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Essaouira with Kids (2026): Easy Family Travel Guide
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Writing lived-in travel guides from long stays and real routes

Essaouira with kids feels like Morocco turned the volume down — in the best possible way. We get the medina, the beach, the blue boats, the seafood, and just enough chaos to keep things interesting without needing a recovery nap every 27 minutes.

This is where we wander slowly, snack often, chase seagulls, dodge wind gusts, and remember that family travel does not always need a military-grade itinerary.

Planning a family trip around Essaouira? Keep going.

Essaouira is one of those rare places where we can wander with kids without feeling like we’re dragging them through a museum of adult patience. Sea air, ramparts, easy food stops, beach time, and just enough chaos to keep things interesting — beautiful, but not exhausting. Mostly.

  • Things to do in Essaouira — for the main sights, beach walks, medina wandering, and the “what now?” moments between snacks.
  • Where to eat in Essaouira — because hungry children plus vague restaurant plans is how holidays become survival documentaries.
  • Glamping in Morocco — for families who like the idea of adventure, but also beds, bathrooms, and not suffering heroically.
  • Rabat, Morocco guide — a calmer city stop if you’re turning Essaouira into a bigger Morocco itinerary.
  • Things to do in Nador, Morocco — for another coastal Morocco angle when you’re not quite done with sea views yet.

Top Things To Do in Essaouira with Kids

Start Your Day at the Port of Essaouira

Essaouira with kids

A few early-morning steps across Moulay el Hassan Square are enough to set the tone. Thousands of gulls and seagulls gather above the port, clearly here for the same show as us: the return of the fishing boats.

Once they pass through the Marine Gate, the boats arrive loaded with the morning’s catch. Then the real performance begins: unloading, sorting, selling, shouting, bargaining, and birds attempting their usual daylight robbery. Cats join in too, meowing dramatically at the fishermen as if they have signed a very serious seafood contract.

The lively fish market is the perfect place to discover what has been caught that day: sea bream, sardines, sole, anchovies, red mullet, shrimp, squid, and more. The atmosphere is loud, salty, chaotic, and wonderfully alive. Ideal for waking up — unless the smell of fish does the job first.

The experience to try: do as the Moroccans do and eat freshly caught grilled fish, even at 10 a.m. Breakfast rules are flexible in Essaouira. Fish rules, apparently, are not.

Stroll Along the Ramparts and Play at Being Cabin Boys

Essaouira rampants

Protecting the city from the trade winds and powerful Atlantic waves, Essaouira’s ramparts and bastions once shielded it from raiders. Today, you can walk along them for a completely different view of the city.

From the port’s Skala, children love pretending to be sailors, climbing around the cannons while parents enjoy the magnificent view over Essaouira and the Purpuraires Islands. Everyone wins: they get imaginary sea battles, we get scenery.

From the medina side, the Skala offers a superb view of the ocean. The wide platform attracts locals who come to sit, talk, contemplate, and let the breeze do its work. I loved watching life unfold there so peacefully: children running, lovers meeting, old friends solving the world’s problems one conversation at a time.

There is something poetic about this place. Not in a forced postcard way — more in the “let’s sit here five more minutes” way.

Get Lost in the Medina and Count Cats

Blue and white street in the medina of Essaouira in Morocco

There is no better way to discover a medina than to get lost in it. Luckily, Essaouira’s blue-and-white medina practically invites slow wandering.

Listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Essaouira has an old-world atmosphere that is a huge part of its charm. Leather shops, ceramics, musical instruments, medicinal plant sellers, street artisans, cafés, restaurants, and riads with enormous carved doorways — it all feels made for strolling without a strict plan.

In some corners, the crumbling walls and sunbathing cats make it feel like time has paused. But Essaouira is not sleepy. Carts roll past carrying goods and luggage, shopkeepers call out, and the newer souks around Mohammed Zerktouni Avenue add plenty of movement and noise.

A perfect family activity: count the cats in the medina. Our daughters loved spotting them in the most unlikely places. In three days, they counted 352 cats. Now it is your turn to beat their record — good luck, you will need commitment and possibly a clipboard.

Eating in Essaouira: A Fresh, Local Experience

Medina Essaouira

Between all that fresh fish and the hours spent wandering the medina, you will definitely work up an appetite.

Start with the fish market stalls. The atmosphere is electric: birds and cats hover hopefully, vendors call out to passersby, and the day’s catch is displayed in glorious, glittering piles.

It is easy to choose a stall when the fish are arranged beautifully. We picked a sea bream, some shrimp, and squid. Within minutes, everything was ready to be cooked. We walked over to a small eatery that looked busier than the others — always a good sign.

A little seasoning, a turn on the grill, and there it was: perfectly cooked fresh fish, served with Moroccan salad, fries, and bread. Cats circled our feet in a very unsubtle attempt to inherit our leftovers. The whole thing was noisy, delicious, and exactly the kind of meal you hope to find in Morocco.

The experience to try: keep an eye out in the medina for women turning traditional stone mills to make amlou, a rich paste made from roasted almonds, argan oil, and honey. It is ridiculously good. Sit down in a simple local eatery and order msemen with amlou and a glass of mint tea. Breakfast? Snack? Dessert? We refuse to limit it.

Learn to Surf as a Family in Essaouira

Surfing in Essaouira

If your family is even slightly sporty, Essaouira is a great place to try surfing.

The waves are gentle enough for beginners, and our daughters, aged 6 and 8, took a lesson and managed to catch a few waves. Their joy level? Extremely high. Their future professional surf career? Still under review.

For more experienced water-sport lovers, Essaouira’s consistent daily wind makes it famous for kitesurfing too. Professionals know this bay well, and it has hosted major international kitesurfing events. If you want to learn properly, plan several sessions rather than expecting to master it in one heroic afternoon.

Not into swimming or water sports? No problem. The beach is also perfect for playing ball with the kids, walking barefoot, or eating local ice cream while pretending that counts as an activity.

A couple-friendly trick: book the children into a surf lesson and enjoy a little time together. Revolutionary? No. Necessary? Sometimes very much yes.

Enjoy the Sunsets of Essaouira

Sunset of Essaouira

Honestly, the sunsets alone are a good reason to spend at least one night in Essaouira.

Actually, make that two nights, because there are two beautiful sunset spots and it would be rude to choose only one.

Essaouira’s wide beach faces west, making it a perfect place to watch the sky turn warm and golden. Every evening, the light changes over the sand, sea, and island of Mogador. It is simple, beautiful, and very easy to enjoy as a family.

The ramparts offer a different sunset mood. From there, the view stretches over the sea and the port, and the whole city seems to soften at dusk. Romantic, cinematic, and just dramatic enough — classic Essaouira.

The family experience to book: a horse ride about 30 minutes before sunset. Riding along the beach as the sun drops behind Mogador Island is magical.

Practical Information for Visiting Essaouira with Kids

Where to Stay in Essaouira with Kids

The medina is calm compared with many Moroccan cities, but it can still be lively in the evening, with darboukas, Gnawa songs, and music drifting through the streets. If your accommodation is not well soundproofed, you may fall asleep to the soundtrack of Essaouira. Honestly, there are worse problems.

For the full experience, choose a riad.

Riad les Matins Bleus is ideally located in the medina and has charming family rooms with a real Arabian Nights atmosphere.

If you prefer staying by the ocean, Villa Quiéta offers beautiful family suites and a more indulgent seaside stay.

When to Visit Essaouira

Essaouira has a unique microclimate in Morocco. Thanks to the trade winds, it stays cool even in summer, usually around 21–26°C.

This is exactly why Moroccans flock here during the hottest months. You may even see locals wearing jackets in August, which feels slightly surreal when the rest of Morocco is melting.

Essaouira is a great destination year-round, but it is especially perfect in summer when inland cities like Marrakech and Ouarzazate can become brutally hot.

What to Pack for Essaouira

Pack a sweater. Seriously.

Essaouira can feel chilly, especially in the evenings and on the ramparts. The wind is part of the charm, but it does not care about your romantic summer outfit plans.

Also bring a swimsuit if you do not mind cooler water, and sunscreen because the wind can trick you into forgetting how strong the sun is.

Do not forget:

  • A sweater or light jacket
  • Sunscreen
  • Swimsuits
  • Sunglasses
  • Something wind-friendly for evenings on the ramparts

Essaouira with Kids: Our Honest Review

As you might have guessed, Essaouira was a huge hit with our family.

We loved its relaxed, peaceful atmosphere, but also its lively energy. During our three days there, we were never bored. We wandered, ate, watched boats return to the port, counted cats, explored the ramparts, surfed, and followed our mood rather than a strict schedule.

If you are planning a family trip to Morocco, Essaouira is the perfect place to slow down, especially after busier medinas like Marrakech.

It is Morocco at its most relaxed: salty, windy, beautiful, slightly chaotic, and wonderfully easy with children.


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