BlogTourismTop sights in Casablanca from iconic highlights to hidden places in the city


Top sights in Casablanca from iconic highlights to hidden places in the city

Top sights in Casablanca from iconic highlights to hidden places in the city
MAROQ
Maroq Redactie
Maroq Redactie
25 February 2026 • 10 min lezen • Tourism

Discover Casablanca’s top attractions from the Hassan II Mosque and the Corniche to art deco streets, markets and cultural spots for a complete city trip.

Discovering Casablanca beyond its business image

Casablanca is often known as Morocco's economic engine, but the city offers much more than offices, traffic and modern towers. Travelers who take time to explore it properly discover a surprising mix of monumental architecture, coastal atmosphere, urban energy, culture and historical layers.

The strength of Casablanca lies in this combination. It is not an open-air museum like some historic cities, but a living metropolis where landmarks, local neighborhoods and modern urban development exist side by side. That makes visiting Casablanca dynamic and varied.

Hassan II Mosque the iconic highlight of Casablanca

The Hassan II Mosque is without doubt Casablanca's most famous attraction and for many visitors the absolute highlight. Its Atlantic seafront location, impressive scale and rich detailing make it unique. The mosque combines traditional Moroccan craftsmanship with modern engineering, making it remarkable both religiously and architecturally.

Even visitors who mainly come for city life or business often visit the area around the mosque for the atmosphere, ocean views and monumental setting. The square and coastline around it also make it an excellent place for photography and a walk.

The Corniche and Ain Diab for boulevard and seaside atmosphere

To experience Casablanca as a modern coastal city, head to the Corniche and Ain Diab. This area is popular for walks, cafés, restaurants and relaxation by the sea. During the day it is a pleasant place to enjoy the Atlantic coast, while in the evening the area becomes lively.

For tourists, it is an ideal complement to more cultural and historic stops. Here you combine city sightseeing with views, leisure and a modern side of Casablanca that fits a complete city trip.

Art deco downtown Casablanca for architecture lovers

Casablanca is one of North Africa's most interesting cities for lovers of 20th-century architecture. In the city center you will find facades, squares and buildings with art deco and modernist influences that give the city a distinct character. This urban architecture is exactly what makes Casablanca different from many other Moroccan destinations.

A walk through central districts shows how history, urban planning and commerce come together. For visitors who enjoy photography or a calmer way of exploring, an architecture walk through downtown is highly recommended.

Mohammed V Square and civic buildings

Mohammed V Square is an important city square and a good starting point to experience Casablanca's administrative and urban heart. Around the square you will find representative buildings and broad urban spaces that say a lot about the development of the modern city.

For visitors, this is an interesting stop because you not only see monumental architecture but also feel Casablanca's daily rhythm. The square is often a logical point between other downtown sights.

The old medina of Casablanca for local atmosphere

Casablanca is less famous for its medina than cities like Fez or Marrakech, but the old medina of Casablanca still has real charm for visitors looking for local atmosphere. You will find narrower streets, trade, daily activity and a more traditional urban experience in contrast with the city's modern areas.

That contrast is exactly what makes it worth visiting. It gives another perspective on Casablanca and shows that the city is made up of several layers.

Marché Central and market atmosphere in the city

For travelers who enjoy experiencing everyday city culture, visiting markets such as Marché Central is a great option. Here you feel the energy of commerce, local products and the rhythm of residents. Markets are not only places to buy things, but also places to understand the city better.

A market visit fits well in a city trip because it combines easily with architecture, cafés and walks in the center.

Museums and cultural stops for a deeper city trip

Beyond the major highlights, Casablanca also has cultural places that add depth to your visit, including museums and art venues. For travelers who want to go beyond the most photographed spots, these are valuable stops to learn more about art, history and the city's cultural diversity.

These places make Casablanca especially attractive for visitors seeking a balanced trip with monuments, city life, architecture and culture.

Rick's Café and cinematic atmosphere

Many visitors are curious about the cinematic associations of the name Casablanca. Although the famous film was not shot in the city itself, the atmosphere around that cultural image still appeals strongly to travelers. Rick's Café is therefore a popular stop for many tourists because of its ambiance and its reference to the classic film culture linked to Casablanca.

Even if you only stop by briefly, it fits well into a route of well-known and distinctive places in the city.

The Habous district for tradition and a calmer visit

The Habous district (the new medina) is for many visitors one of the most pleasant areas to walk around. It offers a more orderly atmosphere, traditional architectural elements, shops and artisan products. For travelers looking for a slower pace than in the busiest traffic zones, it is an excellent stop.

Habous shows well how Casablanca combines multiple urban identities: modern, commercial, traditional and everyday life within one city.

How to combine the sights smartly in one or two days

For a first visit, a combination of iconic highlights and urban districts works best. Start for example with the Hassan II Mosque and the coast, then plan downtown with art deco streets and Mohammed V Square, and end with the Corniche or a cultural stop. On a second day you can add Habous, a market visit and extra museums.

This gives you a complete view of Casablanca: religious monumentality, urban architecture, local atmosphere, culture and modern coastal life.

Why Casablanca is worth a city trip

Casablanca is not a city you can summarize in a single image. The variety between famous highlights and less obvious places is exactly what makes it appealing. For travelers open to a real metropolitan experience with Moroccan identity, Casablanca is a compelling destination.

Visitors who arrive with a good route and realistic expectations discover a lively, stylish and multifaceted city that offers much more than its best-known monument.

Tourism

Meer uit Tourism

Investing in Real Estate in Morocco is it a good plan?
Morocco attracts investors with growing cities, tourism and relatively attractive rental yields. But whether it is a “good plan” depends on location, rental model (long-term vs short-stay), legal checks and realistic costs.
28 January 2026
Riffians in Europe: from recruitment agreements to new generations
Across Europe, many Moroccan communities trace their roots to the Rif. Learn how labor migration started, what languages were spoken, and how families built bridges across generations.
22 January 2026 8 minuten lezen
Fez: Morocco’s oldest imperial city — what you truly should see and experience
Fez is one of Morocco’s most authentic destinations: an ancient medina, world-class craftsmanship, and a timeless atmosphere. Discover what makes Fez special, what it’s famous for, and what travelers shouldn’t miss.
22 January 2026 8 minuten lezen
Where should you be as an entrepreneur in Morocco to really seize opportunities?
Morocco is easy for entrepreneurs to understand as “Morocco’s G7”: 7 core regions, each with its own trade logic. In the north you’ll find Tangier–Tetouan as the export and industrial gateway, and Nador/Oriental as a trade bridge with strong diaspora networks. Moving toward the center, Rabat–Salé–Kénitra provides policy, compliance and business certainty, while Casablanca–Settat is the commercial engine for scale, distribution and B2B deals. Further inland, Fès–Meknès offers craftsmanship and agro with strong origin stories, Marrakech/Middle Atlas runs on lifestyle, design and experience, and Souss–Massa (Agadir) is an export machine for agro, fish and processing with EU quality in its DNA.
19 January 2026
When is Morocco actually not a good fit for entrepreneurs?
Morocco is not the right choice for every entrepreneur. In this blog you’ll read in which situations doing business in Morocco is less logical and when other markets better match your scale, speed and risk profile.
16 January 2026
When is Morocco a good fit — and when is it not — for entrepreneurs?
Morocco offers interesting opportunities for entrepreneurs, but it is not automatically the best choice. In this blog you will read when doing business in Morocco makes sense — and when other markets may better match your strategy, scale and risk appetite.
15 January 2026
Doing Business in Marrakech: Trade, Manufacturing and Services
Marrakech is world-famous as a tourist destination, but the city is rapidly developing into a versatile economic hub. Beyond hospitality, sectors such as trade, manufacturing, the creative industry, logistics and business services are growing strongly. For entrepreneurs, Marrakech offers a unique combination of market access, infrastructure and an international network.
12 January 2026
Opportunities in Agadir's tourism sector: investing in growth and experiences
Agadir is rapidly developing into a versatile tourist destination on Morocco's Atlantic coast. With strong growth in international tourism, investments in infrastructure, and the rise of niches such as surf, wellness and eco-tourism, attractive opportunities are emerging for entrepreneurs and investors.
12 January 2026
Agadir on the rise: opportunities for European entrepreneurs
Agadir offers entrepreneurs plenty of opportunities in agro & food, fisheries, tourism and export. Thanks to its strategic location, strong production capacity and growing infrastructure the region is attractive for European companies that want to source, invest or expand.
10 January 2026
Doing business in Taghazout: where surf, freedom and business come together
Taghazout has grown from a quiet fishing village into an international hotspot for surfers, digital nomads and lifestyle entrepreneurs. The mix of tourism, creativity and international visitors makes the village especially attractive for entrepreneurs who want to tap into small-scale, authentic and sustainable concepts.
7 January 2026