Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Marrakech for Calls and Client Sessions

Photo by  Margo Evardson

18 min read · Marrakech, Morocco · meeting friendly cafes ·

Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Marrakech for Calls and Client Sessions

YB

Words by

Youssef Benali

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Best Cafes for Meetings in Marrakech: A Local's Guide to Getting Work Done

Marrakech has a way of pulling your attention in every direction at once. Snake charmers, motorbikes, the call to prayer echoing off terracotta walls, the smell of fresh msemen from a cart at dawn. But if you have ever tried to close a deal on a Zoom call while sitting in a riad courtyard with spotty Wi-Fi and a rooster crowing in the background, you know that finding the right workspace in this city requires some insider knowledge. After three years of running a consulting practice from Marrakech, I have tested dozens of spots across the city, and I can tell you that the best cafes for meetings in Marrakech are not always the ones with the best Google reviews. They are the ones where the owner knows your name, where the corner table has an outlet, and where nobody blinks when you are on a headset for two hours. This guide is the result of hundreds of hours spent working from cafes across Gueliz, Sidi Ghanem, the Mellah, and the medina, and every venue listed here is a place I have personally sat in with a laptop open and a client on the line.

Why Marrakech Demands a Different Approach to Cafe Workspaces

Working remotely from Marrakech is not like working from Lisbon or Bali. The city does not have a deeply entrenched coworking culture yet, and most cafes were not designed with the remote worker in mind. You will find that many of the trendiest spots in the medina have gorgeous tile work and terrible lighting, or that the Wi-Fi cuts out every time the afternoon wind picks up. The cafes that actually work for professional meetings tend to cluster in Gueliz, the French-built colonial district, or in the industrial-chic pockets of Sidi Ghanem where expat entrepreneurs have set up shop. Understanding this geographic reality will save you a lot of frustration. I learned this the hard way when I booked a "creative workspace" in the medina that turned out to be a converted stable with one shared table and a French press, no power outlets, and a cat that loved to walk across keyboards. That experience taught me to always scout a place before committing to a meeting there, and the venues below have all passed that test multiple times.

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1. Cafe Clock in the Heart of the Medina

Cafe Clock sits on Rue Riad Laârousse, just north of the Bahia Palace in the medina, and it occupies a beautifully restored riad that has been a cultural hub since it first opened. The rooftop terrace is what most people come for, but the real secret for meetings is the covered courtyard on the ground level, where the thick walls block out street noise and the Wi-Fi holds steady even during peak hours. I held a two-hour client session here on a Tuesday morning last month, and the only interruption was a gentle offer of fresh orange juice from the staff. Order the camel burger if you are staying through lunch, or stick to their excellent mint tea and avocado toast for something lighter. The best time to arrive is between 8:30 and 9:00 AM, before the tourist groups show up for their storytelling workshops and the space gets crowded.

Local Insider Tip: Ask the staff to seat you at the far-left table in the courtyard, nearest the fountain. That table has the strongest Wi-Fi signal because the router is mounted on the wall directly behind it, and the fountain sound actually helps mask the echo from the street, which makes a huge difference on calls.

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The connection to Marrakech here is real. Cafe Clock runs a cultural exchange program that hosts storytelling sessions, film screenings, and workshops for local youth, so your dirhams are going toward something meaningful. The building itself is a restored riad with original zellige tile work and carved cedar ceilings, and sitting in that courtyard feels like being inside the living history of the city. One honest note: the rooftop, while beautiful, gets extremely hot from late morning through mid-afternoon between May and September, so avoid it for calls during those hours. The courtyard is your friend.

2. The Lotus Club on Rue Yougoslavie in Gueliz

The Lotus Club is on Rue Yougoslavie in Gueliz, a few blocks from the Church of the Saints-Martyrs, and it has been a quiet professional cafe Marrakech regulars have relied on for years. The interior is all dark wood, low lighting, and comfortable booths that feel more like a private members' club than a public cafe. I have taken more client calls here than anywhere else in the city, mostly because the back room has a door you can close and the staff understands that when the door is shut, you are not to be disturbed. Their espresso is pulled on a proper La Marzocco machine, and the avocado and smoked salmon plate is solid if you need to eat during a meeting. Weekday mornings, especially Tuesday through Thursday, are the sweet spot. Weekends get busy with brunch crowds and the noise level rises considerably.

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Local Insider Tip: There is a second entrance on the side street that most people do not know about. If the main room is full, walk around to the side door and you will find a smaller room with four tables that is almost always empty before noon. The staff will not direct you there unless you ask.

Gueliz itself is a different world from the medina. The wide boulevards were laid out during the French protectorate in the early twentieth century, and the architecture is a mix of Art Deco apartment buildings and modern commercial facades. The Lotus Club fits into this neighborhood perfectly, catering to a mix of Moroccan professionals, embassy staff, and long-term expats who treat it as their second office. The one complaint I will make is that the Wi-Fi password changes weekly and is sometimes written on a chalkboard near the bar that is easy to miss, so always ask for it when you order rather than wandering around squinting at walls.

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3. Kechmara on Avenue Mohammed VI in Gueliz

Kechmara sits on Avenue Mohammed VI in Gueliz, right near the entrance to the Majorelle Garden area, and it has become one of the go-to zoom call cafes Marrakech locals recommend when someone needs a reliable, no-nonsense workspace. The setup is straightforward: large tables, plenty of power outlets along the walls, a sound system that plays music at a low enough volume to talk over, and Wi-Fi that I have tested at around 40 Mbps download on multiple visits. I ran a full afternoon of back-to-back video calls here on a Wednesday recently without a single dropout. The food menu leans toward comfort fare, think chicken paninis, salads, and a surprisingly good carrot cake. Their fresh juices are excellent, and the "Detox" blend of orange, carrot, and ginger is what I usually order.

Local Insider Tip: The two tables closest to the window on the left side of the main room have the best natural light for video calls. If you are on a Zoom meeting and want to look professional on camera, grab one of those. The back of the cafe has overhead fluorescent lighting that washes you out.

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Kechmara reflects a newer side of Marrakech, the one that is building itself around a young, entrepreneurial Moroccan class that wants espresso culture and reliable internet without the pretension of a European third-wave coffee shop. The Avenue Mohammed VI corridor has become the spine of this new professional Gueliz, and Kechmara is one of its anchor points. Parking on the street outside is genuinely difficult on weekday afternoons, so if you are driving, plan to park in the lot behind the Texaco station two blocks south and walk over. That lot has a flat rate of 20 dirhams for the day and saves you the frustration of circling the block.

4. Cafe des Épices on Rahba Kedima in the Medina

Cafe des Épices is on Rahba Kedima, the spice square in the medina, and while it is technically a tourist-facing cafe, the upstairs seating area has a few tables that work surprisingly well for short meetings if you time it right. The square itself is one of the oldest market spaces in Marrakech, and sitting upstairs looking down at the spice mounds while you wrap up a call gives you a sense of the city's commercial history that no Gueliz cafe can match. I use this spot for shorter calls, maybe 30 to 40 minutes, because the Wi-Fi is adequate but not exceptional and there are no power outlets on the upper level. Order a mint tea and a pastilla, the small ones they serve as a snack, not the full meal version. Early morning, before 9:30 AM, is the only time I would recommend it. After that, the square fills up with tour groups and the noise bleeds through the walls.

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Local Insider Tip: There is a small electrical outlet behind the cushion on the far-right bench upstairs. It is not visible unless you look for it, and the staff knows about it but does not advertise it because they do not want people camping out for hours. If you need to plug in, tuck your charger behind the cushion and nobody will bother you.

The medina's Rahba Kedima has been a marketplace for centuries, and the spice trade that passed through here connected Marrakech to sub-Saharan Africa and the broader Mediterranean world. The cafe sits in a building that is part of this legacy, and the spice sellers below are descendants of families who have worked this square for generations. It is a reminder that Marrakech has always been a city of meetings, just in a different form. The lack of reliable power upstairs is a real limitation, though, so this is not the place for a three-hour workshop. Keep it to quick check-ins and short presentations.

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5. Bloom House on Rue de la Liberté in Gueliz

Bloom House opened on Rue de la Liberté in Gueliz about two years ago and has quickly become one of the best cafes for meetings in Marrakech for people who want a plant-filled, calm environment without sacrificing functionality. The space is bright, with floor-to-ceiling windows, hanging greenery everywhere, and a dedicated work-friendly layout that includes a long communal table with built-in power strips. I hosted a small client workshop here for four people last month, and the staff set us up at the communal table without hesitation. Their matcha latte is genuinely good, and the Buddha bowl with roasted vegetables and tahini is a solid lunch option. The Wi-Fi runs at about 35 Mbps, which is enough for video calls as long as you are not screen-sharing heavily.

Local Insider Tip: Bloom House has a small back garden that is not visible from the main room. If you ask the staff nicely and it is not being used for a private event, they will let you set up there. It is completely quiet, has shade from a large olive tree, and there is an extension cord running from the kitchen outlet that reaches the garden bench.

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Rue de la Liberté is one of those Gueliz streets that has transformed dramatically in the last decade, moving from sleepy residential to a strip of independent cafes, boutiques, and galleries. Bloom House fits the neighborhood's new identity perfectly. It attracts a crowd of young Moroccan creatives and remote workers, so the atmosphere is professional but relaxed. The one downside is that the bathroom situation is limited to a single toilet that can have a line during peak hours, so plan accordingly if you are settling in for a long session.

6. Plus61 on Rue de la Liberté in Gueliz

Plus61 is also on Rue de la Liberté, just a few doors down from Bloom House, and it takes a different approach. This is a private booth cafe Marrakech visitors rarely find on their own, because the concept is more common in Southeast Asia than in North Africa. The interior has a series of semi-enclosed booths with curtains, each equipped with a power outlet, a small table, and a reading light. I discovered this place through a fellow consultant who has been working from Marrakech for five years, and it has become my go-to for confidential client calls where I need privacy. The Australian-inspired menu includes flat whites, acai bowls, and a lamb salad that is better than it has any right to be. The Wi-Fi is strong and consistent, and the booths muffle sound well enough that I have never had a client complain about background noise.

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Local Insider Tip: The third booth from the entrance has a slightly wobbly table. Avoid it. The fifth booth is the best one, it is the largest, has the most light, and the power outlet is positioned on the wall at elbow height rather than on the floor where you have to crouch to plug in.

The name Plus61 is a nod to the Australian expat community that helped inspire the concept, but the ownership and staff are entirely Moroccan. It represents a fascinating cross-cultural moment in Gueliz, where global remote work trends are being adapted to a local context. The booth concept works especially well in Marrakech because it addresses a cultural reality: many Moroccan professionals are not comfortable having sensitive business conversations in open, shared spaces where neighbors or acquaintances might overhear. Plus61 solves that problem elegantly. The only issue is that the booths are first-come, first-served, and by 11:00 AM on weekdays they are usually all taken, so arrive early or be prepared to wait.

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7. The Factory in Sidi Ghanem

The Factory is in Sidi Ghanem, the industrial zone on the eastern edge of Marrakech that has become the city's unofficial creative district. It is on the main road through the zone, and from the outside it looks like exactly what it is, a converted warehouse. Inside, it is a sprawling space with a cafe area, an art gallery, and a courtyard. I come here when I need to spread out, literally and mentally. The cafe section has large tables, industrial-chic decor, and a sound system that plays curated playlists at a reasonable volume. The espresso is good, the fresh pastries come from a local bakery that supplies them each morning, and the overall vibe is creative without being chaotic. Weekday mornings are ideal. Sidi Ghanem on weekends is more of a nightlife and events scene, so the energy shifts dramatically after dark.

Local Insider Tip: The Wi-Fi router is in the back office, and the signal is strongest in the area near the gallery wall. If you are having connectivity issues at your table, ask the staff if you can move to the gallery section. They will always say yes, and the tables there are less crowded.

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Sidi Ghanem tells the story of Marrakech's economic evolution. This zone was built for manufacturing and warehousing, and many of the buildings still house textile workshops and auto repair shops alongside the newer galleries and cafes. The Factory sits right at this intersection of old and new Marrakech, and working there feels like being part of the city's transformation. The downside is that Sidi Ghanem is not easy to reach without a car or taxi, and there is no real pedestrian infrastructure, so if you are staying in the medina or central Gueliz, factor in a 15 to 20 minute drive depending on traffic.

8. Nomad on Rue Mohammed El Beqal in Gueliz

Nomad is on Rue Mohammed El Beqal in Gueliz, and it rounds out this list as one of the most consistently reliable zoom call cafes Marrakech has to offer. The space is modern and clean, with a mix of communal tables, individual workstations, and a few two-person tables that are perfect for one-on-one client meetings. I have been coming here for over a year, and the Wi-Fi has never let me down during a call. They use a dual-router system with automatic failover, which means if one connection drops, the other kicks in within seconds. The menu is Mediterranean-leaning, with good tagines, fresh salads, and a hummus plate that I have ordered so many times the kitchen sometimes starts preparing it when they see me walk in. Their coffee is sourced from a roaster in Casablanca and is a step above what most Gueliz cafes serve.

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Local Insider Tip: Nomad has a loyalty program that is not advertised on any menu or sign. After every ten visits, your eleventh coffee is free. The staff tracks this internally, so just ask them to check your count when you order. Most regulars do not even know it exists.

Rue Mohammed El Beqal is a commercial street in the heart of Gueliz, surrounded by law firms, real estate offices, and medical practices. Nomad fits into this professional ecosystem naturally, and many of the people working from its tables are Moroccan lawyers, architects, and consultants who treat it as an extension of their offices. This gives the cafe a focused, productive atmosphere that is different from the more social energy you find at places like Bloom House or Plus61. The one thing to watch for is that the air conditioning is set quite cold, so if you are on a video call and wearing a light shirt, you might want to bring a jacket or sit away from the vent near the entrance.

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When to Go and What to Know

Marrakech's cafe culture follows rhythms that are different from what you might be used to. Friday mornings are quiet because of midday prayers, and many cafes open late or close entirely between noon and 1:00 PM. Ramadan changes everything, most cafes in Gueliz stay open but operate on reduced hours, and eating or drinking in public during daylight hours is frowned upon even in expat-friendly areas. The best days for meetings are Tuesday through Thursday, when the city is fully awake but not yet in weekend mode. Arrive early, between 8:00 and 9:00 AM, to claim the best seats before the morning crowd. Always carry cash in small denominations because some smaller cafes have card machines that are unreliable, and never assume a cafe has a power outlet until you have seen it with your own eyes. The Wi-Fi in Marrakech is generally decent in Gueliz and Sidi Ghanem but can be inconsistent in the medina, so have a mobile hotspot as a backup if your meeting is critical.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Marrakech expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier daily budget in Marrakech runs between 600 and 900 MAD (approximately 60 to 90 USD) for accommodation in a decent riad or hotel in Gueliz, 200 to 300 MAD for meals across breakfast, lunch, and dinner, 50 to 100 MAD for local transport including petit taxis, and 100 to 200 MAD for incidentals like cafe workspace costs, tips, and phone data. Total realistic daily spend falls in the range of 950 to 1,500 MAD, excluding accommodation if prepaid.

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What is the most reliable neighborhood in Marrakech for digital nomads and remote workers?

Gueliz is the most reliable neighborhood, particularly the area bounded by Avenue Mohammed VI, Rue de la Liberté, and Rue Yougoslavie. This zone has the highest concentration of cafes with strong Wi-Fi, the most consistent electricity supply, the greatest number of power outlets per venue, and the largest community of remote workers who can share real-time updates about which spots are working well on any given day.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Marrakech?

In Gueliz and Sidi Ghanem, roughly 60 to 70 percent of cafes frequented by remote workers have accessible power outlets, but only about 20 percent have backup power systems such as generators or UPS units that keep Wi-Fi routers running during outages. In the medina, the numbers drop significantly, with fewer than 30 percent of cafes having reliable outlets and almost none having backup power. Always carry a fully charged power bank as a precaution.

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What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Marrakech's central cafes and workspaces?

In Gueliz cafes, average download speeds range from 25 to 50 Mbps and upload speeds range from 10 to 20 Mbps, based on standard Speedtest measurements taken during weekday business hours. Sidi Ghanem venues tend to be slightly faster, with downloads averaging 35 to 60 Mbps, because several spaces in that zone have invested in dedicated fiber connections. Medina cafes average 10 to 25 Mbps download and 5 to 10 Mbps upload, with higher variability depending on the specific location and time of day.

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Marrakech?

True 24/7 coworking spaces are almost nonexistent in Marrakech. A few venues in Gueliz and Sidi Ghanem stay open until midnight or 1:00 AM, and some hotel lobbies in the Hivernage district are accessible late for guests. However, there is no widely available, dedicated late-night coworking infrastructure comparable to what you would find in cities like Bangkok or Berlin. If you need to work past 10:00 PM, your most reliable option is a hotel room with a desk and the hotel's Wi-Fi.

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