The step-by-step action guide
The step-by-step blueprint to prepare, transition, and take action.
Who is writing this
My name is Ilias. I emigrated to Morocco two years ago.
I left a ten-year career in the pharmaceutical industry, sold my last business, and arrived with little in the way of savings. My family and I wanted to make hijrah. We knew the step would be difficult from where we stood. That did not stop us. It made the planning matter more.
So I built a system. A structured, phase-by-phase plan that my wife and I began working through six months before the first real step. In the same period, I started a new business helping companies build and grow their online presence. That income carried us through the move and into the life we are building now. A business I can run from anywhere. A home of our own in Morocco. A life I get to share with the people I love. Alhamdulillah.
Somewhere along the way, I started sharing the journey on Instagram under the name bledvibe. I began to see that many people were in the same place I had been. The same questions. The same gap between wanting to make this move and knowing how to do it. The first thing I built for them was the income playbook, the 8-step system for building online income before you leave. This guide is the larger piece. The full journey, in the order it has to happen.
This guide cannot remove the difficult stretches. What it can do is make sure you understand each phase before you are inside it. That clarity is the difference between the families who settle and the ones who go back.
The Foundation
Before any phase begins, three things need to be in place: a clear reason for going, a plan that works, and a family that is genuinely part of it. Everything else is built on these.
Intention and Mindset
The reason you move is the reason you stay. This chapter is where you get it clear.
Start here
Before you book a flight, open a savings account, or look at a single apartment listing, answer one question honestly: why are you doing this?
This is not a warm-up exercise. The reason you move is the reason you stay. When the initial excitement fades and the difficult periods arrive, and they will, your reason is what keeps you in place. People who move without a clear reason, or who built the decision on an idealised version of what life there looks like, tend to leave within a year.
This guide does not tell you what your reason should be. That is yours to define. What it does is make sure you arrive with honest expectations, not assumptions shaped by short visits or social media.
If this is hijrah, your reason is grounded in faith. You want a life where Islam shapes the rhythm of your day. You want your children to grow up in an environment where that is the norm, not the exception.
If this is emigration, the reason is yours to name. A better quality of life. A different future for your children. A country you believe in. That reason carries the same weight, and this guide works the same way for you.
Decide once, then commit
If you want this to work, make the decision once and close the door behind it. Not a trial. Not a long holiday with an easy exit. The shift from "let us see how it goes" to "this is the plan" changes how you prepare, how you spend money, and how you approach every step from here.
You will still spend real time in Morocco before the final move. But be clear about what that time is for. It is not a test to see if you want to go, that decision is already made. It is there to make the move go smoothly, because you arrived ready. Exploring a place you have committed to is different from shopping for a place you might still walk away from. The first mindset helps you settle. The second keeps one foot permanently at the door.
An honest picture of both countries
Morocco is not perfect. Traffic is heavy. Bureaucracy is slow. Many systems work differently than they do in Europe, and that will not change. Chapter 4 addresses this directly.
The country you are leaving is not perfect either, that is part of why you are reading this. At some point, the life it offered stopped being the one you wanted, for yourself and for your children. You are not chasing a fantasy, and you are not running from a disaster. You are making a deliberate choice about where you want to live and what you are willing to trade to get there.
People who struggle most after arriving built the move on expectations that did not survive first contact with real life. The people who stay understood that different is not the same as worse. When your reason is solid, the ordinary friction stays manageable. When it is not, small problems start to feel like reasons to leave.
What this move costs and what it gives back
You give up some convenience and some ease. In return, most people find more time, more presence, and a stronger sense of community than they had in Europe. The adjustment takes real effort, a new language, a different culture, systems that follow their own logic. This guide walks you through that process phase by phase, so it is not something that happens to you but something you move through with a clear plan.
The people around you
This move affects more than just you. Parents and extended family may push back, not because they oppose the decision, but because they fear losing closeness with you and their grandchildren. State your reasons once, clearly. Then let the months ahead make your case for you. Keep regular contact through the first visit and the extended stay. Invite them to visit. Resistance usually softens when people can see with their own eyes that the life you are building is real and stable.
Lead your family, do not just inform them
There is a practical difference between announcing a decision and leading people through one. Your household will feel that difference for years.
You came to this over time. Your partner did not get that same lead time. Your children did not choose this at all. Leading well means you own that gap. Tell your partner early, and tell her the real reasons. Make sure she understands the plan, not just that one exists. Make sure she has a real voice in how this change lands for her and for the children. A family that understands the reasoning steps into this together. One that is simply informed tends to come apart during the extended stay. Chapter 3 shows you exactly how to handle that conversation, and how to prepare each child.
Assignments
Take a blank page and write the three main reasons you are doing this, in your own words. This page becomes your reference on the hard days. Keep it somewhere you can reach quickly. There will be moments when it is the clearest thing available to you.
Now write the version of those reasons you will say out loud to your partner, and later to your children. Remove anything that sounds like a sales pitch. This is the explanation that has to work across a kitchen table, honest, direct, and without pressure.
As long as your reason only lives in your head, it stays an idea. Within 48 hours of writing your three reasons, take one concrete action: tell someone outside your immediate circle, request a document you will need later, move your first euro into a separate account. The action does not have to be large. What matters is that it moves this from intention into the real world.
"The people who stay are not the ones who never struggled. They are the ones whose reason to stay was bigger than their reason to leave."
The Strategy
Three phases. Each one takes away a reason to give up and go back.
Why strategy matters more than willpower
Almost everyone approaches this move in one of two ways, and both fail. The first group plans for too long. They research, they wait for a sign that never comes, and they never go. The second group books a one-way ticket on a wave of enthusiasm and arrives with nothing solid in place. One fails from overthinking. The other fails from underpreparing. Both end up in the same place.
There is a third way, and it is the spine of this guide: three phases, each building on the one before it. You move forward when you are genuinely ready, not because a deadline pushed you. This is not about being careful. It is a clear sequence that lets you move forward with confidence, because every step is built on solid ground. The goal is not just to reach Morocco. It is to stay, build something real, and never feel the need to go back.
The three phases at a glance
Phase 1 — First visit. Up to 90 days. You explore, test, and observe. You commit to nothing yet, no city, no neighbourhood, no lifestyle. You gather facts.
The Extended Stay. 6 to 12 months. You live as a resident, not a visitor. You build income, routines, and connections. You find your city and your footing.
The Permanent Move. You close the chapter in Europe cleanly and arrive in Morocco with a plan, savings, income, and a community already in place.
Why this sequence works
Each phase answers one question.
The first visit answers one question: is this the right country and the right city for my family?
The extended stay answers the harder one: can I build a real life here, with income I can count on and people I can rely on?
By the time you make the permanent move, there are no open questions. There is only a move to make. You have already lived there. You know people by name. Income is already coming in. The thing that makes most people give up, not knowing what they are walking into, has been taken away piece by piece. By the final move, it is not a leap. It is simply the next step.
How long does it take
There is no fixed timeline, and you should not trust anyone who offers one. The phases are a structure, not a schedule. The right pace is the one that leaves you financially stable and prepared on the day of the final move. Move too slowly and you risk never going. Move too fast and you risk the crash this system exists to prevent. The right speed is the honest one.
The permanent move does not always mean one address
For most people, the permanent move is exactly that, a single clean step. But it does not have to be. Some people divide the year between Morocco and Europe, typically because their work or business runs in both places. Chapter 7 covers this in full. For now, just know it exists. You do not have to choose today between living fully in Morocco or keeping a connection to Europe. There is a middle path, and it works for many families.
In summer, many Moroccan families living in Europe travel to Morocco for their holiday. That means the country is busy, rentals are more expensive, and availability is limited. If you want the widest choice and the best prices, September is the smarter arrival window.
Strategy checklist
- ✓I understand what each of the three phases is for, and which risk each one removes
- ✓I know which phase I am in right now
- ✓My pace feels honest, not rushed and not stalling
- ✓I know the permanent move can be a single step or a split-year model, and that both are valid
"You are not moving to Morocco to visit. You are moving to build a life. The whole difference is in the preparation."
Family and Friends
The move that fails quietly is almost always the one the family never truly agreed to.
Why this chapter exists
Chapter 1 asked why you are doing this. This chapter is about everyone else the decision affects. Most moves that fall apart do not fail on money or paperwork. They fail at home, a partner who was never fully on board, a teenager who arrived angry and stayed that way. Get this right and you remove one of the most common reasons people end up back where they started.
Your partner: aligned from the beginning
This move works best when both of you are genuinely motivated and pointed at the same outcome, even if your reasons are different. One of you may move for faith, the other for the children's future. That is not a problem, as long as you both want to reach the same place.
The real risk is silence. A partner who agrees on the surface but carries unspoken doubts is not agreement, it is a delay. Those doubts do not disappear. They resurface during a difficult week once you are living there, usually disguised as something else entirely.
Before your first visit, have the conversation properly. What does this move mean for your family? What do you each expect daily life to look like? What concerns either of you? This is not a negotiation that ends in a vote. It is making sure your partner understands the plan, feels genuinely heard, and is prepared for what is ahead, not simply told it is coming. Then keep that conversation going through every phase. A couple that talks honestly through a hard week gets through it. One that raises concerns for the first time in a crisis rarely does.
Children are not one conversation, they are three
How you prepare a child depends almost entirely on age. Treat them all the same and you will lose the one who needed something different.
Under six. Children this age read your tone, not your explanation. They do not need to understand the move. They need to see two calm, certain parents. Keep routines stable, bedtime, familiar food, comfort objects, and the adjustment happens faster than you would expect.
Primary school age. Old enough to feel the loss of friends, a school, a bedroom. That loss needs to be acknowledged, not dismissed. Tell them plainly what is changing and what is staying the same. Give them a proper goodbye, a last afternoon with a friend, a small ritual to mark the end of that chapter.
Teenagers. This is where resistance is most likely, and most understandable. A teenager is building an identity and a social network, and a move like this can feel like both are being taken away. The decision is not theirs to make, but how you carry them through it determines a great deal. Explain it honestly. Name what they are losing instead of talking around it. Then give them real control over what is genuinely theirs: their room, how they maintain friendships across the distance, which activities they pick up on the other side. A teenager who feels considered arrives as part of the plan. One who feels dragged along arrives as an opponent.
Show them the place before they arrive in it
The standard mistake is to complete the first visit alone and then present your family with a finished decision. Where possible, bring them for part of it. Where that is not possible, come back with enough, photos, video, honest descriptions of the streets and the school, that the city has stopped being just a name by the time you move there permanently.
If a family trip is not possible, build familiarity in other ways. Walk them through the neighbourhoods you are considering, the schools, what an ordinary week looks like. Let your children ask the questions that concern them and answer honestly, including the ones they will not enjoy hearing. The goal is familiarity before arrival, not agreement on every detail.
From this point on, hold one short family conversation each month. Fifteen minutes. Ask each person two things: what are you looking forward to, and what is worrying you? People who are asked this regularly raise small concerns early, before they become large ones.
Assignments
Sit down with your partner and go through what this move means for your family, what you each expect, what excites you, what concerns either of you. Make sure the reasoning is fully understood, not just the headline. Write down anything that still needs a plan, and agree to return to this conversation after the first visit.
For every child, write one paragraph: their age and what that means for how you talk with them, one thing they stand to lose, and one age-appropriate part of the decision they have real input on.
Use the format above. Keep it short. The goal tonight is not to resolve every concern, it is to start the habit, so that no one in your family has to wait until they are at a breaking point to be heard.
"The families who arrive steady are not the ones with no fears. They are the ones who heard the truth early enough to prepare for it."
The First Visit
Up to 90 days in Morocco. You are not on holiday. You are there to gather real information, see different cities, talk to people who already live there, and come back with answers instead of impressions. Before you go, you make sure your life at home can run without you.
Preparation
Pre-step · before the first visit
Once you leave, life at home continues without you. Set it up to run properly in your absence.
Why this chapter exists
Before the first visit there is a planning step most people skip, and skipping it turns an exploratory trip into a stressful one. The moment you leave for your first visit, the life you built in Europe keeps running without you. Your income, housing, belongings, and fixed costs all need to be in order before you go.
This is the groundwork beneath everything that follows. The first visit is about exploring Morocco with a clear head. This chapter is what clears that head, by making sure the part of your life still tied to Europe is handled before you board the plane.
Stop comparing, start adjusting
One of the fastest ways to make this difficult is to keep measuring Morocco against the country you left. Morocco has its own systems, its own culture, and its own pace. Bureaucracy, customer service, timekeeping, all of it runs on different logic, and none of it is a problem waiting for you to fix. It simply is what it is.
The people who adapt well arrive expecting to be the ones who adjust. They do not expect a country of forty million people to rearrange itself around their habits. Spend time before you go understanding the culture you are moving into, not just the logistics. The logistics get you through the door. The cultural adjustment is what makes you want to stay.
Three ways to fund this move, choose yours now
Every financial challenge in this chapter comes back to one question: how do I build income? There are three honest answers, and most people start with one and build from there.
Bring it. Your current income travels with you, a job that allows remote work, an existing freelance base, or a business you can run from anywhere. If you have this, it is the lowest-risk route because nothing has to be built from zero.
Build it. You turn a skill or service into income that is not tied to a location. This takes the longest to pay off, which is exactly why it needs the earliest start. If this is your route, the time to begin is now, alongside everything else in this chapter.
Find it. You arrive without income arranged yet and find work once you are there — a callcenter job, a teaching position, local client work. This is a completely valid approach, especially when you have neither savings nor a remote income in place. Your first months will run tighter, so your housing and budget during the extended stay need to reflect what you will actually earn, not what you hope to save or find.
No route is better than another. What matters is picking one to focus on. When I left I tried all three at once — that was a mistake. Spreading yourself across three directions means you never go deep enough in any of them. Pick the route that fits your situation and go all in on that one. The others can come later. That one choice shapes how much you need to save, how fast you need to move, and what you start working on today.
Map your key questions now
Before your first visit (Step 1), work through the decisions below. You are not solving all of this today. You are identifying every open question so that each one has an owner and a deadline before you leave.
→ Income. Can you keep earning while away, or are you pausing work entirely?
→ Housing. What happens with your housing while you are away?
→ Belongings. What stays, what sells, what goes into storage?
→ Fixed costs. Which subscriptions or contracts can be paused or cancelled?
→ Savings. How many months of runway do you have, and what is your target before you leave?
→ Timing. What is your rough departure window, and what needs to happen before it?
Find out well in advance whether your employer would allow a stretch of remote work. Do not ask once and accept a no. Plant the idea first — mention it casually, let it sit, bring it up again in a later conversation. Many employers say no the first time and yes after the third. The first conversation is not a request. It is a seed. Start early enough to have several conversations before your departure window arrives.
List your essential monthly costs in Morocco: rent, utilities, groceries, transport, internet. Multiply by the number of months of runway you want, then add a buffer for the unexpected. As a rough guide: 1,000 euros per month for 12 months plus a 3,000 euro buffer comes to around 15,000 euros. Your numbers will differ. The method is the same.
Cancel subscriptions you do not use. Review insurance for cover you do not need. Sell what you no longer use instead of paying to store or ship it.
Subletting is one of the most effective ways to reduce your fixed costs during the extended stay (Step 2), but not during the first visit. Three months is too short to sublet responsibly. Once you move into the extended stay and commit to six months or more, it becomes worth exploring. Check what your rental contract or housing association permits before you make any plans.
Turning a skill into location-independent income is its own project with its own steps: defining your offer, building visibility, generating leads, selling, delivering, and eventually scaling. If this is your route, start it now, alongside everything else in this chapter, and use a structured system rather than working it out as you go. Start with The Hijrah / Emigration Roadmap — Playbook, which walks the full Build process from start to finish. The earlier you begin, the further along you will be when your first visit arrives.
Healthcare: a practical mindset
For many people, income and healthcare are the two concerns that hold them back most. The income side has its own plan above. On healthcare, the mindset matters as much as the budget. If you do not fully trust any healthcare system, whether in Europe or in Morocco, the answer is to take more responsibility for your own health, not less. Prevention through daily habits is real and available: fresh food is affordable and standard here, and an active routine reduces risk a lot. At the same time, keep an emergency fund for private clinic costs when you need fast, reliable care. That is not naive trust, it is sensible risk management.
Your planning table
Use the table below to work through your own situation. Print it and fill it in by hand so you finish with a single reference sheet for every decision that needs to be made before the first visit (Step 1) begins.
| Area | Question to answer | Your notes |
|---|---|---|
| Income | Can you keep earning while away, or are you pausing work entirely? | |
| Housing | What happens with your housing while you are away? | |
| Belongings | What stays, what goes into storage, and what gets sold? | |
| Fixed costs | Which subscriptions, memberships, or contracts can be paused or cancelled? | |
| Savings | What is your runway in months, and what is your target before you leave? | |
| Timing | What is your rough departure window, and what needs to happen before it? |
Assignments
Write one paragraph naming which of the three routes, bring it, build it, or find it, describes your situation. If you are a mix of two, name the primary one. This single choice shapes every other step in this chapter.
Write down exactly how you plan to earn during and after the first visit, then connect it to the table above. Keeping your job remotely, confirm for how long. Building an online income, describe where it stands today. Relying on savings, calculate how many months they cover at your estimated Morocco costs.
Use the method above. List your essential monthly costs, multiply by your target runway, add the buffer. Write the number down, then build a monthly savings plan that reaches it before you leave.
Open the Facebook groups for muhajiroun in your target city, or browse Avito.ma, and look at real furnished rental listings. Write down what a realistic apartment costs in the neighbourhoods you are considering. That number feeds directly into your monthly budget.
"Your income is what keeps you there. Build it before you go, not after you arrive."
The First Visit
Up to 90 days to replace the picture in your head with facts on the ground.
What this phase is for
The first visit is about information, not commitment, and that distinction matters. You are not visiting Morocco. You are studying it through the eyes of someone who plans to live there. That shift changes what you even notice. Visitors see the medinas and the light. Future residents look at traffic at school pickup, the real cost of a decent apartment, the distance to a hospital that can handle an emergency, whether the internet is reliable enough to carry a working day, and what a street feels like at nine in the evening.
Up to 90 days gives you enough time to see Morocco in more than one condition, move between several cities, and have enough conversations to build a picture based on reality rather than highlights.
Most nationalities receive up to 90 days visa-free in Morocco. That is days, not calendar months, three calendar months can run to 91 or 92 days depending on which months you land in. Overstaying brings a fine, or worse, at the border on your way out. Check the exact number for your passport before you book, and plan for fewer days than the maximum so a delayed flight never becomes a legal problem.
Approach this phase with level expectations. Do not let the good days sweep you off your feet, and do not let the hard ones send you home in your mind. Explore it seriously, and give it time before you reach any conclusion.
What to do during the first visit
Visit more than one city. Give each city you are seriously considering at least two to three weeks. Tetouan, Tanger, Rabat, Casablanca, Marrakech, and the smaller northern towns each have a different character, a different community, and a different cost profile. The city that looks best on Instagram is rarely the one that works best for a family at seven on a Monday morning.
Stay in short-term furnished rentals. Sign nothing long-term during the first visit. Use Airbnb for the first two weeks, then move to a month-to-month furnished apartment found through local Facebook groups or community contacts. Flexibility is the point, it lets you test a neighbourhood by living in it rather than driving past it.
Experience the city, do not just observe it. Take local tours, try the activities, rent a car so you can move between areas on your own schedule. Direct experience teaches you in a week what watching from a distance cannot teach you in a month.
Meet people in person. You are not the first to make this move, and the people already living it are the fastest, most reliable source of honest information. Each week, set one specific target: a co-working space, a community meet-up, a gathering at a mosque. Introduce yourself to two or three people and ask the questions you would hesitate to type into a public group: what is actually difficult here, what do they wish someone had told them before they came.
If your reason is faith, the muhajiroun community across Morocco's northern cities is active and generally welcoming. Attend Friday prayers at several different mosques rather than committing to the first one, and put your real questions to the people who have been there the longest — not the newest arrivals still in their first months. If your reason is not faith, or if you are not Moroccan by background, the picture is a little different. Many Europeans without Moroccan roots settle in areas like Essaouira, the hills around Tanger, or the quieter coastal towns. There is a smaller but real community of people who came for the lifestyle, the climate, or a slower pace — and they are not hard to find once you are in the right place.
Visit schools in person. If you have children, visit the schools themselves, not their websites. Ask about the curriculum, the language of instruction, the real monthly cost, and the waiting list. For many families, school availability quietly becomes the deciding factor for the city.
Morocco offers four main paths. Public schools: free, taught in Arabic and French. Private schools: Arabic or French, roughly 200 to 800 dirhams per month. Islamic or Quran schools: religious education, with quality that varies significantly. International schools: English or French curricula, typically 400 to 800 euros per month and often more. Many families combine a private Moroccan school with separate classes for the things that matter most to them. That could be Quran, Arabic language, a craft, music, a sport, or anything else your child wants to develop. Morocco gives you more room to build a tailored education than most European systems do — use it.
Keep a journal. Write down what you notice each week, and focus on the good. The moments that felt right. The days things clicked. The small reasons you came. When you are back in Europe weighing the decision to stay longer, memory alone will be filtered by whatever mood you are in that day. Your journal is the honest record of what actually felt good when you were there. Think of it this way: when a couple goes through a rough patch, the advice is always to go back to why you chose each other in the first place. The same principle applies here. When doubt creeps in, go back to what made you want this.
What to decide before you go back
By the end of your first visit, you should be able to answer three questions with evidence, not hope: which city or region will you focus on for the extended stay, what kind of housing fits your budget and your daily life, and what does your income need to look like to live there comfortably, not just to get by.
If you cannot answer these, do not move into the extended stay. Stay a little longer instead. Moving forward on a guess is how people end up rebuilding their lives in the wrong city.
| Category | Question | Your answer |
|---|---|---|
| Schools | What are the realistic options for our children here, and what do they cost? | |
| Income | What does my income need to look like to live here comfortably? | |
| Community | Is there an established community here that I can rely on? | |
| Housing | What does a realistic furnished rental cost in this neighbourhood? | |
| Daily life | What does an ordinary Tuesday actually look like here? | |
Before you leave, open Claude, Gemini, or any AI tool and ask it to generate 50 questions you should be able to answer by the end of your first visit. Give it context: your family situation, your target city, your income route, your reason for moving. Upload this guide if the tool allows it. The questions it gives you will be sharper than anything you would come up with alone, and they will push you to look at things you would have missed.
Assignments
Write down which cities you will visit, how long you will spend in each, and how you will find accommodation at each stop. Leave room for flexibility, but go in with a plan. A visit without structure becomes a holiday, and a holiday teaches you nothing you can build on.
Add your own questions to the blank rows before you leave, then record real answers as you find them. By the end of the first visit, this table is the foundation of your decision to stay, not a feeling you are hoping will turn out to be right.
Calculate the full cost of your visit, up to 90 days, including flights, accommodation, food, and transport. That is your budget for this visit. If you have not started saving for it, start today.
First visit — go / no-go check
- ✓I have visited at least three different neighbourhoods or cities in person
- ✓I have had honest conversations with at least three people who already live there
- ✓I can answer the three questions from "What to decide before you go back" with evidence
- ✓If I am moving with a partner or children, they had a real role in this visit, not just a report afterward
- ✓My overall sense of clarity and readiness here is above 7 out of 10
Check all of these honestly and you are ready for the extended stay. Fall short on any of them and the answer is not to push through, it is to stay during the first visit a little longer, or to reconsider the city, before you build a life on a foundation you were not certain of.
The north, Tetouan and Tanger in particular, is the most common landing area for people moving from the Netherlands, Belgium, France, the UK, and Germany. The community is established, Dutch, French, and English are widely spoken, and costs are lower than the large cities further south. Unless you have a specific, strong reason to be in Casablanca or Rabat, start your exploration in the north.
"Ninety days with open eyes is worth more than three years of research from behind a screen."
The Extended Stay
The Extended Stay is where you stop being a visitor. You live as a resident for six to twelve months, build real income, and find your city.
The Extended Stay
6 to 12 months to stop being a visitor and start being a resident.
The difference between visiting and living
The first visit showed you what Morocco looks like. The extended stay shows you what your life in Morocco looks like, and those are not the same picture. Here, you have a neighbourhood, a routine, and the full weight of ordinary life: the boring weekdays and the difficult weeks as much as the good ones. You will have strong weeks and hard ones, and you build your life through both.
That is why the phase is built to run at least six months, and ideally closer to a year. That is long enough for the novelty to settle into reality, and long enough to put down roots before the permanent move.
Housing during the extended stay
Now you can sign a proper rental contract, typically six months or one year. Choose a neighbourhood you found during the first visit and take the time to find the right apartment inside it. Visit in person before signing, more than once and at different times of day, because the feel of a street at noon can be very different from what it is at night.
Get every agreement in writing: rent, deposit, duration, what is included, and the exit terms. And make sure the home is genuinely comfortable. You are allowed to enjoy where you live.
Furnished rentals remain the smarter choice during the extended stay unless you are already certain this is your permanent city. Shipping furniture from Europe is expensive and slow. Rent furnished until you know, beyond doubt, exactly where you are settling.
Your income route in practice
In Chapter 4 (Three ways to fund this move), you named your route. Now it has to produce real income. Here is what each route looks like once you are actually living in Morocco.
Bring it. Remote work with your current employer is the most stable version of this, you keep your salary and benefits while living in Morocco. Far more employers will agree to a partial remote arrangement than you would expect, so ask directly. Freelance work is the second form: if your work runs from a laptop, designer, developer, copywriter, accountant, translator, you can keep serving your existing clients from here without missing a beat. Some people split the year between both countries during this stretch, which spreads the risk while the new model proves itself.
Build it. This is where the groundwork from Chapter 4 pays off, a skill turned into online income, or a business with enough systems in place that it runs without you needing to be present all the time. A tradesperson, fitness trainer, language tutor, coach, or qualified professional can also build a real local client base within the muhajiroun and wider expat community, often running an in-person practice here and an online one for clients abroad at the same time. If you have not started building this yet, Now is your deadline, not your starting point.
Find it. Callcenters in Tanger, Casablanca, and Rabat actively hire French and Dutch speakers. The pay is modest by European standards but liveable in Morocco, making it a fast, real first income while a longer plan takes shape. Teaching at an international or private school is a stable, structured option if you have the background. Customer service, virtual assistant work, online tutoring, and social media management are all achievable without years of prior experience. And if none of that applies, treat a direct local job search as exactly that, a real search, with applications and follow-up, not a last resort.
Whatever route is yours, do not arrive without an income plan already in motion. Not knowing how next month's rent gets paid is one of the most common reasons people return to Europe well before they intended to.
When it gets difficult: your reset protocol
The extended stay will have difficult weeks, and it is in those weeks that most people who eventually leave actually make that decision. Keep the table below close, and the moment one of these situations arrives, act on it immediately, before you have talked yourself into anything. Action first, then process the feeling. Waiting to feel better before you move is how a bad day becomes a flight home.
| Situation | Action to take now |
|---|---|
| Acute homesickness | Call someone from home today. Read back your three reasons from Chapter 1. Give yourself 48 hours before making any decision. |
| Feeling overwhelmed | Cut today's list down to one task. Go to a familiar community spot. Step away from social media for 24 hours. |
| A difficult income month | Check your bridge budget runway so you see the actual picture. Make no panic decisions. Send five outreach messages today instead of waiting. |
| Tension with your partner | Pause the conversation, let it settle for a day, then raise it again using the approach from Chapter 3, rather than letting it harden in silence. |
| A child is struggling | Name it directly with them. Bring it to your next family check-in rather than carrying it alone. |
Before moving on
Extended stay — go / no-go check
- ✓My income has covered my Morocco costs for at least three months in a row, not just once
- ✓That income comes from more than one source or client, so losing one does not drop me to zero
- ✓I have at least three months of reserves set aside for the move itself
- ✓I know which city and neighbourhood I want to settle in permanently
- ✓I have a community here I trust, and my partner and children have one too
- ✓I have lived through difficult weeks as well as good ones, and still chosen to stay
Check these honestly and you are ready for the permanent move. If you fall short, the right step is to extend the extended stay, not to force the permanent move before the income and stability are genuinely there. The whole point of this system is that you never gamble the final move on a maybe.
Assignments
Using what you learned during the first visit, identify two or three neighbourhoods in your target city. Research furnished rental prices in each and set a housing budget. Start looking before you arrive so you land with real leads on day one.
Write down what your income must look like by the end of the extended stay for you to be financially ready for the permanent move, and from how many separate sources. Put a number on it. If 1,200 euros per month covers your costs, your milestone is hitting that figure month after month, from more than one source, before you close the chapter in Europe.
Once you are settled, bring back the monthly check-in from Chapter 3 and hold it on a consistent schedule. Ask your partner and each child what is going well and what is difficult. Do not wait for a problem to start asking.
Open a Moroccan bank account as early as possible once you are settled. A local account makes daily life much easier, especially for rent, utilities, and local services. The main banks are Attijariwafa Bank, CIH Bank, and Banque Populaire, and some will open an account on a foreign passport with proof of address. Ask other emigrants in your city, muhajiroun or otherwise, which bank is currently the easiest for foreigners. The answer shifts over time.
"You do not know a place until you have lived through a hard week there and chosen to stay."
The Permanent Move
The Permanent Move is no longer a decision, it is action. You close the chapter in Europe cleanly, arrive from a position of strength, and build the life you planned for in the years that follow.
The Permanent Move
By the time you reach this phase, the decision is already behind you. Now you act.
This phase is about action, not decisions
By the time you make the permanent move, the decision is long behind you. This phase is about one thing: closing the chapter in Europe cleanly, arriving in Morocco with everything in order, and starting from strength rather than from uncertainty. Everything in this chapter serves that one purpose, to make sure that when you walk through the door for the last time, there is nothing unresolved waiting behind you.
Choosing your city
If you worked through the first visit and the extended stay honestly, you already know your city. If you are still deciding, the table below gives a clear breakdown of the main options and who each tends to suit.
| City | Character | Best suited for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tetouan | Quiet, traditional, northern, affordable | Families, those seeking a slower pace, people with northern Moroccan roots | Fewer international job options, limited callcenter work |
| Tanger | Coastal, growing, European influence, active | Those needing callcenter income, city energy close to Europe | Rising costs, increasing traffic |
| Rabat | Capital, calmer than Casablanca, international | Families, professionals, those with government or NGO connections | Higher rent, more formal culture |
| Casablanca | Largest city, business hub, fast pace | Entrepreneurs, professionals, those needing the largest job market | Expensive, polluted, demanding traffic |
| Marrakech | Tourist city, warmer climate, creative scene | Digital nomads, entrepreneurs in tourism or hospitality | High tourist pricing, heat, different culture from the north |
| Agadir | Coastal, sunny, relaxed, modern layout | Families wanting beach proximity, milder winters, a calmer pace | Smaller community, more spread out |
| Fez | Historic, deeply traditional, strong religious heritage | People drawn to classical learning, culture, and lower costs | Hot summers, fewer international job options |
Finding permanent housing
Now you can consider a longer lease or buying. If you buy, work with a local lawyer, not just an agent. The Moroccan property market has specific rules for foreigners that vary by nationality and legal status, and an agent is paid to close the sale, not to protect you. Sign nothing you do not fully understand. Professional legal advice at this stage is money well spent.
If you are renting long-term, get the contract in writing, have it reviewed by someone with knowledge of Moroccan rental law, and make sure the early exit terms are clear. Verbal agreements are common here, common is not the same as safe.
Registering in Morocco
If you plan to stay more than three months without a break, you will need a carte de séjour, a residency permit, registered at your local Moqata'a. Requirements change by city, by nationality, and by year. Go to your local Moqata'a in person, or check their current published requirements, and write down exactly what they ask for before you assume you already know.
Residency, banking, and registration requirements in Morocco differ by nationality, and this guide cannot give you the specific answer for yours. Always verify current requirements for your country of origin directly with the Moroccan authorities. What applies to one nationality is often different for another.
Assignments
Write down the city and neighbourhood where you intend to settle permanently, and the clear reasons behind the choice. If you cannot put clear reasons on paper, you are not ready yet. Go back to the extended stay.
Write down your current monthly income and your current savings. Do they meet the bridge budget you calculated in Chapter 4? If not, name your plan and your timeline to close that gap before the permanent move, not after.
"Arrive in strength. Not because it will always be easy, but because a strong start gives you room to handle whatever comes."
The Commuter Model: a second valid way to arrive
The permanent move does not have to mean cutting ties with Europe entirely. Some people, especially those on the Bring or Build routes, settle into a steady yearly rhythm instead: most of the year in Morocco, a fixed period back in Europe, built around remote work or a business that operates in both places. This is not a weaker version of arriving. For some families, it is not a step at all, it is the permanent arrangement.
What it is not is lighter on paperwork. Splitting the year between two countries raises questions a clean single move never does: which country counts you as a tax resident, whether your health coverage assumes a continuous absence you are not actually taking, whether benefit or registration rules in your home country require more or less time abroad than your rhythm allows. None of this is a reason to avoid the model. It is a reason to treat it as its own decision, with its own research, not as something lighter that requires less attention.
Before you commit to a yearly rhythm, get a direct answer from your home country's tax authority on what triggers tax residency in your specific case, and from your health insurer on what continuous-absence rules apply. Both depend on your exact pattern of months, not on a general rule you half-remember reading somewhere. Get them confirmed in writing for your situation.
Commuter Model checklist
- ✓I know which country counts me as a tax resident under my specific pattern of months, confirmed, not assumed
- ✓I know exactly what happens to my healthcare coverage under this rhythm
- ✓My income genuinely supports living costs in two countries, not one
- ✓My family has agreed to this specific rhythm, not just to "going to Morocco" in general
Closing the chapter at home
Every country sets its own rules for permanent departure, and this guide does not know yours. What it does is give you the full list of categories to close out, and hold you to finding a real answer for each one, not an assumption.
Go to your government's official emigration information and find your own answer for every one of these: your municipal registration and address, your healthcare coverage and any treaty between Morocco and your country, your tax position for the year you leave and the years after, any benefits or allowances you currently receive, your state pension, your home bank account, your passport and any documents that need to be officially certified, and your housing, whether you are ending a lease or deciding what to do with a property you own.
Reading this list does not complete it. You complete it when every category above has a written answer from an official source.
Start this three to six months before you leave, not three weeks. Most of these steps have waiting times, or require documents from more than one institution, and nearly all of them become harder to resolve once you are no longer in the country.
Assignments
Visit your government's official emigration pages. Write down every step they require before leaving. For each one, note the institution, the timeframe, and whether it requires you to be present in person. This becomes your departure checklist.
Fix a rough date for the permanent move, then work backwards through your checklist and assign a date to every step. Give yourself more time than seems necessary. Administrative processes are always slower than expected.
Most European countries run a digital identity system for government services, DigiD in the Netherlands, and equivalents elsewhere. Make sure yours is active and usable from abroad before you cancel your registration. Once you have done that, getting access again becomes much harder.
"Leaving properly is what lets you focus on arriving properly. Every loose end you leave behind will follow you."
The Years Ahead
You have arrived. This chapter is written for you.
Acknowledge what you did to get here
Before you read another word, stop. What carried you to this point is not nothing. You wrote your three reasons when this was still just a thought, and you came back to them on the days when stopping would have been easier. You had an honest conversation with your partner and made sure you were both genuinely committed, not just one of you pulling the other. You sat with each of your children at their level and carried them into this rather than simply relocating them. You spent ninety days during the first visit with realistic expectations and came home with evidence, not impressions. You lived through the difficult weeks of the extended stay, the lean income month, the homesickness, the strain at home, and you reached for the protocol instead of the exit. You built income that survived more than one hard month and more than one difficult client. You closed every open item in Europe instead of leaving them to catch up with you.
And now you are not visiting Morocco. You live here.
Most people who talk about this move never move past the talking. You did the work. Which means the only question left is what you build with it.
Finish the practical foundation quickly
Most of the groundwork, housing, income, bank account, was sorted during the first visit and the extended stay. What remains are smaller items: a local SIM card, home internet if not already in place, and completing your carte de séjour registration at the local Moqata'a if it is not already done. Clear these in the first two weeks before they become the kind of small open items that drag on for months.
For your SIM card, the main operators are Maroc Telecom, Orange Maroc, and inwi. Maroc Telecom has the widest coverage in rural and smaller areas; Orange and inwi are more competitive in cities. Buy a SIM with a data bundle on day one and use your phone as a hotspot until home internet is installed.
Community, language, and routine
In this period, community matters more than comfort. Find your people and show up for them consistently, a particular mosque, a café, a co-working space, the parents at the school gate. Keep having honest conversations with people who have been here longer than you. Build a routine that fits the life you came here for: when you work, when you spend time with your family, when you train, when you study. A solid routine does not limit you, it frees up energy for what matters by removing the small daily decisions.
Keep building your Darija, the Moroccan Arabic of daily life, rather than relying on Modern Standard Arabic alone or falling back on your own language. Even a handful of phrases changes how people respond to you, and how quickly this place starts to feel like home.
Pick one place that becomes yours and keep showing up there. A mosque, a café, a co-working space, a sports club — it does not matter what it is. What matters is that people start recognising your face. A regular presence in one place builds trust and a sense of belonging far faster than drifting between several. If faith is your reason, the mosque is the natural choice. If not, pick the place that fits your life.
Healthcare and schooling: finalise, do not start again
Most of these decisions were made during the first visit and the extended stay. Treat this as completing them, not reopening them. Confirm your healthcare arrangement, whether that is public cover, a private clinic, or coverage through an agreement between your home country and Morocco. If you have children, confirm their school place is finalised and closed.
Foundation checklist
- ✓Local SIM card with data plan activated
- ✓Home internet installed
- ✓Local bank account open or confirmed active
- ✓Carte de séjour process completed at local Moqata'a
- ✓Healthcare coverage confirmed
- ✓Children enrolled in school, if applicable
- ✓Community contact made, showing up consistently in the same place
- ✓Partner and children each have at least one person here who is their own
- ✓Income running and covering monthly costs
What you build from here
Go back to the three reasons you wrote in Chapter 1 and read them now, through the eyes of someone living this, not planning it. Then aim, with clear focus, at three things over the next twelve months: your income, your community, and what you are building that will outlast the moment you arrived.
Income. Enough was the target during the extended stay. The goal now is margin, room to absorb a bad month without panic, and in time the ability to choose your work rather than simply need it. If you are on the Build route, this is where a single offer grows into a system, and a system grows into something that runs consistently even in difficult periods.
Community. The connections you built during the extended stay now need to carry real weight. Show up for someone else's difficult week, not just for your own. That shift is what turns a place you live into a place you belong.
What you are building. Whatever your reason was, faith, family, freedom, or all three, this is where it becomes visible. A child growing up with Islam as the rhythm of daily life, not just a topic of discussion. A family with time and presence. A business that exists because you built it from nothing, in a country that was not yet yours on the day you started.
Assignments
Read back the three reasons from Chapter 1, then write a simple plan for your first full year settled in Morocco: what you want your income to look like, what you want your community and family life to look like, and one habit or routine you want fully in place by the end of the year. Keep it to a single page. Come back to it every few months and adjust it as needed.
There is no chapter after this one. The guide hands the pen to you, and what you write next is no longer a plan. It is a life. Congratulations, you made the move that most people only talk about. Welcome home.
"You did not come this far to stop here. The years ahead are not something that happens to you. They are something you build, one day at a time."
The Cost Atlas
Real numbers from 2026 research. Housing, schooling, groceries, healthcare, and full family budgets, broken down by region so the picture stays accurate when individual neighbourhoods shift.
A guide that avoids numbers is easy to write and impossible to plan against. This atlas exists so your bridge budget is built on what Morocco actually costs in 2026, not on forum estimates.
The figures in this atlas are drawn from cost-of-living trackers, real-estate platforms, and expat publications updated between January and June 2026, cross-referenced where possible. Sources are listed at the end of the atlas. Numbers are given in Moroccan dirham (MAD) with euro equivalents at an approximate rate of 11 MAD to 1 euro.
Read these as ranges, not fixed amounts. Within every region there is a difference between modest and comfortable, between cheaper neighbourhoods and prime ones, between spending like a local and spending like a foreigner. The low end of each range is what a careful family pays. The high end is what a comfortable family pays. Use the low end to test whether a budget is realistic. Use the high end to plan without surprises.
Morocco divides into three planning regions for this purpose. The North (chamāl), where most muhajiroun from the Netherlands, Belgium, and France arrive. The Centre (wasṭ), the country's economic and administrative core. And the South (janūb), warmer, more tourist-driven, with its own cost profile.
The most popular arrival region for muhajiroun from the Netherlands, Belgium, and France. Tetouan sits at the lower end of the range, traditional and at a slower pace. Tanger sits at the higher end, more dynamic, with an active callcenter economy and rising rents driven by World Cup 2030 investment. Tanger is roughly 13% more expensive than Tetouan across the board.
| Category | Monthly · MAD | Monthly · EUR | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furnished 2-bedroom apartment | 4,500 – 8,500 | €410 – €770 | Tetouan at the lower end, central Tanger at the higher end |
| Furnished 3-bedroom apartment | 6,500 – 14,000 | €590 – €1,270 | Premium areas in Malabata, Corniche, Marchan run higher |
| Utilities (electricity, water, gas) | 250 – 400 | €23 – €36 | Standard 85m² apartment |
| Home internet (fibre) | 250 – 400 | €23 – €36 | Maroc Telecom, Orange Maroc, inwi |
| Groceries (family of 4) | 4,000 – 7,000 | €360 – €635 | Buying primarily at souks and local markets is the lower end |
| Transport (fuel, petit taxi) | 1,000 – 1,800 | €90 – €165 | One car plus occasional taxi for a family of 4 |
| Public school | 0 | €0 | Free. Arabic and French instruction |
| Private Moroccan school | 500 – 2,500 | €45 – €225 | Per child. Arabic and/or French |
| International school | 3,800 – 7,500 | €345 – €680 | Per child. French or English curriculum |
| GP consultation (per visit) | 150 – 250 | €14 – €23 | Walk-in usually possible at private clinics |
| Specialist consultation | 200 – 400 | €18 – €36 | Cardiology, paediatrics, gynaecology, etc. |
| Private hospital (per night) | 800 – 2,500 | €73 – €225 | Individual room, nursing, meals included |
| Private health insurance (expat) | 500 – 1,650 | €45 – €150 | Basic to comprehensive plans |
| Family of 4 · modest monthly total | 8,000 – 12,000 | €725 – €1,090 | Including rent, conservative spending |
| Family of 4 · comfortable monthly total | 14,000 – 20,000 | €1,270 – €1,820 | Including rent, private schooling, occasional dining out |
Morocco's economic and administrative centre. Casablanca is the most expensive city in the country, dense and fast-paced. Rabat sits roughly 5% cheaper, calmer, and more formal. This region carries the highest rents, the largest white-collar job market, and the widest school options. If your route is remote employment or a stable freelance base, the Centre is the most accessible landing. If your budget is tight, it is the hardest.
| Category | Monthly · MAD | Monthly · EUR | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furnished 2-bedroom apartment | 6,500 – 12,000 | €590 – €1,090 | Rabat slightly lower, Casablanca Anfa or Maarif at the top |
| Furnished 3-bedroom apartment | 9,000 – 18,000 | €820 – €1,635 | Prime neighbourhoods exceed 20,000 MAD |
| Utilities (electricity, water, gas) | 300 – 450 | €27 – €41 | Slightly higher than the North, mostly cooling-driven |
| Home internet (fibre) | 250 – 450 | €23 – €41 | Wider provider choice and faster speeds available |
| Groceries (family of 4) | 5,000 – 8,500 | €455 – €770 | Marjane, Carrefour at the high end; markets at the low end |
| Transport (fuel, tram, petit taxi) | 1,200 – 2,000 | €110 – €180 | Tram pass in Casa/Rabat ~230 MAD per month per person |
| Public school | 0 | €0 | Free. Arabic and French instruction |
| Private Moroccan school | 1,500 – 4,000 | €135 – €365 | Per child. More structured private network in the centre |
| International school | 5,000 – 15,000 | €455 – €1,365 | Per child. Lycée Lyautey, BISC, CAS, EFI, GWA range |
| GP consultation (per visit) | 200 – 350 | €18 – €32 | Best private hospital infrastructure in the country |
| Specialist consultation | 300 – 500 | €27 – €45 | French-trained specialists widely available |
| Private hospital (per night) | 1,200 – 3,500 | €110 – €320 | Cheikh Khalifa, Clinique du Parc, Clinique Badr range |
| Private health insurance (expat) | 550 – 1,650 | €50 – €150 | Full hospitalisation plans run higher |
| Family of 4 · modest monthly total | 12,000 – 17,000 | €1,090 – €1,545 | Including rent, public school, careful spending |
| Family of 4 · comfortable monthly total | 20,000 – 30,000 | €1,820 – €2,725 | Including rent, private or international school, dining out |
A tourist-driven region with a different culture from the north. Marrakech runs roughly 30% more expensive than Agadir overall, mostly because tourism inflates housing, dining, and groceries in central areas. Agadir is the calmer, more affordable coastal alternative, with a milder climate and a growing expat community.
| Category | Monthly · MAD | Monthly · EUR | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furnished 2-bedroom apartment | 5,500 – 11,000 | €500 – €1,000 | Agadir at the lower end, Marrakech Hivernage at the top |
| Furnished 3-bedroom apartment | 7,500 – 16,000 | €680 – €1,455 | Palmeraie villas and central Marrakech can exceed this |
| Utilities (electricity, water, gas) | 250 – 450 | €23 – €41 | Summer cooling in Marrakech pushes the high end |
| Home internet (fibre) | 250 – 400 | €23 – €36 | Coverage strong in both cities |
| Groceries (family of 4) | 4,500 – 7,500 | €410 – €680 | Local souks significantly cheaper than Western-style supermarkets |
| Transport (fuel, petit taxi) | 1,000 – 1,800 | €90 – €165 | Public transport thinner than in the Centre |
| Public school | 0 | €0 | Free. Arabic and French instruction |
| Private Moroccan school | 800 – 3,000 | €73 – €273 | Per child. Quality varies more than in the Centre |
| International school | 4,200 – 9,500 | €380 – €865 | Per child. Lycée Victor Hugo Marrakech, French schools in Agadir |
| GP consultation (per visit) | 200 – 350 | €18 – €32 | Marrakech has strong private infrastructure |
| Specialist consultation | 250 – 450 | €23 – €41 | Wider range in Marrakech than in Agadir |
| Private hospital (per night) | 1,000 – 3,000 | €90 – €273 | Quality varies between clinics; ask the community |
| Private health insurance (expat) | 500 – 1,650 | €45 – €150 | Same range as elsewhere in Morocco |
| Family of 4 · modest monthly total | 9,500 – 14,500 | €865 – €1,320 | Including rent, public school, mostly local spending |
| Family of 4 · comfortable monthly total | 17,000 – 25,000 | €1,545 – €2,275 | Including rent, private schooling, occasional tourist-area dining |
Figures triangulated in 2026 from Numbeo, Expatistan, LivingCost, Wise Cost of Living, CityCost, LivingCostIndex, Sands of Wealth Tangier and Morocco rent reports, Doris School and Tutopiya international-school fee guides, Bladi reporting on AEFE and OSUI tuition, Pacific Prime and Holafly expat health insurance comparisons, and Expat Assure healthcare pricing. Rental ranges cross-checked against Mubawab and Avito listings. Numbers reflect early-to-mid 2026 data and are intended as planning ranges, not guarantees.