Moving to Morocco from the US: Cost, Visa, and Healthcare Guide
Real cost of living data, visa requirements, healthcare, and tax information for Americans relocating to Morocco. All figures from public economic data.
WHAT MOROCCO IS ACTUALLY LIKE
M orocco is one of the few countries where you can drive from a ski resort to a surf beach in about four hours, but that's not actually what surprises most people. What surprises them is how functional and modern large swaths of it are. Casablanca has a proper metro, a McDonald's next to a hammam, and traffic jams that could pass for Los Angeles on a bad day. The picture most Americans carry in their heads, assembled from movies and Instagram medinas, collides pretty fast with a country that has a functional highway system, a growing middle class, and a government genuinely invested in infrastructure. The medinas are real and they are extraordinary, but they coexist with a Morocco that runs on smartphones and has a Carrefour.
Living in Morocco on roughly $1,300 a month as a single person is comfortable rather than austere, and in Casablanca or Tangier that number drops closer to $1,150. A sit-down lunch in a local restaurant runs about $3 to $5, a one-bedroom apartment in a decent neighborhood anywhere from $300 to $500 depending on the city. Healthcare is where you slow down and think carefully. With a quality score of 6 out of 10, the public system is under-resourced, and private clinics in Casablanca and Rabat are genuinely good but require out-of-pocket payment or solid private insurance. US insurance does not cover you here in any practical way, and most Americans moving to Morocco start with SafetyWing, around $45 a month, while they figure out a longer-term local private plan. Bureaucracy for foreign residents is manageable but not painless: getting a carte de séjour (residency card) involves multiple visits, patient queuing, and a tolerance for paperwork that does not move on your timeline.
Americans moving to Morocco notice the language situation more than almost anything else. The country officially runs on Arabic and Tamazight, but French is everywhere in business, government, and the professional class, which means English-only Americans are one language removed from full fluency. You can get by in tourist zones and with younger Moroccans in cities, but the Morocco expat who thrives here almost always picks up functional French within the first year. The other adjustment is the pace of social interaction, which is slower, more ceremonial, and more hospitality-forward than Americans expect. You will be offered tea. You will be expected to sit with it. People who find that exhausting usually leave. People who find it restorative usually stay far longer than planned. The call to prayer five times a day is not background noise; it is the actual rhythm of the day, and either you sync with it or you spend six months mildly disoriented.
In the first few weeks, get to the local prefecture to start your residency paperwork early, because the queue is real and the timeline is not negotiable. Open a local bank account at CIH or Attijariwafa as soon as you can, but the process takes time and the account may not be fully functional for weeks. Most Americans open a Wise account before they leave home, since it pulls cash from local ATMs at a fair rate while the local banking situation sorts itself out. Find a neighborhood fqih (a local community figure) or a trusted local fixer, especially in the medinas, since informal networks solve problems that official channels simply do not address. And walk the medina in the morning before the vendors set up, not for the romance of it, but because that is when the city is actually itself.
Living in Morocco is approximately 57% cheaper than the United States. A single person spends around $1300/month on average, excluding rent.
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Why Americans Move to Morocco
Based on real, publicly sourced economic and quality-of-life data
Why Morocco Might Not Be Right for You
Honest considerations before you commit
Typical Monthly Budget in Morocco
Excluding rent · Based on World Bank ICP and Eurostat data via WhereNext
Getting Around Morocco
Practical logistics for everyday life
Quality of Life in Morocco
8 metrics from independent public data sources
Healthcare for Americans in Morocco
Morocco rates 6/10 for healthcare quality on the UHC Service Coverage Index. US health insurance typically does not cover care abroad. Most expats and digital nomads get international health insurance instead.
Visa & Residency in Morocco
US passport holders can enter Morocco visa-free · 90 days. There is no dedicated digital nomad visa. For longer stays, you would need to look into standard residency or work visa options.
Taxes for Americans in Morocco
Morocco uses a worldwide tax system. US citizens are required to file US federal taxes regardless of where they live. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) may reduce or eliminate US tax liability on foreign-earned income up to a certain threshold.
Day to Day Life
Internet speeds average 56.22 Mbps. Commuters spend around 3,530 minutes per year in traffic. The Numbeo Pollution Index sits at 118.9, a moderate level by global standards.
Frequently Asked Questions
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