Ouarzazate sits at 1,160 metres on the edge of the Saharan steppe, home to Africa's largest film studios and some of Morocco's finest kasbahs. Here is how to spend your time properly.
Why Ouarzazate Deserves More Than a One-Night Stop
Most travellers treat Ouarzazate as a waypoint — a night between Marrakech and Merzouga, or a lunch stop before the Draa Valley. That is a mistake. The city sits at the confluence of three river valleys and serves as the administrative capital of the Souss-Massa-Draa region, but its identity is shaped by something older: a position on the trans-Saharan caravan routes that made it a crossroads long before any tarmac road existed. The name itself translates loosely from Tamazight as 'without noise' — and despite its modest population of around 71,000, there is a languid, unhurried quality to the place that rewards those who slow down. Allow two nights minimum.
Atlas Corporation Studios: Where Deserts Become Sets
Built in 1983 on the southern outskirts of town, Atlas Corporation Studios covers roughly 30 hectares and holds the distinction of being the largest film studio complex on the African continent. The list of productions filmed here is almost absurd in its ambition: Lawrence of Arabia used the surrounding landscapes before the studio was formally established, but Gladiator, The Mummy, Babel, Game of Thrones, Kingdom of Heaven, Jewel of the Nile, and dozens of other productions have used the backlots and costume warehouses here. The studio offers guided tours that take you through replica Egyptian temples, a reconstructed Tibetan village, and a standing Roman street that has appeared in more than a dozen films. Tours run daily from 08:00 to 17:30 and cost 50 MAD for adults. CLA Studios, a competing facility that opened later, sits just a few kilometres along the same road and offers a similar experience for roughly the same price. If you only visit one, Atlas Corporation is the original and still the more atmospheric.
Ouarzazate at a Glance
1983
Year Atlas Corporation Studios opened
30 ha
Approximate studio lot size
1,160m
City altitude above sea level
30km
Distance to Ait Ben Haddou
10km
Distance to Fint Oasis
50 MAD
Adult entry to Atlas Studios
Kasbah Taourirt: The Glaoui Legacy in Mud Brick
On the eastern edge of the old town, Kasbah Taourirt is the most accessible historic monument in Ouarzazate and one of the finest examples of southern Moroccan pisé architecture anywhere in the country. It was built by the powerful Glaoui family — the pashas of Marrakech who served as intermediaries between the French protectorate and the mountain Berber tribes — and at its peak housed several hundred family members and servants across its warren of rooms and towers. The UNESCO-assisted restoration project has stabilised the main residential quarters and you can walk freely through the warren of corridors, decorated plaster archways, and rooftop terraces without paying an entry fee for the exterior sections. A small inner museum charges a modest fee. Directly opposite the kasbah, a row of craft workshops employs local artisans and the quality of work here — particularly the carved cedarwood and hand-knotted carpets — is notably higher than what you find in the tourist bazaars of Marrakech.
I expected a dusty film-set town and found something genuinely beautiful. The kasbah at dusk, when the light turns the mud walls amber, was one of those Morocco moments I had not planned for.
Fint Oasis: The Secret Garden Ten Kilometres East
Follow the road east out of Ouarzazate for ten kilometres and the desert steppe gives way, suddenly and completely, to one of the most improbable patches of green in southern Morocco. Fint Oasis sits in a gorge carved by a seasonal river and shelters date palms, rose hedges, pomegranate trees, and small plots of barley behind low mud walls. The resident Berber community is small and the oasis sees a fraction of the visitors that the town's studios attract. There is a short walking trail that loops through the palmerie and along the cliff edge above the river bed, and a handful of families operate simple cafe terraces where you can eat a tagine and drink mint tea in near-complete silence. Come in the early morning or late afternoon when the light is soft and the heat has eased.
What to Do in Two Days in Ouarzazate
- Morning of Day 1: Kasbah Taourirt and the craft workshops opposite
- Afternoon of Day 1: Atlas Corporation Studios tour (allow 2 hours)
- Evening of Day 1: Walk the main boulevard, Avenue Mohammed V, for cafe terraces
- Morning of Day 2: Drive to Fint Oasis for the early light (10km east)
- Afternoon of Day 2: Day trip to Ait Ben Haddou (30km northwest, 45 minutes each way)
- Optional: Museum of Cinema, signposted near the studios, free entry
Staying In vs Passing Through
Ouarzazate makes a poor base for Erg Chebbi (4 hours away) but an excellent base for Ait Ben Haddou, the Draa Valley, and the Dades-Todra circuit. If you are driving from Marrakech to the desert, plan to stay two nights here rather than rushing through. Dar Kamar, inside the kasbah neighbourhood, is a well-run riad with reliable plumbing and good food. Riad Salam on the northern edge of town has a pool and works well for families. Both charge 400-700 MAD per night for a double room.



