Green Fees in Morocco: What It Costs to Play in 2026
Morocco is one of golf's best kept value secrets, a short flight from Europe with championship courses set among cork oak forests, palm groves and the Atlas mountains. The golf is serious, the setting is exotic, and the green fees are a fraction of what comparable courses charge in Spain or Portugal. Here is what golf actually costs in Morocco in 2026, city by city, plus where to spend and where to save.
Photograph: Royal Golf Dar Es Salam, Rabat, via Google
The short answer
Plan on roughly 700 to 1,200 Moroccan dirhams for 18 holes at a quality course in high season, which is about 65 to 110 euro, or 70 to 120 US dollars. The flagship is the Red Course at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam in Rabat, a Robert Trent Jones Senior design that has hosted the Hassan II Trophy for more than three decades, at around 1,200 dirhams, with its Blue Course nearer 850. Marrakech, the country's golf capital, clusters a string of fine modern courses, Amelkis, Assoufid, Al Maaden, The Montgomerie and Royal Golf Marrakech among them, broadly in the 700 to 1,000 dirham band. The coastal resorts at Agadir and El Jadida sit in a similar range.
Two things make Morocco even better value than the headline fees suggest. First, a caddie is mandatory at several clubs and costs only around 100 to 200 dirhams, so a forecaddie or full caddie is an easy luxury. Second, many golfers buy a multi course pass or a stay and play package, which cuts the per round cost further across a week. The figures below are indicative high season rates in dirhams, with euro approximations, and they move with the season, the day and holiday weeks, so treat them as a guide and always confirm directly before booking.
Morocco green fees by course, 2026
| Course | City | Indicative 2026 green fee |
|---|---|---|
| Royal Golf Dar Es Salam, Red | Rabat | Around 1,200 MAD, about 110 euro; Robert Trent Jones Senior, Hassan II Trophy host |
| Royal Golf Dar Es Salam, Blue | Rabat | Around 850 MAD, about 78 euro |
| Amelkis Golf Club | Marrakech | Around 700 to 1,000 MAD, about 65 to 90 euro; Cabell Robinson, 27 holes |
| Assoufid Golf Club | Marrakech | Around 800 to 1,000 MAD, about 75 to 90 euro; Niall Cameron desert course |
| Al Maaden Golf | Marrakech | Around 700 to 900 MAD, about 65 to 83 euro; Kyle Phillips design |
| The Montgomerie Marrakech | Marrakech | Around 700 to 900 MAD, about 65 to 83 euro; Colin Montgomerie design |
| Royal Golf Marrakech | Marrakech | Around 950 MAD, about 88 euro; the city's classic original course |
| Mazagan Beach and Golf Resort | El Jadida | Around 700 to 900 MAD, about 65 to 83 euro; Gary Player coastal links style |
| Tazegzout Golf | Agadir | Around 700 MAD, about 65 euro; Kyle Phillips clifftop course above the Atlantic |
Green fees verified June 2026 from club and booking listings, including the official Royal Golf Dar Es Salam rate card; Marrakech figures are indicative high season ranges. Fees vary by season, day and holiday weeks and change without notice, so always confirm current rates directly with the course or your trip planner before booking. Check tee time availability.
How green fees work in Morocco
Three things shape the price. The first is the city. Marrakech is the golf capital, with the deepest cluster of modern courses and the liveliest scene, while Rabat holds the historic flagship at Dar Es Salam and Agadir and El Jadida add coastal golf with a milder summer climate. The second is season. The dry, mild window from October to April is peak for weather and price, rising further over Christmas, New Year and Easter, while high summer is hot inland and brings lower rates and early or late tee times. The third is the extras: a caddie is mandatory at several clubs, though cheap, and a buggy, club hire and practice balls are billed on top, so the all in cost is a little above the green fee.
The smart way to play Morocco is on a pass or package. Booking platforms and resorts sell multi course passes and stay and play deals that bundle several rounds at a meaningful discount, and a planner can secure the caddies, transfers and tee times across a week so the per round cost drops well below rack rate. Because the courses cluster tightly within each city, a Marrakech week in particular can take in four or five excellent courses with short transfers and no fuss.
Where to spend, and where to save
Spend where the golf is special. In Rabat that means the Red Course at Dar Es Salam, a genuine championship test in a cork oak forest and the one round in Morocco with real tournament pedigree. In Marrakech it means pairing a classic such as Amelkis or Royal Golf Marrakech with a modern design like Assoufid or Al Maaden, where the Atlas mountains form the backdrop. Save by playing in the afternoon, by travelling in the shoulder months, by taking a buggy only when the heat demands it, and above all by buying a pass or package rather than paying course by course. Build the week that way and Morocco delivers championship golf, an unforgettable setting and a bill that shames most of Europe. That is how we plan every Morocco trip.
Plan a Morocco golf trip
We build the multi course pass, secure the caddies, transfers and tee times, and pair the golf with the right riad or resort so your week runs smoothly and the per round cost stays low. Tell us roughly when and who is travelling, and one concierge costs it to the head, with no obligation.
Morocco green fee questions
How much are green fees in Morocco in 2026?
Morocco is excellent value by international standards. Most quality courses charge roughly 700 to 1,200 Moroccan dirhams for 18 holes in the high season, which is about 65 to 110 euro or 70 to 120 US dollars. The flagship Red Course at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam in Rabat is around 1,200 dirhams, the Blue Course around 850, and the premium Marrakech courses such as Amelkis, Assoufid, Al Maaden and The Montgomerie sit broadly in the 700 to 1,000 range. A caddie is mandatory at several clubs and is inexpensive. Always confirm current fees directly before booking.
How much does it cost to play Royal Golf Dar Es Salam?
The championship Red Course at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam in Rabat, a Robert Trent Jones Senior design that hosts the Hassan II Trophy, carries a public green fee of around 1,200 dirhams for 18 holes, roughly 110 euro, with the Blue Course around 850 dirhams. A caddie is mandatory at about 200 dirhams. These are indicative 2026 figures that vary by season and day, so always confirm directly before booking.
Is golf in Marrakech expensive?
No, by the standards of major golf destinations Marrakech is very good value. Its cluster of modern courses, including Amelkis by Cabell Robinson, Assoufid by Niall Cameron, Al Maaden by Kyle Phillips and The Montgomerie, typically charge around 700 to 1,000 dirhams in season, about 65 to 90 euro, with afternoon, summer and multi round rates lower still. Many golfers buy a pass or package across several courses. Always confirm current rates before booking.
When is the best time to play golf in Morocco?
The peak season runs from October to April, when the weather is mild and dry and the courses are at their best, and this is also when fees are highest, rising further over holidays and peak weeks. High summer is hot, especially inland at Marrakech, so play early or late and expect lower rates, while the coastal courses at Agadir and El Jadida stay more temperate. Always confirm course conditions and fees for your dates.
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Researched and written by the GolfForKings editorial desk. Indicative green fees verified June 2026. Last reviewed June 2026.