每位乘客可以携带一件大行李(29" x 21" x 11" / 74 x 53 x 28 cm)和一件小行李(22" x 14" x 9" / 56 x 36 x 23 cm)。豪华轿车最多可容纳 2 件大行李。我们始终会为您安排最合适的车辆,以确保您的行李能够容纳。如有超大行李,或您不确定行李是否能放下,请 联系我们。
Asilah sits roughly 46 km (29 miles) south of Tangier along the Atlantic coast, making it a natural extension of any trip to northern Morocco. A private Daytrip transfer is the most practical option: your driver picks you up directly from your accommodation, handles all the navigation, and can stop at scenic points along the coastal road if you want them. There is no parking to arrange, no timetable to chase, and your luggage stays safely in the vehicle while you explore. If you are coming from Tangier, the drive takes under an hour under normal conditions.
Plan for a full day. The medina itself can be covered in two to three hours, but the real pleasure is slowing down — sitting at a cafe, watching fishermen at the port, or stumbling across a hidden courtyard. Add time for a proper seafood lunch, which Asilah does exceptionally well, and you will want at least five to six hours on the ground to feel like you have done the place justice rather than rushed through it.
Yes, and it is one of the more relaxed introductions to Morocco you will find. The medina is compact and easy to navigate without getting overwhelmed. Children tend to respond well to the colorful murals and open sea walls, which feel more like a storybook town than a busy market city. The beach is calm and accessible, and the local restaurants are welcoming to families. There is very little hard sell from vendors compared to larger Moroccan cities, which makes the whole experience noticeably more comfortable.
Absolutely. Asilah packs an extraordinary amount of character into a small, walkable space. The whitewashed medina, Portuguese ramparts, and murals covering nearly every surface make it feel unlike anywhere else in Morocco. Unlike Tangier or Marrakech, the pace here is unhurried and the crowds are manageable, which means you actually get to enjoy what you came to see. A full day gives you enough time to explore the old town, walk the sea walls, linger over a seafood lunch, and still feel like you discovered something off the beaten path.
Start at the 15th-century Portuguese sea walls, which offer sweeping views over the Atlantic and anchor the town's distinctive Iberian character. From there, wander into the medina where the narrow lanes are layered with murals — the legacy of the 1978 arts initiative that turned the town into a living canvas. Look up for the ornate mashrabiya windows carved into the whitewashed facades. The Centre Hassan II des Rencontres Internationales hosts cultural exhibitions year-round, and the beachfront promenade is an easy, rewarding way to end the afternoon.
The short answer is its arts culture. In 1978, two local friends invited artists to repaint the walls of the medina, sparking a tradition that evolved into the International Cultural Moussem of Asilah — a celebrated arts festival that draws large international crowds and effectively turns the town into an open-air museum. That creative identity has shaped everything about the place, from its carefully maintained medina to its international gallery scene. Layer in the Portuguese and Spanish colonial architecture, the Atlantic seafront, and a food culture that blends Moroccan and Iberian influences, and Asilah stands apart from any other destination in the country.