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Marrakech Private Collection · 2026
25 direcciones clasificadas por un residente local — actualizado cada mes.
La escena gastronómica de Marrakech en 2026 es la más fuerte de la última década. Instituciones como La Mamounia y Le Tobsil siguen marcando el listón del marroquí tradicional, pero el cambio real viene de la nueva generación: alta cocina libanesa en Azar, fusión coreano-marroquí en Yokai, barras crudas y cartas de vinos naturales en Gueliz, y rooftops que por fin saben cocinar más allá del plato instagrameable.
Abajo: 25 sitios que reservo personalmente para clientes cada semana, ordenados por lo que realmente hacen mejor. Los he ordenado por una mezcla de calidad de cocina, hospitalidad, relación calidad-precio (o factor "merece la pena"), y fiabilidad cuando quieres que funcione. Sin copia genérica. Sin relleno de "ambiente". Si un sitio está en esta lista, es porque la cocina aguanta.

Secret garden dining in the heart of the souks
Hidden in the souks, Le Jardin is one of the most beautiful restaurants in Marrakech. Set in an idyllic courtyard garden with banana trees and lush greenery, it serves Moroccan and Mediterranean cuisine. Known for the best pastillas in Marrakech and a peaceful atmosphere far from the bustle of the Medina.
Insider tip
Hidden inside the medina — you'd never find it without directions. The courtyard with banana trees feels like another world. Perfect refuge when the souks get overwhelming.
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Modern Moroccan cuisine with rooftop views over the Medina
Spread over four floors in a converted carpet store at Rahba Kedima — the old spice square of the medina — NOMAD has been one of the most consistently excellent restaurants in Marrakech since opening in 2014. The concept is modern Moroccan: familiar local ingredients and flavor profiles re-examined through a contemporary lens, with fresh seasonal produce sourced from partners across Morocco. Two rooftop terraces provide panoramic views of the Medina rooftops and Atlas Mountains, making this simultaneously one of the best food addresses and best view points in the city. The menu changes regularly but reliable signatures include the lamb merguez brioche and the cauliflower steak that has converted more vegetable skeptics than any dish I've seen here. The natural wine program is curated seriously — bottles change as frequently as the kitchen menu and reflect genuine interest from the team. Service is efficient without being mechanical. Budget 200-350 MAD per person for food, more with wine. Reservations strongly recommended Thursday through Sunday — the rooftop tables are limited and fill by early afternoon.
Insider tip
The cauliflower steak changed my mind about vegetarian food. Rooftop tables overlooking the spice market are best. My friend Kamal started as a waiter here and now manages the place.
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Open-air rooftop dining above the Medina rooftops
Kabana is one of those rooftop restaurant Marrakech spots that gets everything right — views, food, and atmosphere, all in one place. Perched above the Medina with an open-air terrace, it serves up panoramic views of the Koutoubia minaret and, on a clear evening, the snow-capped Atlas Mountains in the background. I've been coming here for years and it still delivers. The menu is a confident mix of Mediterranean and Moroccan cuisines — think chargrilled octopus alongside slow-cooked lamb tagine, bruschetta sharing plates next to bastilla au poulet. It reads eclectic but the kitchen pulls it off. The best view Marrakech has to offer at dinner is probably from the corner tables on the west side of the terrace. Get there just before sunset and you'll understand why this place fills up fast. The decor is colourful and relaxed — terracotta tones, hanging lanterns, low-slung cushions, the kind of setup that makes you want to stay longer than planned. Weekends bring DJ sets that keep the energy alive without tipping into club territory. It's a dinner spot that naturally becomes an evening out. Service is attentive without being formal. The bill for two with drinks typically lands around 600-900 MAD, which is honest value for this address. Groups are handled well — they're used to big tables and the kitchen paces courses sensibly. Whether you're on a romantic dinner, a first night in Marrakech, or just looking for a reliable spot with a killer setting, Kabana delivers every time. What makes Kabana stand apart from other medina rooftops is the consistency. Many spots in this city coast on location alone — Kabana actually maintains its kitchen standards year-round, which is rare. The playlist is well-curated, cocktails are mixed properly, and the staff knows regulars by face within two visits. For anyone doing a first Marrakech trip, this is one of the two or three addresses I always put on the list without hesitation.
Insider tip
Get there 30 minutes before sunset and ask for a corner table on the west side of the terrace — that's where you get the full Koutoubia-meets-Atlas shot. Friday evenings are best: busy enough to have atmosphere, not so packed that service suffers. For food, the mixed mezze starter to share is the move, then go tagine.
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Social enterprise restaurant training disadvantaged women
Amal is Marrakech's most heartwarming dining experience — a non-profit restaurant and training centre that empowers disadvantaged women through culinary education. The menu changes daily with traditional Moroccan home cooking at prices that make your wallet and conscience happy. Set in a charming garden in Gueliz, the food is honest, generous, and cooked with real soul. The daily tagine is consistently one of the best in the city.
Insider tip
Lunch only — they close at 3:30 PM and there's no dinner service. Get there before 12:30 or you'll wait. The daily set menu at 80 MAD is the best deal in Gueliz. They also run cooking classes on certain mornings that I've sent dozens of friends to — worth every dirham.
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Woman-led Moroccan gastronomy since 1987
Founded in 1987 and staffed entirely by women, Al Fassia is among the most important restaurants in Marrakech — a benchmark for traditional Moroccan cooking done with integrity and without theatrics. Located in Gueliz, the modern city quarter, the restaurant has been serving the same high-quality Fassi dishes for nearly four decades, refined continuously but never chasing trends. The menu centers on the classics: tagines slow-cooked to the right texture, couscous on Fridays and Saturdays, mechoui lamb that falls from the bone, and a pastilla de pigeon that is consistently the best in the city. The women who run the kitchen learned from their mothers and grandmothers — this is culinary transmission in the real sense. The Aguedal location features a garden setting with a pool, making it one of the most pleasant dining environments in Gueliz. The restaurant appears on the World's 50 Best Restaurants Discovery list, but the locals who fill it regularly are the more meaningful endorsement. Budget 250-400 MAD per person. Lunch and dinner service. Same-day reservations usually possible outside high season.
Insider tip
All-female kitchen serving the best traditional Fassi cuisine in the city. The lamb shoulder for two is the dish to order. No tourist gimmicks, just exceptional Moroccan food.
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The Medina's most iconic terrace — mint tea, views, and the heartbeat of Place Rahba Kedima
Café des Épices is a Marrakech institution perched above Place Rahba Kedima, the spice square at the heart of the old Medina. Four floors of terraced seating deliver sweeping views over the rooftops and the bustle of the souks below. The menu is simple and honest — mint tea, fresh juices, salads, and light Moroccan plates — but the experience is irreplaceable. With over 8,000 reviews, this is the place that has captured Marrakech's soul for visitors and locals alike.
Insider tip
Go at 6 PM when the light turns golden and the spice market below starts winding down. Order the mint tea and a bissara — forget the tourist lunch menu. The top terrace is where you want to be, but it fills up fast so go straight up when you arrive.
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Refined Moroccan-French fusion in a restored riad
Set in a beautifully restored 17th-century fondouk near the Ben Youssef Madrasa, Le Foundouk serves refined Moroccan-French cuisine across three intimate levels. The candlelit rooftop terrace overlooking the Medina is one of Marrakech's most romantic dining spots. Known for their lamb tagine with prunes and sesame, and a wine list that's one of the best in the city. The cocktail bar on the ground floor is worth arriving early for.
Insider tip
Closed on Mondays — don't make that mistake. Ask for the rooftop corner table with the view of the Medersa. The lamb shoulder takes 6 hours to cook and they run out by 9 PM, so order early or book ahead and request it. The downstairs bar does a killer Old Fashioned with orange blossom water.
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Italian-Moroccan fine dining in a grand Medina riad
An upscale Italian-Moroccan restaurant in a beautifully restored Medina riad, and one of the most romantic dinner spots I keep returning to year after year. Pepe Nero's kitchen fuses Italian classics with Moroccan flavours with real conviction — the handmade tagliolini with saffron and sea urchin (220 MAD) is extraordinary, and the wood-fired sea bass with chermoula crust is my standing order. The fountain courtyard lit by hanging lanterns on a warm Marrakech evening is genuinely magical. Budget around 400–600 MAD per person with wine. Book the inner courtyard table specifically — ask for Rachid when you call. Updated March 2026.
Insider tip
Italian fine dining by a Marrakech-based Italian chef who's been here 20 years. The homemade pasta rivals anything you'd find in Rome. The garden setting in Palmeraie is romantic.
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Fine dining at La Mamounia — Moroccan cuisine elevated
The signature Moroccan restaurant at La Mamounia — one of the world's most legendary palace hotels — and an experience I've done six times for special occasions. The bastilla au pigeon (550 MAD) is the finest version in Marrakech, and the lamb mechoui slow-roasted over charcoal rivals anything in the Medina. The opulent zellige-and-stucco dining room opens onto garden views through arched Moorish windows; the service is flawless without being stiff. Multi-course menus from 1200 MAD per person. Strict dress code — no shorts, no flip-flops, full elegance required. If you're celebrating something, this is where you do it. Updated March 2026.
Insider tip
Inside the Palais Namaskar — pure luxury. The tasting menu is a journey. Not cheap but this is the kind of meal you talk about for years.
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Japanese fine dining on the rooftop of M Avenue
Celebrity chef Akira Back's Marrakech outpost sits atop the Pestana CR7 Hotel on M Avenue. The rooftop setting offers stunning views alongside a menu of contemporary Japanese cuisine with Korean influences — think wagyu tataki, truffle sushi and signature dishes from the global Akira Back brand. One of the city's most upscale international dining experiences.
Insider tip
High-end Japanese-Korean that delivers on the hype. The wagyu tataki is flawless. This is my go-to for hosting friends visiting from Europe who want something beyond tagines.
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Historic coffee house since 1910 with 200+ varieties
Bacha Coffee occupies a beautifully restored Dar El Bacha palace that has served coffee since 1910, making it one of Marrakech's most storied culinary institutions. The brand offers over 200 single-origin coffees from more than 30 countries, served in elegant gold-rimmed porcelain. The interior is a masterpiece of Moroccan craftsmanship with hand-carved cedar ceilings, zellige mosaics, and stained glass windows. Beyond coffee, they serve French-inspired pastries and light bites. Price range 50-200 MAD.
Insider tip
This is where I take anyone visiting for the first time. The building alone is worth the trip -- it's inside Dar El Bacha, one of the most beautiful palaces in the Medina. Order the coffee flight to sample different origins. Morning is quieter, afternoon gets packed with tour groups.
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Gastronomic Moroccan cuisine in Pierre Balmain's former riad
Set within an 18th-century riad that was once the home of fashion designer Pierre Balmain, Dar Moha offers refined Moroccan gastronomy around a pool courtyard with orange trees. Chef Moha Fedal creates inventive takes on traditional recipes. The poolside setting with candlelight makes it one of the most romantic restaurants in Marrakech.
Insider tip
Housed in a former Glaoui palace with a pool in the center. The set menu changes weekly based on what's fresh. My friend knows the chef — the man is a perfectionist.
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Thai-Moroccan fusion in a jungle garden setting
Bo-Zin is Marrakech's original fusion restaurant, and after more than two decades it still feels like a secret that not enough people know about. Located on the Route de l'Ourika just past Hivernage, it sits inside a sprawling tropical garden that you'd never guess was hiding behind those anonymous roadside walls. I've brought dozens of people here over the years and the reaction is always the same: genuine surprise at the setting. Lantern-lit pathways wind through dense vegetation before opening onto a main pavilion that manages to feel both intimate and grand. The menu bridges Thai and Moroccan cuisines in a way that sounds gimmicky on paper but genuinely works on the plate. The pad thai prepared with Moroccan spicing has become a signature dish for good reason. The whole sea bass steamed in banana leaf is outstanding. The Tom Yum soup has no right being as good as it is in a city this far from Southeast Asia. For Moroccan nights, the lamb pastilla with rose water and almonds is exceptional. Dinner here is never just dinner. Around 10:30 or 11pm, the lights dim a little further, the DJ steps up, and the garden transforms from upscale restaurant to one of the best rooftop bar Marrakech-adjacent lounge experiences in the city. It's the only spot I know where you can eat a serious meal and properly dance without moving addresses. Budget around 700-1100 MAD per person with drinks. Book the garden tables, always. What Bo-Zin has maintained over the years is something genuinely rare: a sense of occasion. Every visit feels like a proper event, not just a restaurant meal. The service is professional without being stiff, the sound system is one of the best in the city, and the pacing of the evening — from relaxed dinner to after-party — flows naturally rather than being manufactured. If you only have one night to spare and want the full Marrakech experience in a single address, this is where I send people.
Insider tip
This is dinner AND after-party in one spot. Book a garden table, not inside. Around 11 PM the vibe shifts from restaurant to lounge and the DJ starts spinning — it's one of the only places in Marrakech where you can eat properly and party without changing venues. The Tom Yum soup here is actually better than most places in Bangkok.
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Morocco meets Sydney — cocktails and sharing plates in Gueliz
+61 is the Australian-inspired restaurant that took over the former Grand Café de la Poste space in Gueliz and turned it into one of Marrakech's most consistent modern dining rooms. Chef Andrew Cibej brings a Sydney sensibility — wood-fired grills, seasonal Moroccan produce, fresh pastas made in-house, and a wine list that leans natural and Mediterranean. The double-height dining room with its leather banquettes and open kitchen pulls a mix of expats, creative locals and hotel guests from La Mamounia. Signature dishes: the slow-cooked lamb shoulder, the burrata with heirloom tomatoes, the hand-rolled pappardelle with beef cheek ragù. Mains 220-380 MAD, reservations essential Thursday-Saturday. Lunch menu 295 MAD is one of the best deals in Gueliz.
Insider tip
Australian-influenced brunch spot that locals actually love. The flat whites are the best in Marrakech — I'm not exaggerating. Weekend brunch queue starts around 10 AM.
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Farm-to-table vegetarian in a secret Medina garden
La Famille is one of those rare restaurants that does a single thing with complete conviction and executes it at the highest level: seasonal vegetarian cuisine in a garden setting in the southern medina, near the Bahia Palace. The menu changes daily based on what arrives from their own kitchen garden and selected local suppliers — which means you can't plan what you'll eat, only that it will be good. The Moroccan-Mediterranean approach means vegetables are treated as the main event, not supporting cast: grilled eggplant with charmoula, seasonal salads with preserved lemon, grain bowls that take their cue from both Moroccan and Southern European traditions. The garden terrace itself is one of the most peaceful eating environments in the medina — terracotta, shade, birds, the sound of the kitchen. The restaurant operates lunch-only and has a no-phones policy that is actually enforced. Budget 150-250 MAD per person, which reflects the quality of ingredients and preparation. Arrive before 1 PM on weekends or expect a wait — word is out internationally.
Insider tip
Vegetarian restaurant that converts even the most committed meat-eaters. The garden setting in Mouassine is magical. Come for brunch on weekends — the shakshuka is outstanding.
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Cultural café in a medieval schoolhouse — home of the camel burger
Housed in a converted medieval schoolhouse in the historic Kasbah district near the Saadian Tombs. Famous for its camel burger and cultural programming including storytelling nights, live Gnaoua music and calligraphy workshops. A crossroads for travellers and locals with three floors of eclectic dining spaces and a rooftop terrace.
Insider tip
Cultural hub more than just a restaurant. Storytelling nights, live music, cooking classes. The camel burger is their signature — sounds gimmicky but it's genuinely good.
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Legendary palace dining — the quintessential Moroccan feast
Dar Yacout is the definitive traditional Moroccan dining experience in Marrakech — a 17th-century riad near Bab Doukkala that has been hosting memorable dinners for decades. The evening unfolds in distinct acts: aperitifs with traditional pastries on the rooftop terrace overlooking the medina, then descent into candlelit salons for a procession of traditional salads, a pastilla, a tagine, couscous, and desserts. The cooking is classical Fassi — the culinary tradition of Fes applied with precision — using spice combinations and slow-cooking techniques that have been refined over generations. The building itself is extraordinary: multiple levels of carved stucco, painted cedar ceilings, zellige tile work, and antique lanterns that cast the interior in warm amber. The rooftop view — particularly at sunset — takes in the medina rooftops with the Atlas Mountains on the horizon. This is a dinner that takes three hours and is designed to. No rush, no shortcuts. For a group occasion or a first-time visitor who wants to understand Moroccan hospitality at its height, there is no better address in the city. Budget 600-800 MAD per person. Dinner only. Reservation essential, at least one week ahead in high season (March-May, October-November).
Insider tip
Reserve three days ahead minimum. The rooftop aperitif before the multi-course dinner is the real experience. My friend's family considers this the gold standard of traditional Marrakech dining.
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New-wave fire cooking in the heart of the Medina
Opened in 2026, Flowers is the Medina's most exciting new restaurant led by chef Richard McCormick. The concept centers on vegetable-focused fire cooking, where seasonal Moroccan produce is transformed over open flames into dishes that rival any fine dining experience. The intimate courtyard setting features living walls of cascading flowers and herbs, many of which end up on your plate. Expect creative tasting menus that challenge what Moroccan cuisine can be, with a wine list featuring rare North African bottles. Price range 200-400 MAD per person.
Insider tip
This just opened and it's already the hottest reservation in the Medina. Chef Richard is doing something nobody else in Marrakech is doing -- proper fire cooking with local vegetables as the star. Book at least a week ahead and ask for the courtyard table near the kitchen pass.
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Floral fine dining and rooftop terrace — Marrakech's most instagrammable restaurant
Flowers Marrakech is the city's most visually striking dining destination — a restaurant where the aesthetic is as carefully considered as the food. Every detail here tells a story: pink flower-shaped ceramic bowls cradling signature burrata, rose-adorned tables catching the afternoon light, ornate vintage lampshades casting a warm glow over intimate dinners. The rooftop terrace, framed by terracotta walls and a classic Marrakchi minaret, is one of the most beautiful spots in Gueliz for a sunset cocktail or long lunch. The menu leans Mediterranean with Moroccan soul — think wild-caught prawns, farm-fresh seasonal greens, labneh, pomegranate, and edible flowers woven through every plate. Cocktails are herbaceous and inventive: the Flowers Spritz with elderflower and cinnamon, or the Coconut Margarita with Palmeral gin. This is the kind of restaurant that understands the modern diner — you eat with your eyes first, then your palate, then you photograph everything in between. It attracts a well-traveled, design-conscious crowd: content creators, couples on anniversary dinners, and groups celebrating something worth remembering. Service is attentive without being stiff. The wine list skews natural and interesting, with solid Moroccan labels from Domaines Amal alongside French and Italian bottles.
Insider tip
Go for the Feed Me Flowers tasting menu at 490 MAD — it's the full experience and worth every dirham. Book the rooftop corner table in advance, the view of the minaret at golden hour is something else. The Flowers Spritz is the best aperitif in Gueliz right now.
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Bold modern fusion in a stunning riad setting
Sahbi Sahbi pushes the boundaries of Moroccan cuisine with a modern fusion approach that draws from Asian, European, and North African traditions. Set inside a beautifully converted riad with a central courtyard fountain and candlelit tables, the restaurant delivers dishes that surprise and delight. Think chermoula-glazed black cod, ras el hanout duck confit, and harissa-infused creme brulee. The cocktail program is equally inventive, featuring Moroccan botanicals. Price range 250-450 MAD per person.
Insider tip
The chef here trained in Paris and Dubai before coming back to Marrakech, and you can taste both influences. The duck confit with ras el hanout is the dish everyone talks about. Sit in the courtyard -- the indoor rooms feel too formal.
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Rooftop restaurant at one of Marrakech's coolest boutique hotels
The rooftop restaurant at El Fenn hotel is a destination in itself. Start with cocktails on the terrace watching the sunset over the Medina, then settle in for Mediterranean-inspired dishes that showcase Moroccan ingredients at their best. The chef-driven menu changes seasonally and the wine list features Moroccan and international bottles.
Insider tip
Art gallery meets restaurant. The poolside lunch is one of the most photogenic meals in Marrakech. The menu is lighter and more Mediterranean than most local spots.
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Jemaa el-Fna terrace — Marrakech's best budget tagine
Chez Chegrouni is a no-frills Marrakech institution on the eastern edge of Jemaa el-Fna. The rooftop terrace offers front-row views of the square's evening chaos while you eat honest, generous portions of traditional tagines, couscous, grilled skewers and lemon chicken. It's not fine dining — it's the place Marrakchis send their out-of-town friends for the first real Moroccan meal of their trip. Prices are genuinely reasonable (tagines 60-90 MAD) and the service is brisk-but-friendly. Cash only, no reservations, expect to queue at peak hours (13:00 and 20:00). Arrive at 18:30 for the best rooftop table with sunset over the square.
Insider tip
The most honest tagine in Marrakech for 40 dirhams. Right on Jemaa el-Fna, second floor terrace, perfect view of the square. No frills, no pretension, just great food.
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Healthy bowls and smoothies on Rue Yves Saint Laurent
KAOWA is a trendy health-focused café-restaurant on Rue Yves Saint Laurent in Gueliz — steps from the YSL Museum and Jardin Majorelle, which makes it the natural lunch stop on any Gueliz cultural loop. The menu runs acai bowls, poke bowls, gluten-free salads, wraps, fresh cold-pressed juices and smoothies. The minimalist interior with its long communal table and the shaded outdoor terrace attract a mix of Marrakchi creatives, digital nomads working on laptops, and YSL-museum visitors. Breakfast/brunch is the strongest meal — try the acai bowl or the shakshuka. Open 08:00-22:00, Wi-Fi solid, oat-milk coffee on the menu (not a given in Marrakech).
Insider tip
Contemporary Moroccan with beautiful plating. The young chef is pushing boundaries while respecting traditions. The lunch deal is excellent value for the quality.
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Street-food-inspired Asian kitchen in Gueliz
Mama Lao brings Southeast Asian street food to Marrakech's Gueliz district with a menu of dumplings, bao buns, noodle bowls, and wok dishes that's become an instant local favourite. The interior is Instagram-ready with neon signs and exposed brick, but the food is the real star — the prawn gyoza and the spicy ramen are the dishes that keep people coming back. Fast, flavourful, and a welcome break from Moroccan cuisine when you need one.
Insider tip
Order the crispy prawn gyoza and the tonkotsu ramen — skip the sushi, that's not their thing. It's the best non-Moroccan meal in Gueliz and the prices are fair. Gets packed at 8 PM on weekends so either go early or late. They don't take reservations so just show up.
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Legendary dinner-show with belly dance and live music
A Marrakech institution since 2000, Le Comptoir Darna combines Moroccan-French cuisine with nightly live entertainment including belly dancing and DJs. The atmosphere transforms from elegant restaurant to lively lounge as the evening progresses. Located in Hivernage, it draws both tourists and a well-dressed local crowd.
Insider tip
The transition from dinner to party happens naturally here around 10 PM. The Moroccan-French menu is solid and the belly dance show is part of the DNA of this place.
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Para marroquí tradicional, Le Tobsil en la Medina sigue siendo top — menú único, riad íntimo, sin atajos. Para cocina moderna, Azar (libanés) y L'Mida (rooftop, marroquí moderno) son las dos reservas más seguras si solo tienes una noche.
Sitios locales familiares: 80–150 MAD por persona. Mid-range moderno: 250–400 MAD. Alta cocina: 600–1.200 MAD con vino. Restaurantes de hotel (Royal Mansour, Mamounia): 1.500–3.000 MAD. La propina no está incluida — redondea al 10%.
Todos los restaurantes de hotel (Mamounia, Royal Mansour, Sofitel, Selman, Es Saadi) sirven alcohol. En la Medina, solo los riads con licencia sirven vino — Le Tobsil, Dar Yacout, La Maison Arabe. La mayoría de restaurantes independientes en Gueliz tienen vino y cerveza; los rooftops de Hivernage siempre.
Top 5 (Mamounia, Royal Mansour, Le Tobsil, Azar, Yokai): 3-7 días antes, obligatorio. Mid-tier: 24-48h antes basta. El walk-in solo es realista en sitios familiares de la Medina y en almuerzos. Viernes/sábado noche = el hueco que se llena primero.
Tres polos: Medina (cena en riad, marroquí tradicional, íntimo), Gueliz (moderno, internacional, casual a mid-range), Hivernage (rooftops, hoteles, alta cocina). Para una primera visita, una cena por zona en tres noches.
Restaurantes de esta lista — sí, todos. La comida callejera (puestos de Jemaa el-Fna, sopa de caracoles) es segura en puestos concurridos con rotación rápida — elige los que tienen gente. Agua del grifo no, embotellada o filtrada sí. Las ensaladas en restaurantes decentes se lavan con agua filtrada.
Gestionamos tus reservas, traslados y consejos — gratis.