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Marrakech Private Collection · 2026
18 bars cocktails, speakeasies, bars à vin et lounges d'hôtels — classés.
La scène bar de Marrakech a sérieusement monté de niveau entre 2022 et 2026. Les bars d'hôtels (L'Italien à la Mamounia, le piano bar d'Es Saadi, cigar lounge du Royal Mansour) ont toujours été world-class, mais la nouvelle vague de bars cocktails indépendants à Gueliz — Bloom, Plus 61, Nomad — a enfin rattrapé. La mixologie n'est plus réservée aux hôtels ici. Ajoute les bars à vin (Chez Lamine, La Trattoria) et la foule sundowner des rooftops (Kabana, Sky Bar), et tu as une vraie ville où boire.
Ci-dessous : 18 adresses divisées par humeur. Bars cocktail pour les nerds du spiritueux, bars à vin pour les longues soirées, lounges d'hôtels pour le sortie habillée, et adresses locales casual pour l'after-work. Tagués pour choisir vite.

Award-winning speakeasy in the heart of Gueliz
The first restaurant & bar dedicated to mixology in Marrakech since 2016, and my absolute go-to when I'm off duty. Created by the Hadni brothers, this speakeasy-inspired cocktail bar hides in a basement accessible through an unmarked door on Rue Moulay Ali — a deliberate prohibition-era filter that keeps the vibe right. Youssef behind the bar has been crafting cocktails here since day one and knows my order before I sit down. TOP 10 Middle East & North Africa 2023 by Tales of the Cocktail. Cocktails 80–150 MAD. Best crowd: Thursday from 9pm when the industry crowd winds down. Updated March 2026.
Insider tip
Mon choix pour un verre tranquille quand je ne travaille pas. Le patron connait tout le monde dans la scene de Gueliz. Les jeudis ont le meilleur public -- les gens du milieu qui decompressent.
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Rooftop haven above the souks since 2007
La Terrasse des Epices has been one of my non-negotiable recommendations for anyone visiting Marrakech since I first stumbled up there in 2016 — and it has been doing this since 2007, which tells you something. The open-air rooftop sits deep inside the medieval souk network, accessed through a maze of covered alleys that the GPS will get wrong at least once. When you arrive, the space opens up: a wide terrace above the rooftops with unobstructed views of the Koutoubia minaret and the Atlas Mountains forming the backdrop. The kitchen does Moroccan and Mediterranean fusion — bastilla, lamb tagine, grilled fish, seasonal salads — with a quality that holds up well above standard tourist-territory cooking. Cocktails are well-crafted and the Champagne list is genuinely serious for Marrakech. Budget around 200-350 MAD per person for drinks, more for a full dinner. On select evenings, DJs and live musicians perform from around 9 PM — the acoustic properties of the rooftop make even ambient sets sound surprisingly good. On hot days, the water misters keep the temperature manageable. The crowd is international but not overwhelmingly so — a mix of well-traveled visitors, Marrakech expats, and the occasional celebrity. This is one of those best bars in Marrakech that genuinely earns the description. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
L'un des premiers bars rooftop de la médina. Viens au coucher du soleil pour la plus belle lumière sur la Koutoubia. Le personnel reconnaît les habitués — j'y vais depuis 8 ans. Réserve pour jeudi et vendredi soir quand les soirées live music remplissent la terrasse.
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Morocco's first wine bar
The first wine bar in Morocco, still the best after nearly a decade, and a place I've been recommending to every wine lover who visits Marrakech. Located in Gueliz, 68 Bar à Vin pours several hundred references by glass and bottle from France, Italy, Spain, and Morocco's own underrated vineyards. The menu is pure French brasserie comfort — charcuterie boards, raclette, tartiflette, oysters on Friday evenings, and one of the best entrecôtes in town around 180 MAD. Industrial décor with barrel stools and bottle-chandelier lighting that somehow works perfectly. Wine from 40 MAD/glass, bottles from 190 MAD. Arrive by 7:30pm on weekends or expect a wait. Updated March 2026.
Insider tip
Tenu par un couple francais qui s'y connait en vins. Parfait pour un verre avant le diner a Gueliz. Ils ont des vins naturels marocains introuvables ailleurs.
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Art, culture, and creative cocktails
Kechmara is a Gueliz institution — a multifunctional hybrid space that has been at the center of the modern Marrakech bar scene for over a decade. Positioned in the heart of the gallery district on Rue de la Liberté, it combines a ground-floor café-restaurant with a concept store, a rooftop terrace that is one of the best sun-trapping spaces in the city, and an evening bar program that draws a consistent mix of artists, creatives, local professionals, and informed international visitors. The aesthetic is 1970s with precision — warm woods, vintage furniture, a color palette that looks like it was designed specifically for this building. The kitchen runs from breakfast through late evening, with a menu that includes the burger that many locals consider the best in Marrakech, alongside salads, sandwiches and daily specials. The happy hour runs 18:00-19:30 with 50% off cocktails — one of the better value propositions in the city. The concept store carries objects and clothing that reflect genuine taste. Live music on irregular nights is worth catching when it happens. The rooftop fills at lunch and again from around 7 PM — if you want a table, arrive early.
Insider tip
Une institution de Gueliz. Le rooftop en ete est imbattable. Mon ami gere la cuisine -- essayez le burger, probablement le meilleur de Marrakech. Les sessions de musique live certains soirs valent le detour.
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French colonial charm since 1925
Le Grand Café de la Poste is one of the few genuinely historical bars in Marrakech — built in the 1920s in Gueliz at the moment the French protectorate was reshaping the city, it has welcomed figures including Jacques Majorelle, General Lyautey, and Pasha El Glaoui, and continues to function as both heritage building and active venue. The colonial-era architecture is intact in the most important ways: the high ceilings, the tiled floors, the period details that give it a weight that no new build can replicate. The terrace on Rue El Imam Malik is one of the best people-watching perches in the modern city. The kitchen runs from breakfast through to the last drink — a long day that reflects the venue's role as an anchor point for both residents and visitors. The jazz evenings that run regularly are genuine and the acoustics of the room suit the format. Cocktails are competently made and the wine selection is better than most bars in this price range. The crowd skews toward well-traveled international visitors, Marrakech expats who appreciate history, and occasional Moroccan professionals meeting in a setting that carries neutrality and prestige simultaneously. Prices are mid-range for the city — reasonable for what the setting provides.
Insider tip
Architecture coloniale, parfait pour un aperitif. La clientele est surtout des expats et des touristes avertis. Installez-vous en terrasse pour observer les passants.
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Sir Winston's favourite Marrakech refuge
Named in honour of Sir Winston Churchill, who considered La Mamounia one of the most beautiful places in the world — and I'd argue he was absolutely right. Transformed into a luxurious Pullman carriage with smoky oak paneling and back-lit walls, this bar inside La Mamounia feels like stepping into a 1920s first-class train to nowhere. The bartender — trained in London — makes the best Old Fashioned in Marrakech, hands down. Over 50 single malts and Japanese rarities on the whisky menu from 180 MAD/glass. Smoked fish and caviar also available. Dress to impress — this is La Mamounia. Updated March 2026.
Insider tip
A l'interieur de La Mamounia -- vous payez pour le cadre et ca vaut chaque dirham. Commandez le Old Fashioned, leur barman s'est forme a Londres. Le meilleur endroit pour impressionner quelqu'un.
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Medina mystique meets modern mixology
Le Salama is one of the most theatrical addresses in Marrakech — a three-level restaurant and lounge stacked directly above the chaos of Jemaa el-Fna, with 360-degree views, live belly dance performances every evening, and a kitchen that takes Moroccan cooking seriously. Most visitors head straight for the rooftop, and that's their loss. The ground floor bar is genuinely worth stopping at: intimate, shadowy, with lower prices than upstairs and a bartender who puts real care into the mojitos. The decor blends colonial-era furniture with handcrafted Moroccan tilework, zellij and carved cedar ceilings — the kind of craftsmanship that took years and will never be replicated. I've been coming to Le Salama since 2015 and it remains one of the best seats for experiencing Marrakech at its most alive. Cocktails run around 90-140 MAD, tagines and couscous from around 150-200 MAD. The belly dance and live gnaoua music performances start around 8 PM and go until late — the energy in the main dining room is unlike anywhere else in the Medina. If you want the full experience, book a table for dinner and plan to stay three hours minimum. If you're passing through, stop at the ground floor bar for one drink — the vibe will get under your skin. This is what the best bars in Marrakech look like when they have history behind them. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
Le bar du rez-de-chaussée est une perle cachée que la plupart des touristes ignorent en montant au rooftop. Boissons moins chères, même ambiance, et le barman fait l'un des meilleurs mojitos de la médina. Viens en semaine le soir pour éviter le pic de touristes.
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Live jazz on a hidden Medina rooftop — the sunset happy hour locals don't want you to know about
La Pergola is one of Marrakech's best-kept secrets — a rooftop jazz bar tucked away in the Medina with panoramic views over the ancient terraces. Every evening features live jazz from 7 PM, and the happy hour (4-6 PM) offers some of the best drink deals in the old city. The intimate setting seats maybe 40 people maximum, so it fills fast — especially in high season and on weekends. The cocktails are well-crafted and priced reasonably by Medina standards, around 70-110 MAD a glass during happy hour, closer to 100-140 MAD in the evening. The views over the Medina rooftop landscape at sunset are the kind of image you came to Marrakech for — terracotta tiles, TV satellite dishes, the Koutoubia in the distance, and the Atlas if you're lucky with clarity. The resident jazz trio plays with genuine feeling, not background noise — these are musicians who have clearly spent time with the material. The crowd skews toward well-traveled visitors in their 30s and 40s, couples on a date night, and the occasional local who has discovered the place. There is no VIP, no bottle service, no DJ — just good jazz, well-made drinks, and one of the most honest atmospheres in the city. One of the best bars in Marrakech for anyone who wants something genuinely different. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
Arrivez à 17h30 pour la meilleure place au coucher du soleil — la table d'angle face à l'ouest est LA table. Le trio jazz résident est vraiment talentueux. C'est ici que j'emmène les amis qui disent que Marrakech n'a pas de bars tranquilles.
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Marrakech's original Irish pub — cold Guinness, live sport, and proper craic since 2008
O'Mulligan is the go-to spot for expats, rugby fans, and anyone craving a cold Guinness in the Red City. This proper Irish pub in Guéliz screens every Premier League, Champions League, and Six Nations match on multiple screens. The atmosphere is pure pub — dark wood, draft beers, fish and chips, and a crowd that knows every chant. It's also one of the few places in Marrakech where you can watch international sports with English commentary. The menu runs proper pub food: fish and chips, burgers, loaded nachos, around 80-140 MAD for mains. Guinness on draft runs around 55-70 MAD a pint. Friday and Saturday nights get packed with a mix of expats, tourists, and Moroccans who love the vibe. On big match days — Champions League knockouts, Six Nations weekends — arrive at least 30 minutes early to guarantee a seat. The billiards table at the back sees serious action on quieter weeknights. This is one of those best bars in Marrakech for anyone who misses the comforts of a proper European pub. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
Les jours de match c'est la folie — arrivez 30 min avant pour les matchs de Champions League sinon vous n'aurez pas de place. Le fish and chips est étonnamment bon pour Marrakech.
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Old-school bar-tapas with vintage mechanic vibes in Gueliz
Le Mecano is the kind of Gueliz bar that takes zero effort to love and considerable effort to leave. The decor is built around a genuine obsession with vintage mechanics — bicycles hang from the ceiling, motorbike engine parts line the shelves, and the beer tap is a repurposed camshaft that actually works. The atmosphere is warm, unpretentious, and populated by a loyal crowd of long-term expats, Moroccan regulars, and those lucky enough to stumble in from the street. Draft beer is the order of the day — local Casablanca and Flag Speciale flow freely at prices well below the hotel bar average, around 35-50 MAD a glass. The tapas are generous and honest: grilled chorizo, patatas bravas, cheese boards with decent European selections, and one of the few pork menus you'll find at a licensed bar in Marrakech. Monday nights are karaoke nights and they are exactly as chaotic and fun as that sounds — the room gets packed by 10 PM and the song choices are eclectic. On select evenings a guitarist performs live from around 9 PM, which gives the place a warmth that few bars in the city match. This is one of those best bars in Marrakech where you come for one drink and leave four hours later. Sunday closed, open from 6 PM the rest of the week. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
Le Mecano c'est le bar expat de Guéliz — tous ceux qui vivent longtemps à Marrakech connaissent. Le karaoké du lundi est une institution locale. La bière pression est parmi les moins chères du quartier et le menu tapas porc est rare en ville.
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Guéliz's late-night tapas & pre-club lounge
Casa de Hoy is a versatile tapas bar and lounge in Guéliz that doubles as the perfect pre-club warm-up spot for Marrakech's nightlife circuit. Open daily from noon until 2 AM, it bridges the gap between dinner and late-night with a Mediterranean-meets-Moroccan menu — grilled meats, sharing plates, solid vegetarian options — paired with craft cocktails that come in around 90-130 MAD. The vibe starts relaxed around dinner service and builds steadily through the night. By 11 PM on weekends, the terrace becomes a genuine social scene, with a crowd that's well-dressed without being over-the-top: Gueliz locals, expats and informed visitors who know the neighbourhood. Live music happens on selected evenings — check the Instagram before you go. The smart casual dress code is enforced after 10 PM. This is my go-to before heading to Hivernage because the food is actually good rather than an afterthought, the cocktails are mixed with real attention, and the pacing of the evening feels natural — no pressure to turn the table. One of the best bars in Marrakech 2026 for transitioning smoothly from dinner to nightlife. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
C'est mon pré-club préféré avant d'aller à Hivernage. Arrive vers 21h, tapas et cocktail en terrasse, puis taxi vers Secret Room ou Leone à minuit. L'astuce : ne pas trop en faire ici — garde ton énergie.
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Guéliz's late-night sports bar with pool, darts, and a crowd that stays till closing
Cat Bar is Marrakech's beloved dive bar and sports bar hybrid — unpretentious, cheap drinks, pool tables, dart boards, and screens showing everything from UFC fights to Ligue 1. Located on a Guéliz side street, it draws a loyal mix of Moroccan regulars, French expats, and backpackers who've discovered that the best nights in Marrakech don't always require a dress code. The beer is cold, the music is loud, and nobody judges your outfit. Beers run around 30-45 MAD and cocktails stay well under 80 MAD — genuinely rare in this city. The pool tables see serious competition on Thursday nights when the regular crowd runs an informal tournament. The dart boards are always occupied. Screens cover football, rugby, UFC, and whatever else is on that night. It fills from about 9 PM on weekdays and earlier on weekends, staying open until 2-3 AM. This is the kind of bar that makes up the backbone of the Gueliz nightlife scene — not glamorous, completely honest, and one of the best bars in Marrakech for a no-budget night that lasts. Updated April 2026.
Insider tip
C'est ici que l'after se passe quand tout le reste ferme. Pas de chichi, juste de la bonne énergie. Le tournoi de billard du jeudi est une institution locale — le perdant paie la tournée.
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Hôtels (tous), restaurants licenciés, tous les bars/clubs/rooftops de cette liste, et supermarchés (Acima, Carrefour) vendent de l'alcool avec passeport. Hors de ça — pas d'alcool en public, pas d'alcool dans les cafés ou restaurants non licenciés. Ramadan = plus strict, les hôtels servent toujours.
Bars locaux : 80-120 MAD. Bars cocktail mid-tier : 120-180 MAD. Bars cocktail d'hôtel (Mamounia, Royal Mansour) : 200-350 MAD. Les happy hours rooftop peuvent réduire de 50% de 17h à 19h.
Marrakech n'a pas encore de vrai speakeasy à porte cachée, mais Plus 61 (Gueliz) et Bloom Cocktails Bar s'en rapprochent en ambiance — petits, sombres, vraie mixologie. Le piano bar de la Mamounia est le plus proche du feeling speakeasy d'hôtel.
Oui — voir notre page /happy-hours pour la carte live complète. La plupart des rooftops (Kabana, Sky Bar) font 17h-19h à -50%. Certains bars de Gueliz ont des deals toute la journée mardi/mercredi. Les bars d'hôtels font rarement des happy hours.
Oui — 10% standard, 15% si tu as adoré. Arrondis la note, laisse sur la table ou dis-le au bartender directement. Les machines de carte permettent maintenant de choisir le pourboire dans la plupart des bars modernes.
Limitée. La Casablanca Brewery (Casa Beer) est l'option locale grande conso (pilsner correcte). Bières craft importées (belges, IPAs) chez Plus 61 et quelques bars Gueliz. Pas encore de microbrasserie à Marrakech même — la plus proche est à Casablanca.
On gère tes réservations, transferts, et conseils — gratuit.