The Full Story
Built by the Golden Sultan, sealed in 1672, forgotten for 250 years, found again from the air in 1917.
Read the History
Built by the Golden Sultan, sealed in 1672, forgotten for 250 years, found again from the air in 1917.
Read the History
Hours, location, best time to go, and what to expect from the narrow entrance passage.
Visitor Guide
Entrance fees, what's included, and the fastest way through the queue at the booth.
See PricesSultan Ahmad al-Mansur ad-Dahbi raises the necropolis at the height of Saadian wealth, importing Italian Carrara marble for the Chamber of the Twelve Columns.
The new Alaouite sultan walls off the tombs rather than destroying them, leaving only a single narrow passage from the Kasbah Mosque.
French aerial photography reveals the walled-off compound after 250 forgotten years. Read the full story →
Drawn from thousands of published visitor reviews of the site — the good and the practical.
The gilded muqarnas ceiling and marble columns are consistently what visitors remember most — bring a wide-angle lens.
The site is compact and viewed mostly through openings rather than walked through, so pace your day around it, not around it alone.
The narrow single-file passage backs up fast once tour groups arrive — the single most repeated piece of visitor advice.

Everything you need to know before you go: prices, hours, and how to skip the worst of the queue.
Read the guide →
The full story of the Saadian dynasty's royal necropolis, from Ahmad al-Mansur to the 1917 aerial survey.
Read the guide →
How to beat the tour-group crowds in the single-file passage, hour by hour.
Read the guide →Tickets 30–100 MAD depending on nationality and age, free for Moroccans on Fridays. Open daily, 9:00am–4:45pm. No online payment required — reserve your visit and pay at the booth.