Northern Morocco's two most photographed cities could hardly be more different in character. Chefchaouen — the Blue Pearl — sits at 600 m in the Rif mountains, its labyrinthine medina washed in every shade of blue from periwinkle to cobalt. Cats sleep in doorways; artisans weave djellabas on wooden looms; the air smells of pine resin and fresh bread. It is intimate, photogenic and easy — a town of 45,000 that sees one million visitors a year, most of whom come for a day and stay longer. Fes is the antithesis of easy: a city of 1.2 million with a medina of 9,000 streets that has no simple map and no GPS signal that stays accurate for long. But Fes rewards effort with the most complete medieval urban experience in the Arab world — its tanneries, medersa and mosque architecture date to the 9th century.
Option A
Chefchaouen
The Blue Pearl of the Rif — photogenic, intimate, mountain-fresh
Best for
Photographers, Instagram travellers, those wanting a slower mountain pace
Option B
Fes
Morocco's spiritual and intellectual capital since 789 AD
Best for
History enthusiasts, architecture lovers, culinary explorers
