I’m Brahim. I started guiding travelers through the Erg Chebbi dunes when I was eighteen, the same way my father did, and his father before him. I’m a third-generation Berber guide from Merzouga, so the Sahara has never been a “destination” to me. It’s home.
Morocco Desert Discovery isn’t a corporation with a head office in some other country. We’re a Moroccan family: desert guides, licensed city guides, drivers, and the people who answer your WhatsApp at odd hours. Every one of us was born and raised in the places we take you through.
Over a decade guiding travelers from 60+ countries through Morocco’s wonders.
Desert tours, city experiences, day trips & grand circuits across all 8 destinations.
Officially licensed by the Moroccan Ministry of Tourism. All guides government-certified.
Rated 4.9/5 on Google Reviews. TripAdvisor Certificate of Excellence — 5 years running.
We put that word in our name on purpose. A real trip through Morocco isn’t something you watch from behind a bus window. It’s mint tea with a nomad family who’ve crossed this desert their whole lives. It’s a quiet kasbah the big groups drive straight past. It’s the moment after dark when the dunes go completely silent and you finally understand why people fall for the Sahara.
We spend our energy getting you to the real version of Morocco, not the tourist-trap one.

Every guide is a certified Moroccan specialist who actually grew up here: Berber desert guides, Fes medina experts, Atlas mountain people.
Unhurried, flexible, planned around your party. Never a forty-seat coach.
What we quote is what you pay. No hidden fees, no surprise extras at the end.
We work with locally owned riads and camps, pay fair wages, and put money back into the desert communities we come from.
The trust part, in plain terms:
I answer every message myself, usually within a day and faster on WhatsApp. No obligation, no sales pressure. If you just want advice on planning a Morocco desert tour, ask away.
When you’re ready, I’ll plan it the way I’d plan it for my own friends. Tea’s on me when you get here.
— Brahim and the family