Marrakech: Bahia Palace, Saadian Tombs and Ben Youssef Walking Tour
- Walking Tour, Half-Day, Cultural & Heritage, Medina
Three of Marrakech’s most celebrated monuments — Bahia Palace, the Saadian Tombs, and Ben Youssef Madrasa — each hold a different chapter of the city’s long history, and each takes some knowing how to reach. This half-day walking tour threads them together through the southern medina and the artisan souks, guided by a licensed local who reads the city well and gives you time to absorb what you’re seeing.
Destination
Marrakech
Interests
Duration
3.5–4 hours
Transport Mode
On foot (walking tour — no vehicle)
Included
- Licensed local guide (full tour)
- Mint tea at a traditional souk café
- Hotel or riad pickup (Private format only)
- Meeting-point guidance and pre-tour briefing
Excluded
- Monument entry fees (paid on site in cash)
- Personal purchases in the souks
- Tips (not required)
- Hotel pickup (Small Group and Group formats)
Thing To Do
Day Trips from Marrakech
Not suitable for
- Wheelchair users (cobblestone streets, stepped entrances)
- Very young children (2–3 hours of walking on uneven terrain)
- Travelers with severe mobility limitations
Reasons to book this tour
Walk inside Bahia Palace with a guide who explains the dynasty behind the decoration — not just the tilework, but the power, intrigue, and ambition built into every courtyard.
Discover the Saadian Tombs, a mausoleum sealed for three centuries and rediscovered in 1917 — one of Marrakech’s most quietly extraordinary sites.
Step into Ben Youssef Madrasa, the largest Quranic school in North Africa, where 14th-century craftsmanship fills every surface of a courtyard most visitors find genuinely affecting.
Walk the artisan souks with context — guided through the dyers, metalworkers, and textile traders who give the medina its working character, not just its shopping appeal.
Pause for mint tea mid-route at a traditional souk café — included, unhurried, and part of the rhythm of the day rather than a scheduled stop.
Move through the southern medina and its monuments at a pace that lets things register, with a licensed guide who reads the city well and adapts to your group.
What you can expect

A starting point in the heart of things
Your guide meets you at Jemaa el-Fna, the square that has anchored medina life for a thousand years. Before heading into the lanes, you take a few minutes at the Koutoubia Mosque — the 12th-century landmark whose minaret defines Marrakech’s skyline — to get your bearings and hear the city’s backstory. From there, the walk heads south into the older residential quarters, away from the main tourist flow.
Palaces, gates, and a buried dynasty
Bahia Palace is your first major stop: a 19th-century grand vizier’s residence with 160 rooms arranged around tiled courtyards, carved cedar ceilings, and gardens that still feel private. Your guide moves through it at a pace that lets the detail register — the zellige patterns, the painted woodwork, the logic of the layout. From the palace, you pass through the Mellah and pause at Bab Agnaou, the 12th-century gate that once marked the entrance to the royal quarter.
The Saadian Tombs sit tucked just beyond — hidden for three centuries and only rediscovered in 1917. The mausoleum holds around 60 members of the Saadian dynasty in chambers of remarkable Hispano-Moorish craftsmanship: marble columns, intricate stucco, and a silence that makes the ornamentation feel all the more considered. Your guide explains who is buried here and why this site stayed concealed for so long.
Through the souks, north to the madrasa
The route back north passes through the working artisan souks — a different rhythm from the monument circuit, with dyers, metalworkers, and textile sellers carrying on their trades in spaces that haven’t changed shape in centuries. Partway through, your guide brings you to a traditional café in the souks for a glass of mint tea: a short pause that settles the walk and gives you a moment to ask questions. The tea is included.
Ben Youssef Madrasa closes the tour on a note that surprises most visitors. Founded in the 14th century and expanded under the Saadians, this former Quranic school is the largest of its kind in North Africa. The central courtyard — zellige on every surface, stucco rising to carved cedar, a shallow pool at the centre — earns its reputation quietly. Your guide explains the school’s history and the lives of the students who once studied here, in rooms you can still step into.
Paced for the city, not for the checklist
The walk covers the best part of the southern and central medina on foot — the only way to do it properly. Streets are uneven and occasionally busy, but the pace is unhurried and the route is well considered. Your guide navigates without fuss, answers questions in depth, and makes space for photos at each site without losing the thread of the day.
This is the plan
Check out the plan below to see what you’ll get up to with your local host. Feel free to personalize this offer with the host of your choice.
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Koutoubia Mosque
Photo stop — The tour opens at Jemaa el-Fna, where your guide introduces the day before walking to the Koutoubia Mosque. The 12th-century minaret — the tallest in Marrakech — is viewed from the gardens outside. Your guide explains the Almohad architecture and the mosque’s role as the city’s enduring landmark before the group heads south into the medina.
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Bahia Palace
Guided walk — Built in the late 19th century for Si Moussa, a former grand vizier, and expanded by his son Ba Ahmed, Bahia Palace contains 160 rooms arranged around a series of tiled courtyards and private gardens. Your guide walks you through the reception halls, the harem quarters, and the grand riad at the centre — explaining the political story behind the architecture, from the carved cedar ceilings to the deliberate scale of it all.
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Mellah & Bab Agnaou
Guided walk — From Bahia Palace, the route passes through the Mellah — the former Jewish quarter established by the Saadians in 1558 — and pauses briefly at Bab Agnaou, the ornately carved 12th-century gate that once marked the entrance to the royal kasbah district. Your guide provides context on both the Jewish community that once lived here and the architectural language of the gate itself.
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Saadian Tombs
Guided walk — Hidden behind a narrow passageway and sealed after the fall of the Saadian dynasty, this royal mausoleum was only rediscovered in 1917. It holds around 60 members of the Saadian dynasty, including Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur, in chambers of Hispano-Moorish craftsmanship: marble columns, stucco inscriptions, and tiled floors that remain remarkably intact. Your guide explains the history of the site and why it was deliberately concealed for three centuries.
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Artisan Souks & Mint Tea
Local moment — The route north to Ben Youssef moves through the working artisan souks — the dyers’ quarter, the metalworkers’ lanes, and the textile traders’ section. Partway through, the group pauses at a traditional café tucked into the souk for a glass of mint tea. It’s a short stop, but it gives the walk a natural midpoint and time to take in what’s been seen. The tea is included.
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Ben Youssef Madrasa
Guided walk — Founded in the 14th century and substantially rebuilt by the Saadians in the 16th, Ben Youssef Madrasa was once the largest Quranic school in North Africa, housing up to 900 students at its peak. The central courtyard — zellige tiling rising to carved stucco panels, framed by cedarwood galleries above — is one of the most accomplished examples of Moroccan craftsmanship in the country. Your guide walks you through the courtyard and the remaining student cells, closing the tour with a full picture of Marrakech across three centuries of its history.
Accomodations
Day trip only
Meals
Mint tea included (mid-tour)
Transportation
On foot
Make it yours
Want to tweak the itinerary? Book directly & chat afterwards with your host to adjust highlights, skip stops, or make small changes to fit your preferences.
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Flexible cancellation policy
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Good to know
Everything you need to know for a smooth and enjoyable experience.
Where does the tour start and how will I find my guide?
For Small Group and Group formats, the meeting point is Jemaa el-Fna Square — your guide will be waiting in front of Café Argana. The activity provider will contact you the day before to confirm exact timing and your guide’s details. For Private format, your guide comes to your riad or hotel if it is located within the medina. If your accommodation is outside the medina, your guide will meet you at the square and the driver will handle pickup separately.
Are monument entry fees included in the tour price?
Entry fees to all three monuments are not included and are paid in cash directly at each site. Current rates are approximately 100 MAD for Bahia Palace, 100 MAD for the Saadian Tombs, and 50 MAD for Ben Youssef Madrasa — roughly €23 per adult in total, though fees are subject to change. Bring enough cash (MAD or euros are usually accepted at monument entrances). Bank cards are typically not accepted on site.
What's the difference between the Private, Small Group, and Group formats?
All three formats follow the same itinerary and visit the same monuments with a licensed guide. The Private format is booked exclusively for your group, includes hotel or riad pickup within the medina, and offers complete flexibility of pace and focus. The Small Group format runs with a maximum of 8 guests, allowing for a more personal experience than a standard guided group while keeping the price lower than a full private booking. The Group format is a shared tour with up to 17 participants, led by a single guide at a set pace — a solid option if you want the full experience at the most accessible price point.
How much walking is involved and is this suitable for children or older guests?
The full tour involves approximately 3–4 kilometres of walking on foot across the medina, on a mix of paved lanes, cobblestones, and uneven surfaces. The pace is unhurried, but there is no vehicle and no seating between stops (except for the tea pause). It is suitable for guests with a reasonable level of mobility and for older children who are comfortable with a few hours of walking. We do not recommend it for very young children, wheelchair users, or anyone with significant mobility limitations — the medina’s terrain and monument entrances are not accessible.
Is there anything I need to wear or prepare before the tour?
Modest dress is required for all three monument interiors: shoulders and knees should be covered, regardless of gender. Comfortable, closed walking shoes are strongly recommended — the streets can be uneven and occasionally slippery. Bring cash for monument entry fees (see above), a sun hat and sunscreen for the outdoor sections, and a small bottle of water. The mint tea stop is included, but additional drinks or snacks are at your own expense.
Can the tour be adjusted if one of the monuments is closed or very crowded?
Occasionally, sections of Bahia Palace are temporarily closed due to ongoing renovation works, and the Saadian Tombs can be congested during peak season. Your guide is experienced in navigating both situations — they know the quieter entry windows and can adjust the order of stops if needed. In the unlikely event that a monument is fully closed on the day, the guide will offer a relevant alternative within the same area. Itineraries are indicative and subject to minor adjustments based on real conditions.
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