Casablanca, Morocco
Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.
Overview
Hassan II Mosque
Art Deco Architecture
Corniche & Beaches
Morocco's Gateway
Casablanca (Dar el-Beida, 'the white house') is Morocco's biggest city, its economic and business capital, and the country's main gateway to the world — a sprawling, fast-moving Atlantic metropolis that feels markedly more modern and cosmopolitan than the imperial cities. Most travellers pass through it on the way elsewhere, but it rewards a stop, above all for its single unmissable sight: the Hassan II Mosque, one of the largest mosques in the world, rising on a platform over the Atlantic with a 210-metre minaret (among the tallest religious structures anywhere), part of it cantilevered above the sea. Completed in 1993 with extraordinary craftsmanship in marble, cedar, zellij and carved plaster, it is one of the few mosques in Morocco that non-Muslims may enter, on guided tours — a genuinely awe-inspiring experience. Beyond the mosque, Casablanca's distinctive character lies in its architecture: the city centre is one of the world's great showcases of early-20th-century Art Deco and Mauresque (Moorish-revival) buildings, clustered around the palm-lined Mohammed V Square and the surrounding boulevards. Along the coast, the Ain Diab corniche is the city's leisure strip of beaches, pools, seafront restaurants and nightlife, while the small old medina and the early-20th-century Habous quarter (the 'new medina') offer more traditional shopping and atmosphere. The vast Morocco Mall, the cathedral (no longer a place of worship), and the film-inspired Rick's Café — an affectionate homage to the 1942 movie that was not actually filmed here — round out the city. Casablanca is also the country's transport hub, with the busiest airport (Mohammed V) and fast trains to Rabat, Marrakech and Tangier. The climate is mild and Atlantic-tempered year-round, never as hot as the interior, making the city pleasant in almost any season.
Discover Casablanca
Casablanca is Morocco's largest city and economic capital, a modern Atlantic metropolis best known for the colossal Hassan II Mosque rising over the ocean — one of the largest in the world and one of the few in Morocco open to non-Muslim visitors. It is also famous for its downtown of early-20th-century Art Deco and Mauresque architecture, its seafront Ain Diab corniche, and its role as the country's main international gateway and business hub. The 1942 film lends it romance, though it was not actually filmed here.
Yes — the Hassan II Mosque is one of the very few mosques in Morocco that non-Muslims may enter, on guided tours that run several times a day outside prayer times. The tours take you into the vast prayer hall to see the cedar, marble, plaster and zellij craftsmanship and, below, the ablution halls. Buy tickets at the mosque, dress modestly, and check the daily tour schedule (it varies on Fridays and during Ramadan). Even without a tour, the seaside esplanade around the mosque is a magnificent place to admire it.
Many travellers use Casablanca mainly as an arrival or departure point, since it has the busiest airport and best connections, and it lacks the medina romance of Fez or Marrakech. But it is worth a day: the Hassan II Mosque is genuinely world-class, the Art Deco downtown is fascinating, and the corniche, Habous quarter and dining scene give a cosmopolitan, contemporary view of Morocco that complements the imperial cities. A night here at the start or end of a trip is easily filled.
5 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.