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The Morocco eVisa is the official electronic travel authorization issued by the Kingdom of Morocco for travelers from eligible countries. Launched in 2022 and managed by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the eVisa replaces the lengthy embassy paperwork with a 100% online process: you fill in a short form, upload a passport scan and a photo, pay the fee, and receive your approved eVisa by email β usually within 24 to 72 hours.
An approved Morocco eVisa allows a single-entry stay of up to 30 days for tourism or business purposes. Two service tiers are available: the Standard eVisa ($115), valid for 180 days from the date of issue, and the Express eVisa ($152), valid for 18 days but processed with priority. Both tiers grant the same on-the-ground privileges β the difference lies in how long the authorization remains usable before you must enter Morocco.
This eVisa system was created to attract international visitors to Morocco's emerging tourism markets, in particular travelers from Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and South America who previously had to spend weeks queueing at a Moroccan consulate. If you are a citizen of the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, or other countries on Morocco's visa-free list, you do not need an eVisa β you can stay up to 90 days with just your passport. Always confirm your eligibility before paying the fee.
Whether you are flying to Marrakech for the souks, planning a Sahara excursion from Merzouga, attending a business conference in Casablanca, or starting a road trip through the High Atlas, this guide covers every aspect of the Morocco eVisa: who is eligible, what documents you need, how the application works step by step, the difference between Standard and Express, common rejection reasons, and what to expect on arrival at the airport.
It depends on your nationality. Citizens of the EU, UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and around 60 other countries can enter Morocco visa-free for up to 90 days β just a valid passport is required. Citizens of around 50 other countries (including India, Thailand, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Israel, Mali, the Philippines, Indonesia, etc.) are eligible for the Morocco eVisa. The remaining nationalities must apply for a regular visa at a Moroccan embassy. Confirm your status before paying any fee.
Express eVisa is typically delivered within 24 hours (often the same day). Standard eVisa is delivered within 24 to 72 hours, occasionally up to 5 working days during high-traffic periods (summer, Ramadan, Christmas). We recommend applying at least 7 days before departure for Standard, or 48 hours for Express, to absorb any unexpected delay.
Both Standard and Express eVisas grant a single-entry stay of up to 30 consecutive days in Morocco from the date of arrival. The 30-day stay is fixed and cannot be extended online β you would need to leave the country and request a regular visa for a longer return trip.
Both grant the same authorization (single-entry, 30-day stay, tourism or business). The Standard eVisa costs $115 and is valid for 180 days from the date of issue (good for advance planning). The Express eVisa costs $152 and is valid for 18 days from issue, but processed in priority β usually within 24 hours. Choose Express for last-minute trips, Standard otherwise.
No. The Morocco eVisa strictly authorizes tourism and short business purposes (meetings, conferences, contract negotiations, market visits). It does not allow paid employment by a Moroccan company, paid freelance work, journalism for hire, or academic enrollment leading to a diploma. For paid work in Morocco you need a long-stay employment visa and a residence card.
No. The Morocco eVisa is single-entry only. Once you exit Morocco, even briefly to Spain or Gibraltar by ferry, your eVisa is consumed and you cannot re-enter on the same authorization. If you need multiple entries, plan your itinerary so that Morocco is your only destination, or apply for a separate visa for each entry.
You need: a passport valid for at least 6 months beyond arrival (with 2 blank pages), a recent passport-style photo (white background), a confirmed round-trip flight reservation, a confirmed hotel booking or notarized invitation letter, proof of sufficient funds (bank statement from the last 3 months showing approximately $50β100 per day of stay), and a valid email address. Travel insurance is highly recommended.
Yes β the eVisa is a 100% online process and you can apply from anywhere in the world, as long as your passport is from one of the eligible nationalities. The country where you apply does not matter; what matters is the passport you hold. Many travelers apply during a layover or while already abroad on another trip.
The Standard eVisa costs a total of $115 per traveler ($85 government fee + $30 Evisa Rocket service fee). The Express eVisa costs $152 per traveler ($122 government fee + $30 service fee). Children, infants and seniors pay the same fee as adults. There are no hidden charges or recurring billing.
If your eVisa is denied, you receive a full refund of the government fee per Moroccan policy, and we refund our service fee as a goodwill gesture for first-time denials. Most denials are due to incomplete documentation (expired passport, wrong photo), prior immigration violations, or incorrect data entry. Our team analyses the rejection reason and helps you re-apply correctly or pivot to a regular embassy visa.
Yes. The eVisa is accepted at all major Moroccan international airports (Casablanca, Marrakech, Rabat, Agadir, FΓ¨s, Tangier, Nador, Oujda) and at the Tangier-Med sea port. It is not currently accepted at land borders with Algeria (closed since 1994) or Mauritania β for those overland crossings you need a regular visa.
Yes. Every traveler β including newborns, infants, toddlers, and minors β must have their own valid eVisa linked to their own passport. The fee is the same as for adults. Children traveling with one parent (not both) should also carry a notarized authorization letter from the absent parent, especially if the child has a different family name.
No. Morocco does not offer visa on arrival. You must obtain your eVisa before boarding your flight β airlines verify your authorization at check-in and will deny boarding if the eVisa is missing or invalid. Plan ahead, especially during high season (June to September).
Overstaying the 30-day limit triggers a fine at exit (typically 50 to 200 MAD per extra day, around $5 to $20), and may result in a multi-year entry ban for serious overstays. If you need to stay longer for an emergency (medical, force majeure), report to the nearest police station BEFORE the 30 days expire β they can grant a short extension on humanitarian grounds.