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Blue-painted streets before tourist crowds. The staircase on Rue Lalla El Hora and the small square with the fountain are the classic shots.
View from leather shop terraces overlooking the medieval dye pits. Morning light fills the vats. Fridays closed.
The hilltop viewpoint above the ksar gives the panoramic UNESCO shot. Dawn light on the earthen towers is extraordinary.
Climb a dune 30 min before first light. The pre-dawn blue hour with the dune ridgelines is as good as sunrise itself.
Atlantic golden hour on the blue fishing boats and the whitewashed rampart walls. The sea wind clears the air for exceptional clarity.
The square at dusk — smoke rising from food stalls, the Koutoubia minaret lit, storytellers gathering. Morocco's greatest single scene.
Quick answer: Can you photograph inside Morocco's medinas freely?
Architecture, streets, and scenes can be photographed freely. People require permission — a smile and mime of a camera gesture is universally understood, and most people agree. In Djemaa el-Fna, entertainers expect a small tip (10–20 MAD) for portraits — this is their livelihood, not rudeness. Never photograph inside mosques (non-Muslims cannot enter most mosques in Morocco). A local guide opens doors to portraits that solo visitors can never access.