It directly dictates daily drive length boundaries, appropriate guide vocabulary style, hotel bedding configurations, and interactive activities. |
| Vehicle | Confirm private vehicle class, storage room, and robust AC. | Long transitions across mountain or desert roads can get tough without ample legroom and climate control. |
| Daily pace | Ask for realistic point-to-point transit times and scheduled rest stops. | Digital mapping algorithms don’t account for mountain curves or the reality of regular toddler bathroom demands. |
| Hotels or riads | Check interior stairs, sound insulation, street accessibility, and multi-room availability. | A visually stunning rooftop terrace might lack childproof railings or feature deep interior step-downs that present tripping hazards. |
| Food | Discuss accessible menu options, severe allergies, and local dining times. | Moroccan restaurants typically serve dinner later in the evening. Planning early meals or riad room service avoids late-night meltdowns. |
| Flexibility | Identify alternative activities if energy drops. | Family travel excels when you can swap a museum trip for an hour of pool splashing without breaking your schedule. |



Helpful links: The links below connect this article to Morocco Travel Experts tour pages, practical family resources and official travel references.
Yes, Fes can be absolute magic for kids, acting like a real-life historical movie set. However, because it contains thousands of narrow lanes, packed marketplace zones, and bustling donkey traffic, it requires an experienced guide and a slow, highly flexible route structure to ensure younger children don’t become fatigued or overwhelmed.
A licensed guide is strongly recommended for families. Attempting to constantly track directions on a map while watching over small children in crowded souks can be incredibly tiring. An expert guide handles the navigation seamlessly, knows exactly where public restrooms are tucked away, and introduces you to kid-friendly vendors.
Two nights is usually much better than a single night stay. Arriving after a long road trip or train transfer leaves children tired; having a full, unhurried day between stays allows you to divide the medina tour into manageable morning and afternoon blocks with an essential midday rest interval at your riad.
We generally advise against using traditional strollers inside the old town. The paths feature ancient uneven cobblestones, steep inclines, and deep stone steps. Opt for a high-quality ergonomic baby carrier or backpack backpack for infants, or prepare to take frequent walking breaks with toddlers.