Morocco allows foreigners to buy property freely, and the legal framework is solid. But the buying process in Morocco contains enough specific steps, title distinctions, and administrative requirements that foreign buyers who arrive without preparation regularly make expensive mistakes. This guide explains what you need to know before you make an offer — and what you need to watch for at every stage of the transaction.
Important: Real estate law, tax rates, and administrative requirements change. This guide provides general educational information and should not be taken as legal or financial advice. Always use a qualified Moroccan notaire for any property transaction and consult an independent legal adviser before signing anything.
I returned to Morocco in 2026 after 32 years in the United States. One of the first things I did after renting an apartment in Casablanca was research the property market — not because I was ready to buy immediately, but because I wanted to understand the landscape honestly before making any decisions. What I found was that the official process is genuinely clear and well-structured, but the informal knowledge — the things agents and sellers will not always volunteer — takes time to learn. This guide is my attempt to share that knowledge up front.
Rachid Echahly · Editor, MoroccoPassport.com · Casablanca, 2026Buying Property in Morocco — Key Numbers
What This Guide Covers
- Can Foreigners Buy Property?
- Types of Property
- Understanding Property Titles
- The Buying Process Step by Step
- The Role of the Notaire
- Office des Changes — Fund Transfers
- What Buying Really Costs
- Off-Plan (VEFA) vs. Resale
- Agricultural Land — The Trap
- Ten Mistakes Foreign Buyers Make
- Finding a Real Estate Agency
1. Can Foreigners Buy Property in Morocco?
Yes, with no restrictions on residential property. Moroccan law grants foreign nationals the right to own property freely — apartments, villas, riads, commercial properties — on the same basis as Moroccan citizens. There is no minimum purchase price, no requirement to obtain prior government approval, and no cap on the number of properties you can own.
The main restriction is on agricultural land (see Section 9), which foreigners are prohibited from purchasing. Beyond that, the legal framework is open, and property ownership is protected under Moroccan law.
2. Types of Property Available
The Moroccan property market offers a varied landscape, and understanding what you are looking at helps you buy the right thing.
Apartment (appartement)
The most common purchase for expats in Casablanca, Rabat and Marrakech's ville nouvelle. Modern apartments in new developments offer reliable construction standards, building management (syndic), and clear title. Prices range from 600,000 MAD (~€55,000) for a modest flat in a secondary city to 4–8 million MAD (€370,000–€730,000) for a high-end apartment in Casablanca's Ain Diab district or Marrakech's Guéliz.
Riad (medina house)
The courtyard house of the old medina — a category that attracts buyers looking for the authentic Moroccan property experience. Riads can be extraordinary value and extraordinarily complex. Title situations in the medina are often unregistered or partially registered (melkia — see Section 3). Structural surveys are essential. Renovation costs regularly exceed purchase price. Not recommended for buyers without significant local knowledge or an experienced local partner.
Villa
Stand-alone houses in residential compounds (quartiers résidentiels), on the outskirts of major cities or in resort areas like Marrakech's Palmeraie, the Atlantic coast, or the Souss Valley near Agadir. Generally clear title, but boundary surveys and planning permission verification are important.
Off-Plan (VEFA — Vente en l'État Futur d'Achèvement)
Buying from a developer before or during construction. Potentially better prices but carries developer risk. See Section 8 for specific considerations.
3. Understanding Property Titles — The Single Most Important Thing
The type of title a property holds is the most fundamental due diligence issue in Moroccan real estate. More foreign buyers suffer problems here than anywhere else in the process. There are two systems: the registered titre foncier and the traditional melkia. They are not equivalent.
| Criterion | Titre Foncier (TF) | Melkia |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Registered title at the Conservation Foncière — Morocco's official land registry, administered by the ANCFCC (Agence Nationale de la Conservation Foncière, du Cadastre et de la Cartographie). The Moroccan equivalent of a Land Registry deed | Traditional customary title — ownership established by witness testimony before an adoul (notary under Islamic law), but not registered with the state |
| State guarantee | ✔ State-guaranteed — the government stands behind the registered owner | ✘ Not state-guaranteed — disputes resolved through courts |
| Security for buyer | Highest | Significantly lower — competing claims possible |
| Mortgage eligibility | ✔ Banks will lend against titre foncier without hesitation | Most banks will not lend against melkia alone |
| Resale ease | Straightforward — buyer has clear evidence of ownership | Harder to sell — future buyers or their lawyers will be cautious |
| Conversion possible? | N/A — already registered | Yes, but costly and time-consuming (immatriculation process) |
| Common for | Apartments in modern buildings, villas in registered developments | Old medina properties (riads), rural land, some suburban plots |
4. The Buying Process — Step by Step
Morocco's property buying process is formalised and relatively predictable once you understand its stages. Here is the full sequence from offer to completed ownership:
Property search and offer
Typically handled through a real estate agency (agence immobilière) or direct contact with a promoteur (developer) for off-plan. Once you agree on a price verbally, you move to the preliminary contract stage. Nothing is legally binding at this point.
Compromis de vente (preliminary contract)
A legally binding agreement between buyer and seller setting out the agreed price, conditions, and completion timeline. A deposit of typically 10% of the purchase price is paid at this stage — held by the notaire, not the seller or agent. Read this document carefully before signing. If you pull out after signing without legal justification, you forfeit the deposit. If the seller pulls out, they owe you double the deposit.
Due diligence and title search
Your notaire conducts searches at the Conservation Foncière to verify the title, confirm the seller's ownership, check for any encumbrances (mortgages, charges, liens, pending legal claims), verify that property taxes are paid, and confirm no outstanding fees are owed to the syndic (building management). This phase typically takes 4–8 weeks.
Fund transfer from abroad
If you are bringing money from outside Morocco, the transfer must be routed through a Moroccan bank account and declared to the Office des Changes. You must obtain a "Certificate d'Importation de Devises" or equivalent documentation. This is critical — see Section 6. Fund transfers take 3–10 business days.
Acte de vente (completion deed)
The final notarised deed signed before the notaire, transferring ownership. All parties must be present or represented by a notarised power of attorney (procuration). At this point, the remaining balance of the purchase price is paid and ownership transfers to you.
Registration at the ANCFCC
The notaire submits the deed to the ANCFCC — the Agence Nationale de la Conservation Foncière, du Cadastre et de la Cartographie — Morocco's national agency responsible for land registration. This is the official body that updates the titre foncier in your name. Until registration is complete, you own the property legally but the title document has not yet been updated. Registration typically takes 4–12 weeks. You receive the updated title certificate (certificat de propriété) when complete.
5. The Role of the Notaire
The notaire (notary public) in Morocco is a state-appointed legal officer, not simply a lawyer. They play a central, mandatory role in every property transaction — and understanding what the notaire does and does not do is essential.
The notaire's role in a Moroccan property transaction includes:
- Drafting and authenticating the compromis de vente and acte de vente
- Conducting title searches at the Conservation Foncière
- Verifying the identity of both parties
- Holding the buyer's deposit in a notarial account (séquestre)
- Calculating and collecting all taxes and registration fees due at completion
- Submitting the deed for registration at the Land Registry
For a foreign buyer, it is also worth ensuring the notaire has experience with foreign buyer transactions specifically. International fund transfers, foreign-language documents, and Office des Changes compliance requirements add complexity that a notaire focused on domestic transactions may handle less efficiently.
6. Transferring Funds — The Office des Changes Rules
Morocco operates exchange controls through the Office des Changes. For foreign buyers, these rules are not an obstacle — but they must be followed precisely. The consequences of getting this wrong are serious and long-lasting.
The Fundamental Rule
All funds brought from abroad to purchase property in Morocco must be transferred through the official banking system and documented. Specifically:
- Funds must arrive in Morocco via an international bank transfer to a Moroccan bank account
- The transfer must be documented with a bank certificate confirming the foreign-origin funds
- The notaire will require proof of the transfer before completing the acte de vente
Why This Matters: Your Right to Repatriate
This is the part most buyers do not understand until it is too late. When you eventually sell the property, Moroccan exchange control rules allow you to repatriate the equivalent of the foreign currency you originally brought in — but only if you can prove you imported those funds through the official channels.
If you purchase using funds that arrived through unofficial channels, cash, or undocumented transfers, you will have no legal right to repatriate the proceeds of your future sale. Your money will effectively be trapped in Morocco. This is not a theoretical risk — it is a trap that catches foreign buyers who try to save time or reduce paperwork by transferring informally.
7. What Buying in Morocco Really Costs
The purchase price is only the beginning. Morocco's transaction costs are moderate by international standards, but they are substantial enough that failing to budget for them will affect your finances at completion. The following table shows the true cost of a 1,500,000 MAD property (~€137,000) — a typical mid-range apartment in a secondary Moroccan city.
| Cost | Basis | Estimated Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price | Agreed with seller | 1,500,000 MAD |
| Registration tax (droits d'enregistrement) | 4% of purchase price | 60,000 MAD |
| Land registry fee (conservation foncière) | 1.5% of purchase price | 22,500 MAD |
| Notaire fees | ~1.5% + 10% VAT | 24,750 MAD |
| Agency commission (if applicable) | 2.5% of purchase price | 37,500 MAD |
| Miscellaneous (survey, translations, legal review) | Variable | 5,000–15,000 MAD |
| Total transaction costs (approximate) | ~150,000–160,000 MAD (~10%) | |
| Total outlay | ~1,650,000–1,660,000 MAD |
Transaction costs vary based on the notaire, the property type, whether an agent is involved, and the specific deal structure. For higher-value properties (above 5 million MAD), notaire fee percentages typically reduce. For off-plan purchases, a VAT component (TVA) may apply differently. Always ask for a complete cost breakdown before signing.
8. Off-Plan (VEFA) vs. Resale Property
Buying from a developer before construction is complete (VEFA — Vente en l'État Futur d'Achèvement) can offer lower prices and the appeal of a new property. But it introduces risks that resale purchases do not carry.
Potential advantages of VEFA
- Lower entry price compared to equivalent finished properties
- New construction to current building standards
- No renovation surprises on delivery
- Sometimes lower TVA rates under government affordable housing schemes
Risks of VEFA that buyers underestimate
- Developer solvency: If the promoteur runs into financial difficulties, your deposit and staged payments may be at risk. Check the developer's track record — other completed projects, reputation, financial standing
- Delivery delays: Moroccan construction timelines frequently slip. A 24-month delivery can become 36 or 48 months
- Contract specification: What is promised in the commercial brochure and what appears in the contrat VEFA are not always identical. Have a lawyer review the contract before you sign
- Permit verification: Confirm the developer holds all necessary building permits (autorisation de construire) before signing anything
9. Agricultural Land — The Trap You Must Know About
Moroccan law prohibits foreigners from purchasing land classified as agricultural (terrain agricole). This restriction exists regardless of what the land looks like visually — land on the outskirts of cities, or in peri-urban areas, can be classified as agricultural even if it has been used or developed informally.
The restriction also applies regardless of the seller's representations or the presence of structures on the land. A seller — or their agent — telling you that land is "constructible" does not make it legally so. The definitive reference is the land's classification in the commune's land registry and planning documents.
Agricultural land that cannot be sold to a foreigner directly also cannot be converted to residential use for the purpose of enabling a foreign sale — at least not quickly. If a deal depends on a future reclassification that has not yet been granted, treat it as if the reclassification may never happen.
Ten Mistakes Foreign Buyers Make in Morocco
Most property guides explain how the process works when everything goes right. This section is different. It covers the errors that cost foreign buyers time, money and peace of mind — the things that agents and sellers will not always tell you, and that most guides skip over.
Buying without verifying the title
The single most common and most expensive mistake. A seller with a melkia (traditional unregistered title) may genuinely believe they own the property outright. But melkia without a titre foncier means the ownership has not been verified by the state. Competing claims from other family members, historical co-ownership disputes, or undisclosed encumbrances can emerge after you have paid.
Foreign buyers in old medinas are particularly exposed. The romance of a riad purchase can make due diligence feel like an obstacle rather than a protection.
Rule: Do not proceed past the compromis until your notaire or independent lawyer has confirmed titre foncier status at the Conservation Foncière.Not using a notaire experienced with foreign buyers
All Moroccan notaires are qualified to handle property transactions. But a notaire who primarily handles domestic transactions between Moroccan citizens may have limited experience with the specific requirements of international fund transfers, foreign-language documentation, Office des Changes compliance, or the particular due diligence a foreign buyer needs.
Ask, before you engage, how many international buyer transactions they handle per year. In a city with a large expat community — Marrakech, Casablanca, Tangier — experienced notaires are easy to find. In smaller towns, you may need to travel to find the right professional.
Rule: Ask for references from foreign buyer clients. A few minutes of verification can save months of administrative complications.Transferring money incorrectly — and losing the right to repatriate
Some buyers transfer funds informally to save time, fees, or paperwork — using cash carried in person, unofficial money transfer services, or bank transfers that arrive without proper documentation. In the short term, nothing appears to go wrong. The purchase completes. The keys are handed over.
The problem emerges years later when you sell. If you cannot produce bank documentation proving that the purchase funds entered Morocco through official channels, you have no legal right to repatriate the sale proceeds. Your money is effectively locked inside Morocco indefinitely.
Rule: Every centime must arrive via official bank transfer with documented Office des Changes compliance. Keep the paperwork permanently.Ignoring the Office des Changes rules entirely
A variation of mistake 03 — not just transferring incorrectly, but failing to understand that the rules exist at all. Some buyers are never told. Others assume the notaire handles all of this automatically. The notaire will ask for proof of transfer at completion, but may not proactively guide a foreign buyer through the full compliance process beforehand.
The Office des Changes rules also affect how you can repatriate rental income from a Moroccan property if you decide to rent it out. The compliance framework matters from day one, not just at the point of resale.
Rule: Ask your notaire AND your bank about Office des Changes documentation before you initiate any transfer. Do not assume this will be managed on your behalf.Confusing agricultural land with urban land
A plot on the edge of Marrakech that looks like building land — perhaps with a small structure already on it — may be legally classified as terrain agricole. Foreigners cannot purchase agricultural land. The informal use of the land, visual appearances, or a seller's assurances do not change the legal classification.
Buyers who proceed on the basis of what the land looks like, rather than what the documents say, can find their purchase voided — after paying the compromis deposit.
Rule: Obtain and read the classification documents from the commune before the compromis. No exceptions for land purchases.Failing to budget for purchase taxes and fees
Morocco's transaction costs are transparent and well-defined — but they add up to roughly 6%–10% above the purchase price. A buyer who has negotiated their maximum price without reserving for taxes and fees will arrive at completion short of funds. In a worst case, this means forfeiting the 10% compromis deposit.
Agency commissions are particularly prone to causing surprises. In some markets, both buyer and seller each pay a full 2.5% commission. In others, it is split. Clarify this in writing before you sign anything.
Rule: Calculate the full cost — purchase price + 10% buffer — before making an offer. Ask for a written cost breakdown from the notaire before the compromis.Signing the compromis de vente without understanding it
The compromis is a legally binding contract. Signing it commits you to the purchase under the stated conditions — if you pull out without legal justification, you lose your 10% deposit. Yet many foreign buyers sign the compromis without a full translation, without legal review, and without understanding all the conditions precedent (conditions suspensives) it contains.
The conditions suspensives are particularly important — they specify the circumstances under which the sale can be cancelled without penalty. If your purchase is conditional on obtaining a mortgage, the compromis must include a financing condition. If it does not, and you fail to get the loan, you lose the deposit.
Rule: Never sign a compromis without a full translation and an independent legal review of the conditions. This is not an area to economise on.Trusting the seller's agent as your representative
Real estate agents in Morocco — like most countries — are typically paid by the seller, work in the seller's interest, and have a financial incentive to close the sale at the highest price. They are not neutral advisers. A buyer who relies on the seller's agent for property advice, due diligence guidance, or contract interpretation has no independent protection.
This is not a criticism of agents — it is simply how the market works. The solution is straightforward: engage your own independent lawyer for significant purchases, and treat the agent's representations as a starting point for your own verification, not a final word.
Rule: The agent works for the seller. Your notaire is neutral. Neither is your advocate. For high-value purchases, engage an independent avocat who works exclusively for you.Not checking for outstanding debts or syndic arrears
A property being sold may carry outstanding liabilities that transfer to the buyer: unpaid property taxes, unpaid syndic fees (building management charges), outstanding utility debts, or even a mortgage the seller has not disclosed. In Moroccan law, some of these liabilities follow the property rather than the person.
Your notaire's due diligence should include checking for these encumbrances — but confirm explicitly that this check has been completed before the acte de vente. Do not assume it has been done.
Rule: Ask your notaire to confirm in writing that they have verified: (a) no outstanding mortgage or lien, (b) property taxes current, (c) syndic fees current. Obtain the syndic's written clearance certificate.Overlooking inheritance law implications
Morocco applies Islamic inheritance law (Moudawwana) to property passing between Moroccan nationals upon death. For foreign buyers, the situation is more complex: your home country's inheritance law may conflict with Moroccan rules, particularly regarding what happens to a Moroccan property if you die without a Moroccan will in place.
Issues of particular concern: leaving property jointly to a spouse and children; leaving property to an unmarried partner; leaving property to heirs of a different religion. These situations can create complications under Moroccan law that would not arise in your home country. Estate planning in relation to Moroccan property requires specialist advice — ideally before you complete the purchase.
Rule: Ask your lawyer about the inheritance implications of your purchase before completing. This is especially important for high-value properties, joint purchases, and situations involving non-standard family structures.11. Finding a Real Estate Agency in Morocco
The Moroccan real estate market has a large number of agencies, from international franchise operations to small local independents. Quality varies significantly. For foreign buyers, the most important qualities are: experience with international clients, language capability, and a track record of closed transactions you can verify.
What to Look For
- Registered with the relevant professional bodies (ask for their registration documentation)
- Specific experience with foreign buyer transactions — not just familiarity with the market
- Fluency in your language — complex legal discussions cannot be conducted through partial translation
- Clear, written disclosure of how their commission works and who pays it
- References from previous foreign buyer clients you can contact directly
Vetted Real Estate Agencies by City
We are currently researching and compiling a city-by-city list of real estate agencies with demonstrated experience serving English-speaking foreign buyers — professionals we can recommend with confidence based on verified client feedback.
This list will be published here once our research is complete. In the meantime, if you need a referral now, contact MoroccoPassport and we will do our best to assist you.
Final Thoughts from the Editor
Morocco is one of the few countries in the world where a foreigner can genuinely buy beautiful, character-filled property at a price that would be unthinkable in Western Europe or North America. A riad in the Fes medina, an apartment facing the Atlantic in Essaouira, a villa in the Palmeraie — these are real possibilities at accessible prices. That opportunity is genuine.
But the Ten Mistakes in this guide are also real. I have spoken to people who have lost deposits, been trapped by undisclosed title problems, or discovered years after their purchase that they cannot repatriate their money. These are not fringe cases. They happen to intelligent, well-prepared people who simply did not know what to look for.
My advice, drawn from everything I have learned since returning to Morocco: take the process seriously, build your professional team before you fall in love with a specific property, and let the paperwork guide your decisions rather than the other way around. A property that cannot withstand proper due diligence is not the right property.
When our recommended agency list is complete, it will be published on this page. Until then — ask questions, verify independently, and do not be pressured to move faster than is safe.
Rachid Echahly · Editor, MoroccoPassport.com · Casablanca, 2026- ANCFCC — Agence Nationale de la Conservation Foncière, du Cadastre et de la Cartographie — Morocco's national land registry agency and the official authority for titre foncier registration, cadastral records and property documentation.
- Office des Changes — Official regulations governing foreign currency transfers and the repatriation of property sale proceeds.
- Direction Générale des Impôts (DGI) — Official source for property tax rates, capital gains tax (TPI) and registration fee schedules.
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This guide is reviewed periodically to reflect changes in Moroccan property law, tax rates, fees and administrative procedures. Laws and fees change — always verify current figures with a qualified notaire or independent lawyer before completing any transaction.