Cheapest Public Transport in Marrakech: A Tourist’s Guide

Nobody warns you about this before you land in Marrakech.
You’ve budgeted for your riad, your food, your day trips — and then you spend three times what you expected just moving around the city.
Taxis that charge what they feel like, calèches that sound romantic until you see the price, and ride apps that add surge pricing at exactly the wrong moment.
I’m Ayoub. I grew up here, and I use public transport in Marrakech the way locals do — not the way guidebooks describe it.
This is everything you need to know to move around this city without burning your budget on transport alone.
Why Transport in Marrakech Catches Tourists Off Guard
Marrakech doesn’t have a metro. It doesn’t have a tram. What it has is a patchwork of buses, petit taxis, grand taxis, calèches, and ride apps — each with its own unwritten rules, its own price logic, and its own version of “negotiation.”
The result: most tourists overpay consistently, not because they’re careless, but because nobody explained the system before they arrived.
Let’s fix that.
City Buses (ALSA) — The Cheapest Way to Move

Price: 4 MAD per ride (roughly $0.40)
Marrakech has a functional city bus network operated by ALSA. It’s not glamorous, but it works — and at 4 MAD a ride, nothing else comes close on price.
The most useful lines for tourists:
| Line | Route |
|---|---|
| 1 | Jemaa el-Fna ↔ Gueliz |
| 11 | Medina ↔ Menara Gardens |
| 16 | Train Station ↔ Medina |
| 26 | Airport ↔ Jemaa el-Fna |
How to use it:
- Pay the driver directly when you board — exact change preferred
- No app, no ticket machine — just cash
- Google Maps shows bus routes in Marrakech and works well for planning
What to expect:
Buses run from around 6am to 10pm. They get crowded during morning and evening rush hours. Air conditioning exists on newer buses — but not always.
For short distances in the Medina itself, the bus doesn’t help much since streets are too narrow for vehicles. But for getting between the Medina and Gueliz, it’s unbeatable value.
Honest verdict: If you’re staying more than 3 days and making regular trips between the old and new city, the bus alone could save you 100–200 MAD compared to taxis.
Marrakech Made Easy: Save $100+ on your Marrakech trip!
Petit Taxis — The Local Standard

Price: 7–15 MAD for most Medina trips (meter)
Petit taxis are the small orange or beige cars you’ll see everywhere. They’re metered, they’re fast, and when used correctly they’re extremely affordable.
The golden rule: always ask for the meter first.
“Mètre, s’il vous plaît” — say it before you get in. If the driver refuses, get out and find another taxi. There are always more taxis. Drivers who refuse the meter are planning to charge you 3–4x the real price.
Typical metered fares:
- Jemaa el-Fna → Gueliz: 10–14 MAD
- Medina → Train Station: 12–15 MAD
- Within the Medina area: 7–10 MAD
Important notes:
- Petit taxis can legally carry up to 3 passengers — sharing is normal and expected
- There’s a small nighttime surcharge after 8pm (about 50% extra — still cheap)
- Drivers sometimes claim the meter is “broken” — it rarely is
Honest verdict: For door-to-door convenience at low cost, petit taxis are your best friend once you know the meter rule. Most trips in the city should cost under 20 MAD.
Grand Taxis — For Day Trips and Intercity
Price: varies — always negotiate before you get in
Grand taxis are the larger shared vehicles, usually Mercedes sedans, that connect Marrakech to surrounding towns and run fixed routes. They depart when full (typically 6 passengers).
Common grand taxi routes:
- Marrakech → Asni (Atlas Mountains gateway): ~20 MAD shared
- Marrakech → Ait Ourir: ~15 MAD shared
- Marrakech → Ourika Valley: ~25 MAD shared
If you want the whole taxi for yourself (for a day trip or private transfer), you negotiate the full price upfront. Always agree on the price before departing — not after.
Honest verdict: For budget day trips into the Atlas Mountains or Ourika Valley, grand taxis beat organized tours significantly on price. The trade-off is flexibility — you wait for the taxi to fill up.
Calèches (Horse-Drawn Carriages)

Price: 150–300 MAD for a circuit — negotiate hard
The calèches you see lined up near Jemaa el-Fna are part of Marrakech’s charm and part of its tourist pricing. They’re not a practical transport option — they’re an experience.
A standard circuit through the Palmeraie or along the city walls takes 45–60 minutes. The price quoted first is always aimed at tourists — 300 MAD or more. Locals would pay significantly less.
How to negotiate:
- Start at 100 MAD and work up from there
- Agree on the full route and duration before you start
- Confirm the price is for the whole carriage, not per person
Honest verdict: Worth doing once for the experience. Not for getting from A to B.
Uber and Careem
Price: slightly higher than metered taxis, but fixed and trackable
Both Uber and Careem operate in Marrakech. Fares are fixed in advance, routes are tracked, and there’s no negotiation — which makes them particularly useful for solo travelers, late-night returns, and airport trips.
When to use ride apps:
- Late at night when you want a tracked journey
- Airport transfers (avoids the airport taxi price games)
- When you’re tired and don’t want to negotiate
Typical Uber fares:
- Airport → Medina: 60–80 MAD
- Medina → Gueliz: 20–30 MAD
Honest verdict: Not the cheapest option, but the most stress-free. For your first day in the city or late-night returns, the extra few MAD is worth the peace of mind.
Walking — More Useful Than You Think
The Medina is small. Jemaa el-Fna to the Saadian Tombs is 10 minutes on foot. Jemaa el-Fna to the Majorelle Garden is about 25 minutes walking through Gueliz.
Many tourists take taxis for distances that take less time to walk than it takes to find and negotiate a taxi.
Download Google Maps offline before you arrive. The Medina looks like a maze — it isn’t. Every alley connects to something familiar within a few minutes of walking.
Offline maps make the difference between confident navigation and paying for taxis you don’t need.
The Airport: Where Most Tourists Overpay First
The journey from Marrakech Menara Airport to the Medina is where the price games start — sometimes before you’ve even left arrivals.
Your options ranked by price:
| Option | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bus Line 19 | 30 MAD | Runs to Jemaa el-Fna, takes ~45 min |
| Uber/Careem | 60–80 MAD | Fixed price, reliable |
| Petit Taxi (metered) | 70–90 MAD | Ask for meter, confirm destination |
| Airport official taxis | 150–200 MAD | Fixed zone pricing — higher than necessary |
Bus Line 19 is the best-kept secret for budget travelers — clean, direct, and 30 MAD for a journey that taxis charge 150 for.
Quick Reference: What to Pay
| Journey | Bus | Petit Taxi (metered) | Uber |
|---|---|---|---|
| Within Medina | — | 7–10 MAD | 15–20 MAD |
| Medina → Gueliz | 4 MAD | 10–14 MAD | 20–25 MAD |
| Medina → Train Station | 4 MAD | 12–15 MAD | 25–30 MAD |
| Airport → Medina | 30 MAD | 70–90 MAD | 60–80 MAD |
| Medina → Palmeraie | — | 20–25 MAD | 35–45 MAD |
The Local Approach in One Paragraph
Walk when the distance is under 20 minutes. Take the bus when you’re going from the Medina to Gueliz or the train station.
Use petit taxis with the meter for everything else — say “Mètre, s’il vous plaît” every time without exception. Use Uber at night or when you want predictability.
Avoid negotiating taxis near major tourist sites — walk one street back and flag one down. That’s how locals move around this city, and it works.
Before You Arrive
If you want the complete budget breakdown — transport, food, riads, day trips, and every scam to avoid — it’s all in the Marrakech Made Easy guide.
👉 Get the Marrakech Made Easy Guide
Everything I give friends before their first visit. Real prices, real advice, no filler.
Go prepared. Move smart. Spend what you actually want to spend.
