REVIEW · SEVILLE
2 Days Tangier (Morocco) Trip from Seville
Book on Viator →Operated by Naturanda Turismo Ambiental · Bookable on Viator
Two continents in two days is a quick hit. I like that it handles hotel pickup and all transport, and I like the guide-led walking tour of the Tangier medina that helps you get your bearings. The trade-off is that it’s a lot of moving parts, so you’ll want patience for ferry lines and a fairly packed time in town.
This is a convenience-first trip. One night in Morocco turns it from a rushed day-push into something you can actually feel, especially when you’re trying to squeeze Tangier into a short Seville stopover.
A big practical point: you’ll need your passport in hand for the ferry process. And while the tour is meant for small groups (max 15), it uses shared transport, so expect other people in the mix.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice on this 2-day Tangier trip
- Luggage Plan in Seville: Start Light With a Fast Storage Stop
- From Seville to Tangier by Ferry: Passport Stamps and Shared Logistics
- Tangier Arrival and Your Overnight: Meals Included, Hotel Quality Varies
- Walking the Tangier Medina: A Guide-Led Route Beats Guessing
- Lunch, Shop Stops, and the Real Pace of Two Days
- Price and Value: Is $377.35 Worth It?
- Who This Trip Fits Best (and Who Should Choose Something Slower)
- Tips to Get the Most From Two Days in Morocco
- Should You Book This 2-Day Tangier Trip?
- FAQ
- Is the tour in English?
- What’s included in the price?
- Do I need my passport for this trip?
- How long is the trip?
- What’s the group size like?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key things you’ll notice on this 2-day Tangier trip

- Hotel pickup in Seville plus round-trip shared ferry means less planning and fewer decisions on your end
- A Tangier medina walking tour with a local guide helps you navigate streets that can feel like a maze fast
- One-night accommodation with breakfast and lunch included gives you at least one real Morocco meal rhythm
- Passport details required for ferry tickets plus passport stamping during arrival keeps you from scrambling last-minute
- Shared timing and meeting points can feel tight if you dislike early starts or waiting around
- A strong guide can make or break the experience; Rachid is a name that comes up a lot for helping when problems appear
Luggage Plan in Seville: Start Light With a Fast Storage Stop

Seville is your launch point, and the first smart move here is the stop for luggage support. Early on, you’ll pause at Naturanda Tourism Information on Calle Trajano 6 for luggage storage. It’s short—about 10 minutes—but it matters. If you’re staying in central Seville, you probably don’t want to drag bags through morning transfers and ferry queues.
What I like about this setup is that it lets you travel hands-free for the biggest chunk of the day. It also reduces the chance you forget something in the hotel room, because you’re not constantly hauling your stuff between cars and ports.
The only consideration: if you’re the type who likes to keep everything with you, luggage storage is still helpful, but you’ll want a small day bag with your passport, charger, and any meds.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Seville
From Seville to Tangier by Ferry: Passport Stamps and Shared Logistics

The big event is the cross-strait ferry. The good news is that the trip includes round-trip shared transfer and the ferry ticketing, so you’re not piecing it together on your own.
The main thing to plan for is the passport workflow. You’ll need to provide your full name and passport number when booking the ferry tickets, and you must bring your passport on the day of the tour. During the ferry arrival process, you should be ready for passport stamping as you dock.
If you don’t like bureaucratic steps, here’s your best tactic: keep your passport within easy reach during boarding and arrival. Not buried deep in a tote. Not in a checked compartment. In hand.
The “shared” part is real. Even with a small max group target, you’re still on a shared ferry and buses can feel crowded at the most impatient times. One recurring theme from feedback is that lines and timing can create stress—especially if you’re not expecting the ferry to run like a school drop-off.
Tangier Arrival and Your Overnight: Meals Included, Hotel Quality Varies

Once you reach Tangier, you’re not just sent into the city with a vague instruction. This trip includes overnight accommodation plus breakfast and also includes lunch during the experience. That meal coverage is part of the value. Tangier can be easy to over-spend on food when you’re hungry and walking all day.
Where people get mixed feelings is the hotel side. The trip is supposed to reserve your room as part of the package, but there are cases where the reserved accommodation didn’t go as planned—like arriving to find no available room. In those moments, a strong local guide can save your day.
And that brings up an important name: Rachid. In multiple accounts, Rachid is praised for stepping in, calling the provider, and helping get a workable hotel solution when issues happened. If your trip includes him as your Tangier guide, you’ll likely feel more confident when plans change.
My practical takeaway: treat the hotel as included value, not a guarantee of luxury. You’re booking a Morocco add-on with meals and logistics, not a five-star resort vacation.
Walking the Tangier Medina: A Guide-Led Route Beats Guessing

The heart of this package is the Tangier medina walking experience with a local professional guide. This is where you get the actual Tangier, not just the view from a bus window.
A guided medina walk is worth it because the medina isn’t a single attraction. It’s a working maze of shops, streets, and small surprises. Without guidance, it’s easy to waste hours going in circles—or accidentally skipping the most interesting streets because they look similar.
What the guide-led format gives you is pacing and orientation. You get to learn how the area is organized, where to focus your time, and what to see without needing a map battery.
That said, there’s another reality check from past experiences: medina time can get tight, and you might be funneled through specific areas. Some feedback points to fast movement through highlights and time allocated to shops. If you’re price-sensitive or not in the mood for sales pressure, keep your own priorities in mind and don’t confuse included time with relaxed time.
Lunch, Shop Stops, and the Real Pace of Two Days

This trip isn’t built for long, slow wandering. It’s built for coverage. That’s the deal.
You get one lunch included, which helps a lot. It means you aren’t constantly searching for something open or trying to manage lunch during ferry timing. Still, you’ll want to be flexible with where lunch falls in the day, because meal time often has to match bus and ferry schedules.
About the medina experience itself: in at least one detailed account, the schedule moved quickly through areas like the kasbah and included visits to shops that the guide arranged. The important part for you is to expect that some time inside the medina may come with a sales tone. Not every stop will match your interests.
If you want the best experience on this style of tour, I’d plan mentally like this:
- Decide in advance what you want most: photos, architecture, textiles, or just soaking in street life
- Give yourself permission to say no to purchases without feeling awkward
- If you see a “tour bus rhythm” starting (move, stop, shop pitch, move), hold onto your energy for the street moments you enjoy most
Price and Value: Is $377.35 Worth It?

At $377.35 per person, you’re paying for convenience and time savings more than for comfort-level luxury.
Here’s what you’re getting, in practical terms:
- Round-trip ferry and shared transfers
- One night accommodation
- Breakfast + lunch included
- Guide and driver
- All taxes
If you tried to DIY this from Seville, the ferry and transport alone would eat a big chunk of the budget quickly—then you’d add a hotel night and meals. The tour price is basically packaging those costs into one call-and-go experience.
So when does it feel like a good deal?
- When you want a guided medina overview without planning transport and ticket steps
- When you can tolerate shared buses and early timing
- When you’re happy with “see a lot in a short window” rather than deep exploration
When it may feel overpriced?
- When you want lots of free time in the medina without structure
- When you strongly prefer a higher-end hotel experience every time
- When you’re sensitive to schedule changes or meeting-point stress
Balancing that: the tour is positioned as a short overnight bridge to Tangier. You’re buying a fast, guided taste.
Who This Trip Fits Best (and Who Should Choose Something Slower)

This is a strong fit for you if:
- You’re basing in Seville and want to add Tangier without the hassle of independent planning
- You like a walking tour format and you want help getting bearings
- You’re comfortable with a tight schedule and shared-group travel
It’s not the best fit if:
- You hate early starts and prefer fully flexible travel days
- You expect a private-group experience with no waiting and no shared timing
- You need a very consistent, premium hotel standard regardless of circumstances
One theme from the experience feedback: when pickup timing or transfers go sideways, it can feel extra frustrating because the trip already has a time-boxed structure. If you’re easily stressed by meeting points, you might want a longer stay or a different style of tour.
Tips to Get the Most From Two Days in Morocco

A tour like this rewards preparation. Here are the things that tend to make the day smoother:
- Bring your passport and keep it accessible for the ferry process and stamping
- Pack light if possible, and use that Seville luggage stop wisely so you’re not weighed down
- Have patience for queues and shared transport. Think of it like a moving checklist, not a lazy stroll
- If you’re not interested in shopping, treat shop time as a pass-through segment and focus your attention on streets and views around it
- If Rachid is your Tangier guide, listen when he suggests what to prioritize. His help is specifically praised when the plan changes
Also, if you’re hoping for a lot of time on your own, plan to spend some of your energy asking the guide for practical next steps once you’re settled. One account described a guide recommending someone to show them around on the free part of the trip—exactly the kind of local touch that can turn “tight schedule” into “still worth it.”
Should You Book This 2-Day Tangier Trip?
I think you should book it if you want an efficient, guided Tangier introduction and you value included transport and an overnight over DIY planning headaches. The medina walking component is the right idea: Tangier makes more sense when you’re not navigating it alone.
Skip it (or reconsider) if your top priority is lots of free time, a very consistent hotel standard, or a relaxed pace. This trip can feel rushed, and shared logistics mean you have less control over timing.
If you do book, go in with the mindset of a short adventure: expect motion, keep your passport easy, and put most of your focus into the medina walk and the street-level Morocco moments you can actually slow down for.
FAQ
Is the tour in English?
Yes. The experience is offered in English.
What’s included in the price?
The trip includes breakfast, lunch, one overnight stay, all taxes, a driver and local professional guide, round-trip shared transfer, and round-trip shared ferry.
Do I need my passport for this trip?
Yes. You must bring your passport on the day of the tour, and you’ll need the full name and passport number of each traveler for the ferry tickets.
How long is the trip?
It runs for approximately 2 days, with one night included.
What’s the group size like?
The tour has a maximum of 15 travelers.
Can I cancel for free?
Free cancellation is available. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























