Ifrane as Your Fes Base: The Day-Trip Strategy for Nomad Families Who Want the Medina Without the Overwhelm
Why Nobody Should Stay in Fes with Young Kids, a Dog and a Work Calendar
I tried it once. We had booked a riad inside Fes el-Bali because it looked extraordinary in the photos, which it was. We arrived at the Bab Boujeloud gate at four in the afternoon with two children, a dog in a carrier bag, two rolling suitcases, and a laptop bag.
The alley leading to the riad was 90 centimetres wide. A motorbike came through it at walking speed with its horn on.
My daughter pressed herself against a tiled wall. My son dropped his water bottle into the crowd below and we never saw it again.
We stayed three nights. By the second morning, the children were exhausted from the noise and the navigation, the dog had not left the riad courtyard, I had missed one client call because the wifi dropped mid-sentence, and my partner had developed a very specific look that I recognised from previous occasions when a plan had stopped making logistical sense.
We left early. Drove to Ifrane. Checked into a guesthouse with a garden and a view of cedars. And from that point forward, we visited Fes the way it actually works for a family like ours: as a day trip, from a mountain base an hour away.
The Grand Taxi Sequence: Ifrane to Fes in One Hour
The grand taxi stand in Ifrane is on the main avenue near the town centre. Grand taxis run the Ifrane to Fes route continuously throughout the morning and fill quickly with six passengers. The cost is 80 to 100 MAD per person each way. For a family of four, that is 320 to 400 MAD for a return trip. Budget the same on the way back.
Depart by 8:00 am. The road from Ifrane to Fes descends through cedar and pine before opening into the Saiss plain. The drive is just under 60 kilometres and takes approximately one hour under normal conditions. You arrive at the Fes Ville Nouvelle taxi drop point, which is the correct arrival point, not the medina gates. Do not ask to be dropped at Bab Boujeloud if you have young children with you.
PRACTICAL NOTE: Fix the taxi fare before you get in. Negotiate clearly and confirm the total for all passengers. The journey is standard and the price should not vary much, but agreeing upfront removes the discussion on arrival.
What We Do With a Full Fes Day
The table below is the actual schedule we use. It is built around one principle: see what is genuinely extraordinary about Fes while keeping the family functional throughout the day.
The Fes Family Day Schedule from an Ifrane Base
| Time | Activity | Location | Nomadic Clan Note |
| 08:00 am | Depart Ifrane | Grand taxi stand | Shared taxi fills in about 10 minutes. Fix the price before you get in. |
| 09:00 am | Arrive Fes Ville Nouvelle | Taxi drop-off | Do not go to the medina first. Go to the Ville Nouvelle, get a coffee. |
| 09:30 am | Walk to Bab Boujeloud | Blue Gate entrance | Enter the medina here. It is the calmest entry point for families. |
| 10:00 am | Chouara Tanneries | Medina upper level | Best light and lowest crowds are before 11am. Go to a leather shop above for the view. |
| 11:00 am | Bou Inania Madrassa | 5 minutes on foot | Kids respond well to the tile geometry. Entry about 20 MAD. |
| 12:00 pm | Lunch at Nejjarine square | Central medina | The Museum of Wooden Arts is attached. Cool interior. Good for a rest. |
| 01:30 pm | Mellah district | Jewish quarter | Flatter streets. Less hustling. Better stroller access than the central derbs. |
| 03:00 pm | Carrefour grocery run | Fes Ville Nouvelle | This is the practical reason to come. Stock up before returning to Ifrane. |
| 04:30 pm | Grand taxi back to Ifrane | Taxi stand Ville Nouvelle | Last comfortable departure. The 5pm mountain light is worth arriving for. |
| 05:30 pm | Back in Ifrane | Your guesthouse | Walk the dog. Eat slowly. Tomorrow you work from the cedar clearing. |
Medina vs Ville Nouvelle: The Family Decision Table
Fes Medina vs Ville Nouvelle for Nomad Families
| Factor | Fes Medina | Fes Ville Nouvelle |
| Street Layout | Narrow derbs, no grid, no signs | French grid, pavements, logical blocks |
| Stroller Access | Very poor. Cobbles, steps, bottlenecks | Good. Flat wide pavements throughout |
| Dogs Allowed | No. Leave the dog in Ifrane | Yes. Pavements, parks, outdoor cafés |
| Remote Work Wifi | Almost none. Spotty in riads | Reliable 4G and café fibre. Several spots tested at 25 Mbps plus |
| Carrefour Access | Not accessible from medina on foot | The Carrefour is a 10-minute walk |
| Kid Safety | Motorbikes in derbs, crowd pressure | Normal pavement safety. Parks nearby |
| Cultural Experience | High. This is where Fes happens | Moderate. French-influenced. Less overwhelming |
| Best For | Adults, older kids above 8, short visits | Families with toddlers, working parents, dogs, grocery runs |
“Fes is not a base for families with remote work obligations and a dog. It is a destination. Ifrane is the base. That reframe changes everything.”
What We Do Not Do in Fes with Children under Eight
The narrow derb streets in the central medina are not safe for strollers and are genuinely stressful for children below primary school age. Motorbikes use these lanes as through routes. The foot traffic at peak hours compresses into single-file and you cannot move freely with a small child at hand height in a crowd. We learned this.
We also do not attempt the tanneries visit with children under five. The smell is powerful and the viewing platforms involve leaning over a railing above a working industrial dye pit. It is spectacular for older children and adults. It is not a good experience for a toddler who does not yet understand railings as concepts.
The Mellah district, the historic Jewish quarter in the southern part of the medina, is a different story entirely. The streets are wider, the crowd pressure is lower, and the pace is calmer.
This is where we take the children when we want them to see the medina rather than be overwhelmed by it. The Rue des Mrinides in the Mellah connects to a terrace viewpoint that gives the best rooftop view of the city, takes about 20 minutes to reach on foot from Bab Boujeloud, and involves no particularly narrow passages.
The Dog Protocol on Fes Days
The dog stays in Ifrane on Fes days. This is not negotiable and it is not a compromise. Dogs are not culturally welcome in the Fes medina. They are not permitted in any of the cultural monuments. The Ville Nouvelle pavements are technically navigable but a foreign dog in a Moroccan city context draws attention in a way that is uncomfortable for the animal and creates friction with people around you.
The practical answer is simple: the dog has a good day in Ifrane. The guesthouses we use allow the dog to spend the day in the courtyard or garden with access to shade and water. We leave by 8:00 am and we are back by 5:30 pm. The dog is fine. The children have seen the tanneries. We have done a Carrefour run for the week’s groceries on the way back through the Ville Nouvelle. Everyone wins.
The 5pm Return and Why Ifrane Makes Fes Worth It
The return taxi from the Ville Nouvelle stand runs continuously in the late afternoon and fills with workers and students heading back toward the Middle Atlas towns. You are in the car by 4:30 pm. The descent from the Saiss plain back into the cedar belt takes about 40 minutes. The light in the late afternoon on the Middle Atlas cedar forests is extraordinary.

We arrive back in Ifrane at around 5:30 pm. The children want to walk. Dog waiting in the corner. The air is clean and noticeably cooler than what we left in Fes. We pick up tagine from Café Chamonix and eat at the guesthouse table. By nine in the evening everyone is asleep.
That is the entire point. Fes is one of the great cities of the medieval world and it is completely worth seeing. It is also loud, disorienting, difficult to navigate, and not designed for the logistics of a family with a remote work obligation and a dog. Ifrane solves all of those problems at a distance of 60 kilometres. You get the culture without the cost of living inside it.
The Ifrane to Fes Day-Trip Reference
| Logistics Factor | The Actual Answer |
| Grand taxi fare (per person) | 80 to 100 MAD each way. Negotiate before boarding. |
| Departure time from Ifrane | 8:00 am for a comfortable full day. No later than 9:00 am. |
| Drive time | Approximately 1 hour. 60 km. Saiss plain descent. |
| Arrival point | Fes Ville Nouvelle. Not Bab Boujeloud. |
| Best medina entry point for families | Bab Boujeloud (Blue Gate). Widest entry. Most manageable start. |
| Chouara tanneries timing | Before 11:00 am for best light and lowest crowd pressure. |
| Best area for children under 8 | Mellah district. Wider streets, lower traffic, rooftop viewpoint accessible. |
| Grocery stop | Carrefour in Fes Ville Nouvelle. Stock up before the return taxi. |
| Last comfortable taxi back | 4:30 pm from Ville Nouvelle stand. Home in Ifrane by 5:30 pm. |
| Dog policy on Fes days | Leave the dog in Ifrane. The medina is not suitable and the Ville Nouvelle is uncomfortable. |
| Emergency contact Fes | SAMU: 15. Gendarmerie: 177. Clinique Al Farabi for medical emergencies. |
Have you done Fes as a day trip from a mountain base?
Found a better grand taxi timing, a quieter medina entry point, or a Carrefour run hack worth knowing about?
Drop it in the comments below.


