Tickets Guide

Saadian Tombs Tickets & Opening Hours (2026 Guide)

Saadian Tombs tickets cost 100 MAD (about $10) for foreign adults and 50 MAD for foreign children aged 7–13, or 30 MAD and 10 MAD for Moroccan nationals and residents, sold only for cash at the on-site booth. Moroccans enter free every Friday and on the first days of national and religious holidays. The site is open daily from 9:00am to 4:45pm, with no official online ticketing available.

How much do Saadian Tombs tickets cost?

Entry is 100 MAD per foreign adult and 50 MAD per foreign child aged 7–13, according to the site's official pricing. Moroccan nationals and residents pay a separate, lower rate: 30 MAD for adults and 10 MAD for children 7–13. Moroccans also enter free every Friday and on the first days of national and religious holidays — a discount not advertised to foreign visitors, so it's worth knowing if you're traveling with Moroccan family or friends. There is no separate charge to see the garden tombs — one ticket covers the whole site.

What are the Saadian Tombs opening hours?

The tombs are open every day of the week, including Fridays and public holidays, from 9:00am to 4:45pm, with last entry around 4:30pm. Hours occasionally shift slightly during Ramadan — if you're visiting during that period, it's worth confirming locally a day or two ahead, since religious holidays can affect staffing at cultural sites across Marrakech.

How do I pay — cash, card, or online?

Cash only, in Moroccan dirhams. The booth does not reliably take euros, dollars, or card payments, and there's no ATM directly outside the entrance, so withdraw dirhams before you arrive — the nearest reliable ATMs are back toward Jemaa el-Fnaa. There is currently no official website selling Saadian Tombs tickets online; be cautious of third-party sites that imply otherwise, since at most they're bundling entry with a paid guided tour rather than selling a discounted official ticket.

How do I avoid the queue?

Arrive right at 9:00am opening. The entrance is a single narrow passage from the Kasbah Mosque, wide enough for only one or two people at a time, and it backs up fast once the first tour buses arrive — usually by mid-morning. Visitors consistently report the same pattern: a calm first hour, then a bottleneck that can mean a 30–45 minute wait in full sun. Late afternoon, an hour or so before closing, is the next-best window.

Is a guided tour worth it?

Licensed local guides are available on-site, typically negotiated on the spot rather than fixed at a published rate — budget roughly 150 MAD upward depending on group size and length. Given how small the site is and how little posted information there is inside, a guide adds real context (which tomb belongs to whom, why the chamber was sealed) that you won't get from the site itself. It's optional, not required for entry.

What exactly does the ticket include?

One ticket covers the entire site: the Chamber of the Twelve Columns (viewed from its openings rather than entered), the smaller Chamber of the Three Niches next to it, and the garden tombs with their zellige-tiled headstones. There's no upsell structure inside — you won't be asked to pay again for a "better" viewpoint or a separate wing, which is unusual for a Marrakech monument and worth knowing before you go.

What ticket mistakes catch visitors out?

The most common one is assuming, because so much else in travel has moved online, that there must be an official website to prepay through — there isn't, and third-party sites that suggest otherwise are usually reselling a guided tour rather than a discounted ticket. The second is arriving without small dirham bills; the booth isn't set up to break large notes or foreign currency. The third is expecting to walk inside the marble chamber itself — entry is from the surrounding openings and walkway, not a walk-through of the chamber floor, which surprises visitors who haven't read ahead.

What if the tombs are unexpectedly closed?

Like other government-run monuments in Morocco, the site can occasionally close for maintenance, restoration work, or official events without much advance public notice. If you're visiting on a tight schedule, it's worth building in a backup — the Badi Palace nearby, covered in our Kasbah district guide, is a reasonable alternative on the same walk.

How does the price compare to other Marrakech monuments?

At 100 MAD for foreign visitors, the Saadian Tombs sit in the mid-range for Marrakech's paid monuments — more than the Koutoubia Mosque gardens (free, exterior only) but comparable to or less than a combined Bahia Palace and Badi Palace day. Given how briefly most visitors stay, the per-minute cost is higher than at larger sites, which is worth knowing going in so the value comparison doesn't come as a surprise.

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