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Moroccan Culinary Art Museum Tickets with Marrakesh Monument Options

Moroccan Culinary Arts Museum courtyard with fountain and intricate tilework.
Moroccan Culinary Arts Museum interior with mosaic tiles and traditional seating.
Tajine pots and cooking utensils at Moroccan Culinary Art Museum kitchen.
Bahia Palace courtyard with visitors seated around a fountain, Marrakech.

Explore at your pace

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    • Pair a Marrakech monument with a culinary heritage museum visit and unwind before or after sightseeing, all planned in a single ticket.

    • Spend time in rooms dedicated to Moroccan culinary traditions, then step into a traditional Moroccan setting that adds atmosphere to your visit.

    • Follow exhibits that connect cooking tools and table customs with daily life in Morocco, giving you deeper context for meals during your stay.

    • Pick an add-on, choosing entry to Saadian Tombs, Bahia Palace, or El Badi Palace. Bahia Palace is on the same street as the museum and seconds away on foot. El Badi Palace and the Saadian Tombs are each a 10-minute walk from the museum and just 5 minutes apart from each other.

    • Entry to Saadian Tombs/Bahia Palace/El Badi Palace (as per option selected)

    • Entry to the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    • Self-guided exploration of exhibits across three floors, covering:

      • Harira and traditional Moroccan soups

      • Couscous: regional variations, preparation methods, and cultural significance

      • Tagines: spice combinations, slow-cooking techniques, and regional styles

      • Moroccan pastries and sweets

      • Street food culture

      • Displays of traditional spices, antique cooking implements, and tableware

      • Audiovisual displays illustrating cooking processes

      • Two interior courtyards with zellige-tiled floors and carved columns, the first featuring a Carrara marble fountain framed by four olive trees

      • Coffee break with choice of mint tea or coffee, served with 3 Moroccan pastries

      • Digital audio guide app

    • Guided tour

    • Cooking class

    • Headphones

  • These tickets can't be cancelled or rescheduled.

  • Explore Marrakech's key monuments with included entry tickets, a digital audio guide, and a Moroccan Culinary Art Museum visit.

    Getting started

    All three monument options sit within the same southern Medina cluster as the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum, so your day involves short walks rather than cross-city transfers. Begin with the monument selected in your booking — either the Saadian Tombs, Bahia Palace, or El Badi Palace — scan or show your ticket at the official entrance, and follow on-site signs to enter. When your monument visit is complete, head to the museum to continue your experience.

    Saadian Tombs

    What to expect

    This option combines access to the Saadian Tombs with cultural insights at the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum. The Saadian Tombs are around a 10-minute walk from the museum; if you want to extend your southern Medina visit, El Badi Palace is just 5 minutes from the Tombs in the same direction.

    Features

    • Use your Saadian Tombs entrance ticket to access the site and explore at your own pace, following the on-site pathways and areas that interest you.

    • A digital audio guide app for a self-guided tour is included with this option, so you can listen on your own device as you move through the Saadian Tombs.

    Bahia Palace

    What to expect

    Choose this option to pair Bahia Palace with a visit to the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum. Bahia Palace sits on the same street as the museum — Rue Riad Zitoun el Jdid — and is seconds away on foot, making the transition between your two stops completely seamless in either order.

    Features

    • Present your Bahia Palace entrance ticket at the palace access point, then move through the open areas in whatever order suits your visit.

    • This option includes a digital audio guide app for a self-guided tour, giving you structured commentary as you explore Bahia Palace on your own.

    El Badi Palace

    What to expect

    Select this option to visit El Badi Palace along with the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum. El Badi Palace is around a 10-minute walk from the museum; the Saadian Tombs are a further 5 minutes from El Badi, making it easy to extend into a three-site southern Medina afternoon if your schedule allows.

    Features

    • Use your El Badi Palace entrance ticket to enter the complex and walk through the accessible sections at a pace that matches your schedule.

    Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    What to expect

    All options include time at the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum, focused on Morocco's food heritage and traditions.

    Features

    • Entry to the Moroccan Culinary Art Museum is included with every variant, so you can explore the museum spaces that interest you without additional tickets.

    • During your museum visit you have a coffee or tea break in a traditional Moroccan setting, which is included as part of this experience.

  • What to bring

    Bahia Palace

    • Comfortable shoes with grip — the palace involves extensive walking across uneven tiled floors and multiple open courtyards.

    • Water, as there are no cafés or food facilities inside; arrive hydrated, particularly in warmer months.

    • Modest clothing covering shoulders and knees is expected at a historic cultural site; there is no enforcement at the entrance but it is the standard for the space.

    El Badi Palace

    • Sunscreen, a hat, and water: The site is almost entirely open-air ruins with little shade across a large courtyard — sun exposure is significant, especially between 11:00 AM and 3:00 PM.

    • Flat, comfortable shoes, as the grounds cover a large area with uneven flagstones, earthen paths, and ramps between levels.

    • A camera — the open courtyard, reflecting pools, sunken gardens, and rampart views are the primary draw, and personal photography is permitted throughout.

    Saadian Tombs

    • Modest clothing covering shoulders and knees — this is a functioning religious burial site, not a palace, and the dress expectation is observed more strictly here than at either palace.

    • Small change in Moroccan dirhams in case on-site ticket payment is cash-only; bring MAD for the entry fee if not pre-covered by your booking.

    • Water and patience — queues for the main mausoleum build quickly during peak hours and move slowly, often in direct sun with no shade cover.

    Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    • Personal earphones: Required to use the digital audio guide app, which plays through your own device and none are provided on-site.

    • A charged smartphone with the app pre-downloaded: Your ticket QR code and audio guide content arrive by email the day before; download the audio guide content before leaving your accommodation, as there is no Wi-Fi inside.

    • Passport or ID card: Required at entry; children under 9 enter free with valid ID.

    • Moroccan dirhams (MAD) for anything beyond the included coffee break — the boutique, additional drinks, and the rooftop restaurant are at your own cost.

    What's not allowed

    Bahia Palace

    • Flash photography is discouraged to protect the carved cedar ceilings and painted plasterwork — photography without flash is permitted throughout.

    • Certain rooms and sections are periodically closed for restoration without advance notice; tickets are non-refundable should you encounter a closure.

    • Loud or disruptive behaviour is not appropriate; Bahia Palace is one of the busiest heritage sites in Marrakesh and the same consideration applies here as at any significant historic monument.

    El Badi Palace

    • There are no shops or cafés inside the palace grounds; all food and drink must be brought in or sourced from the small kiosks directly outside the entrance gate.

    • Avoid touching or climbing on the ruins and exposed archaeological remains; sections around the outer edges of the site are restricted.

    • Flash photography is not appropriate near any exhibition pavilions or sensitive display areas within the complex.

    Saadian Tombs

    • Entry into the main mausoleum interior is not permitted — visitors view the Hall of the Twelve Columns from the doorway only; this applies regardless of crowd levels and is a firm operational rule.

    • The Tombs are a religious burial site; loud talking, disruptive behaviour, and any display of irreverence are not acceptable. Visitors are expected to move quietly through the grounds.

    • Smoking is not permitted anywhere on the site.

    Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    • Commercial or professional photography and video require advance written permission from the museum — personal photography is permitted throughout.

    • Cooking classes, the rooftop restaurant (Le Douar Médina), and the full tea salon menu are separate bookings not covered by this ticket — only your included coffee break applies.

    Accessibility

    Bahia Palace

    • The palace has uneven surfaces and steps throughout, and wheelchair access is limited due to its historic layout — not all rooms and corridors are navigable for visitors with mobility impairments.

    • The site involves substantial walking across multiple large courtyards and interconnected rooms; plan for a slow, stop-start route if endurance is a consideration.

    • There is no fixed seating inside the main palace areas — rest is limited to a few open courtyard spaces, so factor this in if you need regular breaks.

    El Badi Palace

    • The grounds have uneven flagstones, steep ramps, and narrow passages around the ruins — access is more challenging than a purpose-built attraction, though the central courtyard area is relatively flat.

    • El Badi is the largest of the three monument options in terms of physical footprint; visitors with limited walking capacity should be aware this is an expansive site with no short loop option.

    • The absence of shade across most of the site makes heat endurance a meaningful factor alongside physical mobility, particularly between April and September.

    Saadian Tombs

    • The site is compact and takes most visitors 30–45 minutes, making the physical endurance demand lower than either palace.

    • Some uneven surfaces and steps exist within the grounds, but ramps are in place for sections leading to the main viewing areas.

    • The primary physical challenge here is not the terrain but the queue — waiting in direct sun at the mausoleum doorway during peak hours is the main strain for visitors with heat sensitivity or limited standing tolerance.

    Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    • The museum spans three floors of an 18th-century riad with no confirmed elevator access — visitors using wheelchairs may not be able to reach all exhibition levels.

    • Zellige tile floors and narrow riad corridors present challenges for both wheelchairs and strollers; the ground-floor courtyards are the most navigable areas.

    • Seating is available in the interior courtyards, so you can rest at several points during your visit without needing to leave the building.

    • The visit is entirely self-paced with no fixed route or standing queue, making it easy to move slowly or pause as needed.

    Additional Information

    Bahia Palace

    • Bahia Palace sits on the same street as the museum — Rue Riad Zitoun el Jdid — and is seconds from the museum entrance on foot, making the transition between the two seamless in either direction with no navigation required.

    El Badi Palace

    • El Badi Palace is around a 10-minute walk from the museum through the southern Medina; the Saadian Tombs are a further 5 minutes from El Badi — both can be covered in the same afternoon if your schedule allows.

    • Explanatory signage on-site is almost entirely in French — the audio guide becomes more useful here than at the other two monument options if historical context matters to your visit.

    • No food or drink is available inside; small kiosks just outside the entrance gate sell water and snacks.

    Saadian Tombs

    • The Saadian Tombs are a 10–15 minute walk from the museum; El Badi Palace is 5 minutes from the Tombs in the direction of the museum, making a three-site loop practical within a single afternoon.

    • The site is compact; set realistic expectations for the mausoleum viewing, as the interior is viewed from the doorway only, and most visitors are done in under an hour.

    Moroccan Culinary Art Museum

    • The museum entrance sits directly beside Bahia Palace on Rue Riad Zitoun el Jdid; for El Badi Palace and Saadian Tombs pairings, ask your petite taxi for Bahia Palace as a landmark — taxi fares from central Marrakesh run 20–50 MAD.

    • Your included coffee break — mint tea or coffee served with 3 Moroccan pastries — is taken at Le Salon de Thé on the ground floor after completing the exhibits; let staff know it is part of your ticket, and no separate payment is needed.

    • Your voucher will be emailed to you shortly.
    • Display the voucher on your mobile phone with a valid photo ID at the starting point.
    • Please check your final voucher for the starting point details & specific instructions.

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