The best hotels in Casablanca
Casablanca has 8,000+ places to stay, and most of them will disappoint you in ways the photos won't show. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Casablanca
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Hôtel Guynemer
City Centre, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hôtel Transatlantique
City Centre, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Barceló Casablanca
Gauthier, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Golden Tulip Farah Casablanca
City Centre, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hôtel & Spa Le Doge
Gauthier, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Novotel Casablanca City Centre
City Centre, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kenzi Tower Hotel
Maarif, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hyatt Regency Casablanca
City Centre, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
Four Seasons Hotel Casablanca
Anfa, Casablanca
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hôtel Guynemer | City Centre, Casablanca | $45–75/night | 7.1/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Hôtel Colbert | Mers Sultan, Casablanca | $60–90/night | 7.4/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 3 | Hôtel Transatlantique | City Centre, Casablanca | $105–155/night | 7.9/10 | Best Location |
| 4 | Barceló Casablanca | Gauthier, Casablanca | $120–180/night | 8.2/10 | Business Pick |
| 5 | Golden Tulip Farah Casablanca | City Centre, Casablanca | $130–190/night | 8/10 | Most Popular |
| 6 | Hôtel & Spa Le Doge | Gauthier, Casablanca | $150–220/night | 8.6/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 7 | Novotel Casablanca City Centre | City Centre, Casablanca | $160–210/night | 8.1/10 | Family Friendly |
| 8 | Kenzi Tower Hotel | Maarif, Casablanca | $195–249/night | 8.8/10 | Top Rated |
| 9 | Hyatt Regency Casablanca | City Centre, Casablanca | $260–400/night | 9/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Four Seasons Hotel Casablanca | Anfa, Casablanca | $400–700/night | 9.4/10 | Luxury Pick |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Hôtel Guynemer
This old-school hotel sits on Rue Guynemer in the heart of downtown Casablanca, a short walk from Place des Nations Unies. Rooms are basic and worn but clean enough for a short stay. The staff are friendly and speak decent French and Arabic. Breakfast is simple and inexpensive. Good option if you just need a bed close to the medina and train connections.
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Hôtel Colbert
Located on Rue Colbert near the Mers Sultan neighborhood, this small hotel punches above its price point. Rooms are compact but have been updated with decent mattresses and working air conditioning. The building has some original Art Deco character that gives it more personality than budget chains. Street noise can be an issue on lower floors, so request upper rooms. It is an easy walk to the Hassan II Mosque waterfront.
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Hôtel Transatlantique
The Transatlantique is a Casablanca institution on Rue Chaouia, operating since the colonial era and still carrying its original Art Deco bones. The lobby alone is worth seeing, with high ceilings and period tile work. Rooms vary quite a bit, so ask for a renovated one when booking. It sits two blocks from the central market and is close to most city-centre attractions. A solid mid-range choice with genuine character.
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Barceló Casablanca
The Barceló sits in the upscale Gauthier district on Boulevard Rachidi, a quiet residential and business area about ten minutes from the port. Rooms are modern and well maintained, with solid Wi-Fi and proper work desks. The rooftop pool is small but a real bonus during summer. Service is professional and the on-site restaurant does a reliable Moroccan set menu. It attracts a mostly business crowd, which keeps the atmosphere calm.
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Golden Tulip Farah Casablanca
Right on Avenue des FAR in the commercial heart of the city, the Farah has long been a go-to for business travelers and tourists alike. The hotel has a full-service restaurant, conference facilities, and a bar that stays open late. Rooms are spacious by Casablanca standards and recently refurbished with neutral modern decor. The location puts you close to the twin towers and the main train station Casa-Port. Check the website for promotional rates that often undercut third-party booking platforms.
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Hôtel & Spa Le Doge
Le Doge is a restored 1930s mansion on Rue du Docteur Veyre in Gauthier, converted into a boutique hotel with only a handful of rooms. The spa is genuinely excellent, with a hammam and massage treatments that are worth booking in advance. Each room is individually decorated with a mix of Art Deco furniture and Moroccan craftsmanship. The restaurant serves French-Moroccan fusion food in an intimate courtyard setting. It is the kind of place that is easy to not leave for a full day.
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Novotel Casablanca City Centre
The Novotel occupies a central spot near Place Mohammed V, putting guests within easy walking distance of the main administrative quarter and the old medina. Rooms follow the reliable Novotel formula: clean, functional, and consistent. The pool area is a highlight and well managed during peak summer months. Families benefit from the family rooms and kids-eat-free policy at certain meal times. Service is polished and the English-speaking front desk is efficient with local recommendations.
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Kenzi Tower Hotel
Kenzi Tower sits inside the Twin Center skyscrapers at the intersection of Boulevard Zerktouni and Boulevard Al Massira Al Khadra in the Maarif district. The upper-floor rooms deliver some of the best city views available in Casablanca, particularly at night. Service quality is high across the board, from check-in through to the concierge recommendations. The breakfast spread is extensive and the fitness center is one of the better hotel gyms in the city. This is the upper end of mid-range and it earns the price.
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Hyatt Regency Casablanca
The Hyatt Regency sits on Place des Nations Unies, the central square of Casablanca, giving it arguably the best address in the city. The lobby is grand and the rooms are exactly what you expect from a top-tier Hyatt property, well appointed and very comfortable. The Dar Beida restaurant does excellent traditional Moroccan cuisine in a properly elegant setting. The pool terrace overlooks the city and is a serious upgrade from anything else in this price range. It is the default choice for international business delegations and discerning leisure travelers.
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Four Seasons Hotel Casablanca
The Four Seasons sits on the Corniche in the Anfa district, directly facing the Atlantic Ocean with unobstructed sea views from most rooms. The beach club and outdoor pools are exceptional, particularly in spring and summer. Rooms are among the largest and most thoughtfully designed in Morocco, with floor-to-ceiling windows and premium finishes throughout. The Bleu restaurant serves fresh seafood sourced locally and is worth visiting even if you are not staying here. This is the benchmark luxury property in Casablanca and the price reflects it.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Casablanca
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
City Centre vs. Gauthier: Which Should You Choose?
City Centre puts you close to Hassan II Mosque and Place Mohammed V, but the streets around Boulevard Mohammed V get loud and disorganised fast. Traffic on Rue Ibn Batouta doesn't quit until midnight.
Gauthier, by contrast, feels like a different city. Tree-lined streets, proper restaurants on Rue Najib Mahfoud, and a calmer pace that actually lets you sleep. If this is a leisure trip, pick Gauthier without overthinking it.
Getting Around Casablanca Without a Headache
Petits taxis (the small red ones) are the fastest way to move within the city. Most rides between Gauthier and City Centre cost 20-35 MAD. Insist the driver uses the meter, because some won't bother if you look like a tourist.
The Tramway Line 1 covers a useful corridor from Sidi Moumen through to Hassan II Mosque, but it won't serve Gauthier or Maarif directly. For those neighborhoods, taxis win every time.
The Casablanca Corniche: Worth Staying Near?
The Corniche along Ain Diab is about 8 kilometres from City Centre, and traffic between the two can be brutal on weekends. It's a great place to eat dinner or walk, but basing your entire trip there means you're dependent on taxis for everything.
The Four Seasons sits in Anfa, which is the most sensible compromise. You're close to the Corniche without being stuck in the Ain Diab tourist strip. But budget for $400+/night if you go that route.
What to Know Before Booking in Ramadan
Ramadan dates shift each year. In 2026, it falls around late February to March. During Ramadan, many restaurants near hotels don't open until after sunset, and the city's rhythm changes completely. Some hotel restaurants run restricted daytime service.
The upside: hotel rates in some categories drop 10-20% during Ramadan, and the city after Iftar is genuinely one of the best times to be in Casablanca. Book a hotel with an in-house restaurant if daytime meals matter to you.
Quartier Habous: The Part of Casablanca Most Visitors Miss
Habous, also called the New Medina, sits about 4 kilometres south of City Centre near Boulevard Victor Hugo. It was built by the French in the 1930s and looks like a planned medina, with proper arcaded streets and no motorbike chaos. Most tourists go to the Old Medina and miss this entirely.
No hotels sit inside Habous itself, but it's a 15-minute taxi ride from Gauthier and worth a half-day. Go in the morning before the pastry shops sell out.
Casablanca Hotel Pricing: What's Actually Worth It
Under $100/night, you're in budget territory and you know it. Hôtel Guynemer and Hôtel Colbert are honest about what they offer. Don't book them expecting boutique finishes.
The real value zone in Casablanca is $120-180/night, where Barceló Casablanca and Golden Tulip Farah sit. Above $195/night, Kenzi Tower and the luxury tier genuinely deliver. There's no bad deal in that upper bracket.
Casablanca's best neighborhoods
City Centre is where most visitors land, but Gauthier and Maarif are where the better hotels actually are. If you want walkability plus quality, start your search in Gauthier.
City Centre 4 vetted hotels Historic core with the most hotels and the most noise.
Historic core with the most hotels and the most noise.
City Centre is where Casablanca's history lives. Place Mohammed V, the Art Deco architecture along Boulevard Mohammed V, and Hassan II Mosque are all within walking distance of each other. You can cover a lot on foot, which matters in a city this spread out.
The trade-off is traffic and noise. The streets between Rue Ibn Batouta and Gare Casa-Voyageurs are relentlessly busy. Pick a hotel on the western edge of City Centre if quiet nights are non-negotiable.
Four hotels in our list sit here, ranging from $45/night at Hôtel Guynemer all the way to $400/night at Hyatt Regency. That spread exists for a reason: location quality within City Centre varies block by block.
Gauthier 2 vetted hotels Casablanca's most liveable neighborhood for hotel stays.
Casablanca's most liveable neighborhood for hotel stays.
Gauthier is the neighborhood where Casablancans who have choices actually live. The streets around Rue Moulay Hassan I and Rue d'Alger are walkable, lined with good restaurants and independent cafés. It's 12 minutes on foot to Boulevard Zerktouni's financial district.
Two of our best hotels sit here: Barceló Casablanca for business travelers and Hôtel & Spa Le Doge for anyone after something more romantic and intimate. Both punch above their price in terms of surroundings.
Prices run $120-220/night in Gauthier, and you're genuinely getting more per dirham than equivalent-priced City Centre options. This is the neighborhood we recommend most consistently.
Maarif 1 vetted hotel Upscale residential quarter with the city's top-rated hotel.
Upscale residential quarter with the city's top-rated hotel.
Maarif is where Casablanca's professional class shops, eats, and entertains. The streets around Rue Ibnou Sina and Avenue des Forces Armées Royales are lined with good restaurants and boutiques. It's not a tourist quarter, which is exactly why it works so well.
Kenzi Tower Hotel dominates the skyline here and is the highest-rated hotel in our entire list at 8.8. The views from the upper floors over the Atlantic are something you won't forget. Rooms run $195-249/night, which for this quality is genuinely competitive.
Getting to the Old Medina or Hassan II Mosque from Maarif takes about 20 minutes by taxi. Not far, but plan around it if sightseeing is on the agenda.
Anfa 1 vetted hotel Casablanca's most exclusive coastal address.
Casablanca's most exclusive coastal address.
Anfa sits west of the city, between Gauthier and the Corniche. It's an old-money neighbourhood, with walled villas and wide boulevards that feel nothing like the congested City Centre. The Four Seasons sits here, right on the Atlantic coastline.
You're 7 minutes by car from Ain Diab beach and about 20 minutes from Hassan II Mosque. It's not a walking neighbourhood in the traditional sense. You come here to be in the hotel, use the spa, and taxi out for dinner on the Corniche.
Rates at $400-700/night put this firmly in luxury territory. But if that's the trip you're planning, this is easily the best address in Casablanca.
Mers Sultan 1 vetted hotel Affordable and central, with more character than people expect.
Affordable and central, with more character than people expect.
Mers Sultan sits just south of City Centre and often gets overlooked. It's residential, unpretentious, and significantly cheaper than Gauthier for a comparable level of comfort. Boulevard Mohammed Zerktouni cuts through it, giving you tram and taxi access.
Hôtel Colbert is our pick here at $60-90/night. It's not glamorous, but it's solid, and you're 8 minutes walk from Marché Central and 20 minutes from Hassan II Mosque on foot.
This is the right call for budget-conscious travelers who still want a decent base. Skip the cheaper options further east toward the train station and you'll be fine.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Casablanca.
Romantic Stay
Gauthier is the right neighborhood for couples. Hôtel & Spa Le Doge has intimate Art Deco interiors and a spa, and the surrounding streets have proper dinner options without the tourist rush.
Culture & History
Base yourself in City Centre near Place Mohammed V. You're 10 minutes walk from Hassan II Mosque, 15 minutes from the Old Medina, and the Art Deco facades on Boulevard Mohammed V are a walk-around experience in themselves.
Family Friendly
Novotel Casablanca City Centre on Boulevard de la Corniche end of City Centre is the obvious pick for families. It has space, reliable facilities, and it's 20 minutes by taxi to Ain Diab beach where kids can actually run around.
Budget Travel
Mers Sultan and City Centre give you the most for the least. Hôtel Guynemer at $45-75/night is the floor, and you're still centrally located within walking distance of Marché Central and the main sights.
Beach & Corniche
Anfa is your base if the Atlantic matters to you. The Four Seasons sits closest to the water, and Ain Diab beach is 7 minutes by car along Boulevard de la Corniche.
Foodie
Gauthier has the best restaurant density in the city. Rue Najib Mahfoud and the surrounding blocks have everything from traditional Moroccan to solid French bistros, all within a 10-minute walk of each other.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
When to Visit Casablanca
When to visit Casablanca and what to pay.
Winter (December-February)
December through February is the quietest period. Temperatures drop to 12-15°C at night, which feels cold by Moroccan standards but is mild by most others. Hotel rates dip noticeably, with mid-range options in Gauthier running $120-150/night instead of peak rates. The Atlantic gets rough, so the Corniche is more dramatic than swimmable.
Spring (March-May)
This is the best window to visit Casablanca. Temperatures sit at a comfortable 18-24°C, the city feels alive without being overwhelming, and hotel rates haven't hit summer peaks yet. Gauthier hotels like Barceló run $130-160/night in this window. Note that Ramadan can fall in this period in some years, which changes the city's rhythm significantly.
Summer (June-August)
July and August bring Moroccan domestic tourists to Ain Diab and the Corniche, and hotel prices across Casablanca rise 20-30%. Temperatures hit 28-32°C on the coast and higher inland. The Four Seasons in Anfa and Kenzi Tower in Maarif both push toward their upper price brackets. Book at least 6 weeks ahead for anything decent under $200/night.
Autumn (September-November)
September to November is the second-best window, arguably better than spring for the warmer sea temperatures along Ain Diab. Crowds thin after mid-September and hotel rates follow. Expect $150-180/night at Gauthier properties that cost $200+ in August. October is the standout month: 20-24°C, low humidity, and the city's outdoor café scene running at full capacity.
Booking Tips for Casablanca
Insider tips for booking hotels in Casablanca.
Book Gauthier hotels 3-4 weeks out during trade fair season
Casablanca's Foire Internationale de Casablanca and various industry expos fill Gauthier and Maarif hotels fast, often in April and October. During these weeks, rates at Barceló and Kenzi Tower can jump $40-80/night overnight. Check the Casablanca Events calendar before assuming off-peak availability.
Always negotiate your taxi fare before you get in
Petit taxis in Casablanca are metered by law, but many drivers won't use the meter with tourists. Agree on a price before getting in or insist on the counter. City Centre to Gauthier should cost 25-35 MAD. Airport to City Centre runs 250-350 MAD, fixed by regulation but still worth confirming.
Hassan II Mosque visits are easiest from a City Centre hotel
The mosque sits on Boulevard Sidi Mohammed Ben Abdallah, and guided tours run at 9am, 10am, and 11am most days except Fridays. Tickets cost 130 MAD for non-Muslims. From any City Centre hotel, you're 10-15 minutes on foot along the waterfront. It's the one thing in Casablanca that genuinely earns the hype.
Don't stay near Gare Casa-Voyageurs for the location alone
The train station sounds convenient on paper. In practice, the surrounding streets. particularly around Rue Strasbourg and the northern end of Boulevard Mohammed V. are noisy, chaotic, and home to hotels that charge City Centre prices for a sub-par experience. Move 10 minutes west toward Place Mohammed V and you're in a different world.
Mid-range hotels in Maarif and Gauthier fill fast in Ramadan's final week
The last 10 days of Ramadan see a surge in domestic Moroccan visitors coming to Casablanca for Eid preparations and shopping. Maarif hotels near Rue Ibnou Sina and Gauthier properties can sell out 2-3 weeks ahead. Prices don't always spike, but availability disappears. Book early if your dates overlap.
Breakfast outside the hotel saves real money
Hotel breakfasts in Casablanca run 120-200 MAD per person at mid-range and above. Instead, walk to any of the cafés near Marché Central on Rue Chaouia for a proper Moroccan breakfast. msemen, argan oil, coffee. for 30-50 MAD total. You'll eat better and spend the savings on dinner on the Corniche.
Hotels in Casablanca — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Casablanca.
What's the best neighborhood to stay in Casablanca?
Gauthier is our top pick. It's walkable, quieter than City Centre, and you're 10 minutes on foot from Boulevard Moulay Youssef and 15 minutes from the Parc de la Ligue Arabe. Hotels here run $120-220/night, and you get real value for that price compared to equivalent City Centre options.
How much does a good hotel in Casablanca cost per night?
You can sleep well from $60/night in Mers Sultan, and the mid-range sweet spot sits around $120-180/night in Gauthier or City Centre. Luxury at the Four Seasons in Anfa starts around $400/night. Don't pay City Centre prices for hotels near Gare Casa-Voyageurs. that area isn't worth the premium.
Is Casablanca safe for tourists?
Yes, for the most part. The areas around Gauthier, Maarif, and the Corniche are safe to walk at night. Stick to Boulevard d'Anfa and avoid the backstreets of the Old Medina after dark if you're unfamiliar with the city. Petty theft exists, like in any major city of 4 million people.
How far is Mohammed V International Airport from the city centre?
About 30 kilometres, which takes 30-45 minutes by taxi. The Al Boraq high-speed train also connects the airport to Gare Casa-Voyageurs in roughly 30 minutes for around 70 MAD. Taxis from the airport run 250-350 MAD depending on your destination and how firmly you negotiate.
When is the best time to visit Casablanca?
March-May and September-November are the sweet spots. Temperatures sit around 18-24°C, crowds are manageable, and hotel prices dip below peak summer rates. July and August push 28-32°C along the Corniche and attract domestic tourists from across Morocco, which drives prices up 20-30%.
Are there good budget hotels in Casablanca?
Yes. Hôtel Guynemer in City Centre runs $45-75/night and is genuinely decent for the price. Hôtel Colbert in Mers Sultan is another solid option at $60-90/night, and it's 8 minutes walk from Boulevard Mohammed Zerktouni. Don't expect luxury, but both are clean and well-located.
Does Casablanca have beach hotels?
The main beach area is Ain Diab along the Corniche, about 8 kilometres west of City Centre. The Four Seasons in Anfa is the closest luxury option to the waterfront, sitting less than 10 minutes by car from Ain Diab. Most other vetted hotels are inland, but a taxi to the beach costs 40-60 MAD.
What's the best hotel for a business trip to Casablanca?
Barceló Casablanca in Gauthier is the business traveler's go-to, with solid meeting facilities and a location on Rue Moulay Hassan I that puts you 12 minutes from the financial district around Boulevard Zerktouni. Kenzi Tower Hotel in Maarif is another strong option if you need a prestigious address. Both run $120-249/night.
Is there a metro or tram in Casablanca?
Casablanca has one tram network, Tramway de Casablanca, with 2 lines covering key areas including Sidi Moumen, City Centre, and the Ain Sebaa industrial zone. A single ride costs 6 MAD. For Gauthier or Maarif, taxis are more practical and rarely cost more than 30-50 MAD within the city.
Which areas of Casablanca should I avoid?
The blocks immediately surrounding Gare Casa-Voyageurs are noisy, chaotic, and overrepresented by hotels charging more than they're worth. Sidi Moumen in the east is not a tourist area and has no relevant hotels or amenities. Stay west of the train station, and you'll be fine.
What's the best luxury hotel in Casablanca?
Four Seasons Hotel Casablanca in Anfa is the best in the city, full stop. It sits on the Atlantic coastline near Boulevard de la Corniche, 7 minutes by car from Ain Diab, with rooms from $400/night. Hyatt Regency in City Centre is a strong runner-up at $260-400/night if you want to be closer to Hassan II Mosque.
Do Casablanca hotels include breakfast?
Some do, most at mid-range and above. At Kenzi Tower Hotel in Maarif and Hyatt Regency in City Centre, breakfast is often bookable as an add-on for 150-200 MAD per person. Budget hotels like Hôtel Guynemer usually don't include it, but Marché Central is a 10-minute walk for a proper Moroccan breakfast under 50 MAD.