This is home for us. Chefchaouen sits at 600 metres in the Rif Mountains of northern Morocco, four hours from Fès and an hour from Tetouan — the country's most photographed town, and one of its most misread. People turn up expecting a backdrop and leave having found a place that works for a living: a mountain town with its own culture, a climate that runs cool when the lowlands swelter, goat cheese worth the trip alone, and lanes every bit as blue as the photos promised.
Why is Chefchaouen painted blue?
The blue-and-white palette of the medina has at least three competing origin stories, all of which are probably partly true. The most historically documented explanation is Sephardic: when Jewish refugees expelled from Spain in 1492 settled in Chefchaouen, they introduced the tradition of painting thresholds and public walls in tekhelet — a blue associated in Jewish tradition with heaven and divine protection. Blue repels mosquitoes, too, which may have encouraged the broader adoption of the colour.
The practice was adopted by the Muslim population over succeeding generations and today is maintained as a point of civic identity. The municipality actively enforces a consistent palette — homeowners who repaint in unsanctioned colours are asked to correct it. Walking the medina, you notice that the blue is not uniform: some walls are cobalt, some periwinkle, some almost violet, depending on the pigment used and how many seasons of mountain weather they have absorbed. The variation is part of what makes it beautiful.
What is there to do in Chefchaouen beyond photography?
The medina is compact — walkable in forty minutes — but rewards slow exploration. Start at Plaza Uta el-Hammam, the central square, where the fifteenth-century Kasbah and its hexagonal minaret anchor the northern end. The Kasbah museum inside documents the town's Andalusian heritage with ceramics, weapons and textiles worth thirty minutes of attention.
From the square, walk east toward Ras el-Maa, the mountain spring where women traditionally wash wool in the cold rushing water. It is a working part of the town, not a tourist attraction, and the ten-minute walk takes you through increasingly local streets where the tour groups thin out. The waterfall itself is modest but the setting — blue-washed walls against the forested hillside — is excellent.
The Spanish mosque on the hill above the medina (a twenty-minute uphill walk from Plaza Uta el-Hammam) offers the best panoramic view of the blue rooftops against the Rif Mountains. Non-Muslims cannot enter, but the terrace outside is open and sunrise from here — the town still quiet, the light raking across the rooftops — is among the most memorable moments Morocco offers.
The morning market near the grand mosque sells Rif Mountain produce: fresh goat cheese (jben) sold in rush baskets, dried figs, wild thyme and oregano, hand-spun wool, and cannabis resin (openly sold in the northern Rif, legally ambiguous for foreigners — use your judgement).
Day trip or overnight: which is better?
A day trip from Fès is logistically feasible — four hours each way, three to four hours in the town — but leaves you in Chefchaouen at its most crowded, between 11am and 4pm. The blue streets are genuinely beautiful at this hour, but you are photographing them alongside significant numbers of other people doing the same.
One night changes everything. By 6pm the day-trip coaches have left. The medina reverts to its own pace: locals setting up chairs in the square, the call to prayer bouncing off the blue walls, the mountain air noticeably cooler than the city you came from. Dawn — particularly in spring and autumn — produces soft, warm light before the tour groups arrive. Two nights is our standing recommendation for anyone who wants to photograph seriously or simply exhale.
How do you get to Chefchaouen?
From Fès: four hours by private car via the N13; five to six hours by CTM bus (two to three departures daily from the Fès bus station). This is the most natural pairing — Fès and Chefchaouen complement each other well as a northern Morocco circuit.
From Tangier: two to three hours by private car; Tangier Med port is an efficient entry point for travellers crossing from Spain. The Tangier–Chefchaouen–Fès route is a classic northern Morocco itinerary.
From Marrakech: six to eight hours by private car, making Chefchaouen a natural stop in a broader circuit (Marrakech — Fès — Chefchaouen — Tangier) rather than a standalone day trip from the south. No direct train serves the town; the nearest railhead is Meknès (three hours) or Tangier (two and a half hours).
See our destinations guide and private tours for itineraries that include Chefchaouen as part of a northern Morocco circuit.
What are the best photography spots in Chefchaouen?
- Rue Targhi — the most iconic lane in the blue quarter, with a staircase that photographs well from below. Best at 8–9am or 5–6pm.
- Plaza Uta el-Hammam at dusk — café lights reflecting on the blue walls; bring a wide-angle lens.
- The Spanish mosque terrace at sunrise — the only time you will have the panoramic view largely to yourself.
- Ras el-Maa — women washing wool against blue walls and rushing water; photograph respectfully and ask before including people close-up.
- The alleyways north of the Kasbah — less visited than the central quarter, with older, more faded blue walls that feel genuinely worn-in.
Frequently asked
Why is Chefchaouen painted blue?
Ask ten people in our medina and you'll hear three answers, all with some truth in them. The best-documented one is Sephardic: Jewish families who arrived after the 1492 expulsion from Spain brought a tradition of washing walls in blue, a colour their faith tied to the heavens. There's also the practical theory that blue keeps mosquitoes at bay. Whatever started it, the Muslim majority kept it going down the generations, and the town now guards the colour by ordinance — it's a matter of local pride more than anything.
Is Chefchaouen worth visiting, or is it just a photo opportunity?
We'd say that with a straight face even if it weren't our home: yes. Strip away the cameras and you've still got a working Rif mountain town — a busy wool and leather market, old mosques, and an Andalusian-Moroccan grain that feels nothing like Marrakech or Fès. The pictures are easy to come by; the real reward is staying a night or two and having the blue lanes to yourself once the day buses pull out.
How do you get to Chefchaouen from Marrakech or Fès?
From Fès we're about four hours by private car, or five to six by CTM bus — close enough to bolt onto a Fès trip overnight. From Marrakech it's a longer six to eight hours by car, so it makes more sense as a leg of a northern loop taking in Fès and Tangier. There's no station in town; the nearest railheads are Meknès or Tangier.
Is a day trip to Chefchaouen from Fès enough?
You can do it in a day, but you'll be cutting it fine — in by midday, three or four hours in the medina at peak crowd, out by late afternoon. Staying over flips the whole thing: the blue streets at dusk and at first light, with the coaches gone, are a different town altogether. We tell guests two nights is the sweet spot for an unhurried visit.
What is the best time of year to visit Chefchaouen?
Spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) are our pick — daytime temperatures around 18–24°C and the cleanest light for photographs. July and August fill up fast as Moroccans head inland to escape the coastal heat. Winter turns cold and sometimes brings snow to the Rif, which is lovely if you've packed proper layers.
What should you not miss in Chefchaouen?
The blue quarter around Plaza Uta el-Hammam is the obvious one. After that: climb to the Spanish mosque on the hill for the classic rooftop panorama, best caught at sunrise; walk ten minutes east to the Ras el-Maa spring, where locals still gather; and get to the morning market by the grand mosque for Rif wool and fresh goat cheese — that one's for the town, not the tourists.
Northern Morocco circuits
We build Chefchaouen into itineraries that make sense.
Fès, Chefchaouen, Tangier — or a full northern loop. Private car, curated guesthouses, early starts. Tell us what you are looking for.
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