
Hassan II Mosque, Guided
Boulevard de la Corniche, Casablanca
A half-day private visit to Hassan II Mosque — one of the only mosques in Morocco open to non-Muslims — with a licensed guide and skip-the-line timed entry.

The catalogue · 10 private trips
Every tour below is privately operated by our local Casablanca team — Hassan II Mosque visits, art-deco and medina walks, layover tours and day trips to Rabat and El Jadida. Reshape any of them: change dates, add a stop, fit it to your flights. Real prices, written quotes in 24 hours.
10 private trips

Boulevard de la Corniche, Casablanca
A half-day private visit to Hassan II Mosque — one of the only mosques in Morocco open to non-Muslims — with a licensed guide and skip-the-line timed entry.

Downtown Casablanca
A half-day walking tour of Casablanca's 1920s–30s downtown: Art-Deco and Mauresque facades, Place Mohammed V, the old cathedral and the central market.

Old Medina & Quartier des Habous, Casablanca
A half-day on foot through Casablanca's original walled medina and the elegant 1920s Habous quarter — the 'New Medina' built in Moorish style — with its arcades, bakeries and craft shops.

Boulevard de la Corniche · Ain Diab
A relaxed half-day along Casablanca's Corniche and the Ain Diab seafront — the mosque from the water side, beach clubs, the lighthouse and the Sidi Abderrahmane marabout on its tidal island.

Central market & old medina, Casablanca
An evening of Casablanca's real food — snail soup, grilled fish off the central market, msemen and mint tea — across six tasting stops with a local foodie guide.

Old medina & downtown, Casablanca
An evening tracing the myth of the 1942 film — the real Casablanca it imagined, the colonial downtown, and a three-course dinner at Rick's Café with live piano.

Rabat
A full-day private trip to the capital, an hour north of Casablanca: the blue-and-white Kasbah of the Udayas, the Hassan Tower and royal mausoleum, and the Roman-Marinid ruins of Chellah.

El Jadida (Mazagan)
A full-day trip south to El Jadida — the UNESCO-listed Portuguese fortified town of Mazagan, famous for its eerie underground cistern with mirror-still water and shafts of light.

Casablanca → Marrakech
A private one-way transfer from Casablanca to Marrakech that doubles as a day tour — a guided Hassan II Mosque visit, then a stop at the seaside resort of El Jadida or the pottery town of Safi before reaching Marrakech by evening.

Mohammed V Airport · Casablanca
A flexible layover tour built around your flight times: collect you at Mohammed V Airport, see Hassan II Mosque and the old medina or Habous, and have you back at the terminal with comfortable margin.
Frequently asked
Casablanca has a mild Atlantic coastal climate, so it is comfortable to visit for much of the year. Spring (April–June) and autumn (September–November) are especially pleasant, with warm days and sea breezes. Summers are warm but rarely extreme thanks to the ocean, while winters are cool and can be wet. Mornings near the coast are sometimes hazy or foggy, so afternoons often give the clearest light for sightseeing and photographs along the Corniche.
Casablanca's main sights fit comfortably into one full day. That is enough for the Hassan II Mosque, the Art-Deco and Mauresque architecture of the city centre, the Habous quarter, the Corniche and a meal by the ocean. With a second day you can slow the pace or add a day trip — Rabat, the capital, is a short drive north, and Casablanca also works well as a base for a wider tour of Morocco.
Yes. Casablanca has Morocco's main international airport and is a key rail hub, so it is a natural arrival point and stopover. A half-day or full-day tour lets you see the Hassan II Mosque and the city centre between flights or before continuing by train to Rabat, Marrakech, Fes or Tangier, which are all reachable by Morocco's national rail network.
The Hassan II Mosque is one of the few mosques in Morocco open to non-Muslim visitors, and entry is by guided tour at set times. Dress modestly: cover your shoulders and knees, and you will be asked to remove your shoes before entering the prayer hall, so easy-to-remove footwear helps. Tour times can change, so it is best to confirm the schedule in advance and arrive early. Modest dress is appreciated generally when visiting religious and traditional sites.
Casablanca is a large, modern city, so a licensed guide and a private driver make sightseeing far easier than navigating the traffic yourself. A guide adds context to the Art-Deco heritage and the mosque, while a driver links the spread-out sights efficiently. For getting around independently there is a tram network, app-based and metered taxis (the small red 'petit taxis'), and trains to other cities. Booking through a registered operator means your guide is licensed and insured.