Sahara — Wikipedia, the vast dune field near the village of Merzouga in southeastern Morocco, is the country’s most visited stretch of true Saharan desert. Its dunes reach up to 150 metres at their highest points, tall enough to cast dramatic shadows at sunrise and sunset, and their colour shifts through the day from pale gold in the midday heat to deep amber and rust as the light drops. Most visitors who book a Marrakech to Fes Desert Tour (2 Days) cite the dunes as the trip’s defining image long after returning home.
The Scale and Landscape
Erg Chebbi stretches roughly 28 kilometres from north to south and up to 7 kilometres wide at its broadest point. The dunes are not static — they shift with the prevailing wind and rebuild themselves each season, which means the precise landscape changes slightly year on year while the overall character remains constant. The approach from Merzouga crosses a flat stony hammada before the first dune crests appear, a transition that arrives faster than most first-time visitors expect. The Medina of Fez — UNESCO World Heritage as a whole extends far beyond Morocco, but Erg Chebbi represents one of its most accessible and visually dramatic sections.
Best Time to Visit Erg Chebbi
Spring and autumn offer the most comfortable conditions: warm days without the extreme heat of July and August, when temperatures regularly exceed 40°C, and cool nights that reward the warm layers in your pack. Winter days are pleasant and the nights cold, with temperatures dropping toward freezing between November and February — this is also the season of clearest skies and fewest visitors. Summer remains popular but concentrates activity at dusk and dawn to avoid the heat. Our Unique Private 4-Day Marrakech Desert Tour runs year-round, with seasonal advice on what to pack provided at booking.
The Desert Camp Experience
Desert camps at Erg Chebbi range from basic shared tents with communal facilities to private tents with en-suite bathrooms and proper beds. The standard experience includes a camel trek to the camp at sunset, dinner by firelight, Berber music, and a pre-dawn wake-up for the sunrise from a dune crest. The night sky, once camp lighting is switched off, reveals the Milky Way as a visible band across the desert — something most urban visitors have never seen unobstructed. Travellers selecting a Contact Us have access to some of the better-equipped camps in the region.
Khamlia: The Gnawa Village Near the Dunes
A short 4×4 drive from Merzouga sits Khamlia, a small village whose population descends from sub-Saharan African slaves brought north by Saharan trade caravans centuries ago. The village is known for its Gnawa musicians, who perform traditional percussion-driven music and welcome visitors for informal sessions in their communal space. This cultural stop, often included in longer desert itineraries, adds context to the region’s history that the dunes alone cannot provide.
Getting to Merzouga
Merzouga is not served by train or regular bus connections suited to tourists, which makes a private guided transfer the practical choice for most visitors. The drive from Marrakech takes roughly nine hours non-stop or two to three days with the standard itinerary stops; from Fes it is slightly shorter. The last section of road from Rissani to Merzouga is paved for most of its length. Browse our About Us for departure options from your city of choice, with clear day-by-day breakdowns of what each route includes en route to the dunes.


