Casablanca, Morocco · Money-saving passes

Casablanca Money-Saving Passes & Cards

Casablanca has no city pass. Here is what the individual tickets really cost and when a multi-entry card is worth it.

verified Prices and rules verified 2026-04-22

The short answer

No. Casablanca has no unified city pass — no museum consortium, no combo card, no tourist bundle. Every attraction is ticketed independently, total cultural spend rarely tops €30 per adult, and the only 'passes' that exist are the Casa Tramway weekly ticket and Amuzeum multi-entry cards for repeat visitors. Buy individual tickets on arrival.

Every pass, compared honestly

Neutral comparison — no affiliate links, no sponsored placements. Prices checked on official issuer sites.

Casa Tramway Weekly Pass

transport pass

Transport

Prices

  • Adult weekly (card + pass) 75 MAD
  • Single tram journey (comparison) 8 MAD
Durations: 7 days

Includes

  • ✓Unlimited rides on Casa Tramway Line T1 and T2
  • ✓Coverage from Sidi Moumen to Lissasfa and the Ain Diab Corniche branch
  • ✓Access to Casa-Port and Casa-Voyageurs tram stops
  • ✓Top-up on the same card afterwards

Not included

  • ·City buses (separate Casa Bus card required)
  • ·Petit taxis and Grands taxis
  • ·ONCF trains (Casa-Port ↔ airport, Rabat)
  • ·inDrive and Careem rides

shopping_bag Buy at any tram-platform vending machine or the ticket office at Casa-Voyageurs station. The first purchase includes a ~15 MAD rechargeable smart card; bring a photo ID, as the weekly pass is issued as a nominative card. Machines take cash and card; staff ticket offices are the safer bet if you need English help.

Only worth it if you realistically ride 8+ times in the week, e.g. commuting daily between a Corniche hotel and the medina or Casa-Port. For a 2–3 day visit, pay 8 MAD per ride and skip the smart-card faff.

Official site open_in_new Verified 2026-04-22

Casa Tramway Monthly Pass

transport pass

Transport

Prices

  • Adult monthly 230 MAD
  • Student monthly 150 MAD
Durations: 1 month

Includes

  • ✓Unlimited rides on Casa Tramway Line T1 and T2 for 30 days
  • ✓Same network as the weekly pass

Not included

  • ·City buses
  • ·Taxis and ride-hail apps
  • ·ONCF trains

shopping_bag Issued at staffed ticket offices (Casa-Voyageurs, major interchange stops). Photo ID and a passport-style photo may be required for the nominative card. Residents use these; tourists almost never hit the break-even.

Designed for Casablanca commuters, not visitors. A tourist would need ~29 tram rides in a month to beat single tickets — not a realistic itinerary.

Official site open_in_new Verified 2026-04-22

Amuzeum 10-Entry Pass

attraction bundle

Prices

  • 10 child entries 1,400 MAD
Durations: 6 months, 10 entries

Includes

  • ✓10 child entries to Amuzeum Dar Bouazza (any weekday or weekend slot)
  • ✓Free entry for the first accompanying adult per child
  • ✓Access to interactive zones, soft-play, workshops

Not included

  • ·Additional adult entries beyond the first
  • ·Scheduled workshops and birthday parties (separate fee)
  • ·Café consumption
  • ·Transport to Dar Bouazza (20 km from central Casablanca)

shopping_bag Buy at the Amuzeum reception desk in Dar Bouazza, or by calling +212 6 66 41 10 23. Not sold through OTAs. Only makes sense if you live in or near Casablanca; for a one-off visit pay the single 120 MAD weekday rate.

At 140 MAD per entry the pack effectively gives no discount versus the weekday rate (120 MAD) and a small discount versus the weekend rate (180 MAD). Worth it only for local families planning weekend repeats.

Official site open_in_new Verified 2026-04-22

Amuzeum 1-Week Family Pass

attraction bundle

Prices

  • 7 child entries over 7 days 720 MAD
Durations: 7 consecutive days

Includes

  • ✓Up to 7 child entries (one per day) across a rolling week
  • ✓First accompanying adult free on each entry

Not included

  • ·Extra adult tickets
  • ·Workshops and birthday bookings
  • ·Transport to the venue

shopping_bag Purchased on-site at Amuzeum Dar Bouazza. Best for families on school holidays burning energy near the coast — not tourists on a Casablanca city break.

About 103 MAD per visit — cheaper than weekend walk-up (180 MAD), roughly level with weekday walk-up (120 MAD). Strong value if you actually plan five or more visits in a week.

Official site open_in_new Verified 2026-04-22

Does the math work?

Real scenarios with real numbers. Green means a pass saves money, red means single tickets win.

Solo adult, 1 day, classic culture route

skip

Using: No pass (pay as you go)

Single tickets

216 MAD (~€20)

With pass

n/a — no city pass exists

Diff

n/a

Hassan II Mosque (140 MAD) + Slaoui Museum (60 MAD) + Villa des Arts (free) + 2 tram rides (16 MAD) tops out at about €20. OTA 'combo tours' covering the same list sell for €45–€90. Pay at each booth.

Couple, 48h stopover, mosque + one museum + tram

skip

Using: Casa Tramway Weekly Pass

Single tickets

464 MAD (2 × 140 mosque + 2 × 60 Slaoui + 6 × 8 tram)

With pass

550 MAD (tickets + 2 weekly tram passes at 75 MAD each)

Diff

Loses 86 MAD

Two people riding the tram six times total cost 48 MAD against 150 MAD in weekly passes. Buy single 8 MAD tickets and pocket the difference.

Solo traveler, 7 days, tram-based commute from Ain Diab to medina

buy

Using: Casa Tramway Weekly Pass

Single tickets

112 MAD (14 × 8 MAD single rides)

With pass

75 MAD (60 MAD pass + 15 MAD card)

Diff

Save 37 MAD

Two tram rides per day for seven days puts you clearly past break-even. The smart card stays on your account for future trips too.

Family of 4 (2 adults + 2 kids 5 and 10), 1-day sightseeing

skip

Using: No pass (pay as you go)

Single tickets

310 MAD (2 adult mosque tickets 280 + 1 kid mosque 30 + under-6 free + Slaoui 60 for 2 adults, kids free under 12)

With pass

n/a

Diff

n/a

Kids are free or reduced at every major site. There is no family pass to beat the built-in discounts — just show up.

Family with kids under 12, planning 5 Amuzeum visits in one week

borderline

Using: Amuzeum 1-Week Family Pass

Single tickets

720 MAD (3 × 120 weekday + 2 × 180 weekend, per child)

With pass

720 MAD (1-week pass, per child)

Diff

Save 0 MAD on 5 visits, save 180+ MAD from the 6th

Break-even hits at the 6th visit in a week. Worth it only during school holidays or rainy stretches when you know you'll return. One-off tourists should pay the single rate.

Culture-maximalist solo, 3 days, every paid museum + mosque

skip

Using: No pass (pay as you go)

Single tickets

~295 MAD (mosque 140 + Slaoui 60 + Jewish Museum 20–50 + weekly tram 75)

With pass

n/a

Diff

n/a

At under €28 to do everything Casablanca offers culturally, there is nothing for a hypothetical pass to save. Visit the Jewish Museum on Wednesday to drop another 20–50 MAD.

What should YOU buy?

Pick your travel style.

solo

No pass recommended

No pass beats paying at each counter. Budget ~216 MAD for the mosque, Slaoui, a couple of tram rides and a free Villa des Arts afternoon. Save the pass-research time for the Corniche.

couple

No pass recommended

Two adults doing a 2-day cultural loop spend under €50 total on tickets. Any OTA 'Casablanca combo' marketed to couples is a commission product, not a pass. Pay individually, split a grand taxi to the Corniche.

family

No pass recommended

Kids under 6 are free at the mosque and under 12 are free at Slaoui, so families already capture the biggest discounts without any pass. Only consider Amuzeum multi-entry if you are staying long enough for 5+ visits.

48h stopover

No pass recommended

Too short for the tram weekly pass to break even, and the main attraction (Hassan II Mosque tour) has no pass alternative. Pay cash at the booth, use inDrive for longer hops.

week long

Buy: Casa Tramway Weekly Pass

If you are based along the tram route (Ain Diab, downtown, Sidi Moumen) and will ride 8+ times in a week, 75 MAD all-in beats 8 MAD singles. Buy it at Casa-Voyageurs ticket office on day one.

budget

No pass recommended

Stack the free options — Villa des Arts, Corniche walk, Quartier Habous, Sacré-Cœur exterior, Jewish Museum on Wednesdays. Add the 140 MAD mosque tour and you have a full trip under €15.

student

No pass recommended

Bring a valid student ID: Hassan II Mosque drops to 70 MAD for foreign students and Slaoui drops to 10 MAD. That built-in discount beats any pass math.

senior

No pass recommended

No senior-specific pass or discount is advertised by Casablanca's major attractions. Individual tickets are the play; ask at each booth just in case as some waive fees informally.

luxury

No pass recommended

Skip every OTA bundle and book the Foundation's VIP private Hassan II Mosque visit directly (2,200 MAD for up to 10 people) plus a licensed private guide through your hotel. That is the only real 'premium' product in the city.

warning Scams & traps to avoid

Known scams tied to Casablanca passes and tickets.

Fake 'skip-the-line' Hassan II Mosque tickets on OTAs

How it works

Viator, GetYourGuide, Musement and Marriott Activities list 'Hassan II Mosque skip-the-line' tickets at €14–€25+. The mosque Foundation does not sell tickets online at all. OTAs simply pre-buy a slot in the mosque's own group tour and charge you 50–100% on top. You join the same queue, same tour, same guide as anyone who walked up that morning.

How to spot it

Any listing priced above 140 MAD (~€13), any language promising 'skip the line' or 'official fast-track,' any site that is not fmh2.ma. The Foundation explicitly does not sell online.

Safe alternative

Walk up to the ticket booth at the mosque entrance on Boulevard de la Corniche 15–30 minutes before one of the published tour slots and pay 140 MAD in cash or by card.

Fake 'police officer' demanding photo fines at Hassan II Mosque

How it works

A man in plain clothes — no uniform, no visible badge — approaches foreign tourists near the mosque esplanade. He claims that taking photos is forbidden, that CCTV has already flagged you, and says 'polis, polis' in French while grabbing your arm. He expects you to pay cash to make the supposed problem go away.

How to spot it

Real Moroccan police at the mosque wear uniforms and carry visible credentials. Photography is permitted everywhere on the esplanade and outside the mosque. Any 'officer' in streetwear demanding an on-the-spot fine is a scammer.

Safe alternative

Say no firmly, walk towards the mosque staff at the official entrance, and ask for a uniformed officer or mosque security. Never hand over money or passport.

Unlicensed 'guide' commission funnel at Quartier Habous and the Old Medina

How it works

A stranger offers you a free or cheap walking tour around the Old Medina, the Habous, or near the mosque. The route is actually a loop through cooperative shops — carpets, argan oil, leather — where the 'guide' earns commission on anything you buy. At the end he demands a large 'tip' (often 200–500 MAD).

How to spot it

No official ONMT guide badge, no printed tour leaflet, tour materializes on the street rather than being pre-booked. Price is vague or 'whatever you want to pay.'

Safe alternative

Book a licensed guide through your hotel, ToursByLocals, or GetYourGuide operators with verified reviews. Licensed Moroccan guides carry a government-issued card and have fixed rates.

AI-generated fake Casablanca tour agencies on Instagram and Facebook

How it works

Polished-looking accounts with AI-rendered Casablanca skylines and suspiciously uniform five-star reviews advertise 'Casablanca passes,' 'mosque VIP tickets,' or private day tours. They take a deposit by bank transfer or crypto and disappear before the booking date.

How to spot it

Account created in the last 12 months, reviews all posted within the same week, photographer credits missing, payment via IBAN transfer or Western Union, no physical address in Morocco.

Safe alternative

Book only through platforms with buyer protection — Viator, GetYourGuide, ToursByLocals — and pay by credit card so you have chargeback rights. Never wire a deposit to a new social-media vendor.

Don't buy a pass if…

  • block You are in Casablanca for 1–3 days: single tram tickets at 8 MAD and walk-up attraction tickets always beat a weekly pass or OTA combo.
  • block You are visiting only the Hassan II Mosque: there is no pass that covers it, and any 'skip-the-line' product is a marked-up reseller ticket.
  • block You are travelling with children under 12: kids are already free or half-price at every major site, so family 'bundles' offer nothing you don't already get at the door.
  • block You will stay exclusively in a Corniche or downtown hotel and walk or use ride-hail apps: the tram pass loses to inDrive or Careem for short door-to-door hops.
  • block You only plan one Amuzeum visit: both multi-entry Amuzeum packs are priced for repeat local users and break even only from the 5th–6th visit onward.

Common questions

Is there a Casablanca city pass or tourist card? expand_more
No. Casablanca has no unified city pass, no museum consortium pass and no transport+culture combo card. Every attraction — including the Hassan II Mosque, Slaoui Foundation, Jewish Museum and Amuzeum — sells its own ticket at its own counter. The only multi-use cards in the city are the Casa Tramway weekly or monthly transport passes and the Amuzeum multi-entry family packs, neither of which is aimed at short-stay tourists.
How much does the Hassan II Mosque tour cost and can I buy a skip-the-line ticket? expand_more
The Fondation de la Mosquée Hassan II charges 140 MAD (~€13) for a foreign adult, 70 MAD for Moroccan nationals, foreign residents and foreign students, 30 MAD for Moroccan children aged 6+ and under 6s are free. There is no official online ticketing and no genuine skip-the-line option. Third-party 'skip-the-line' tickets on Viator or GetYourGuide simply pre-buy a slot in the mosque's standard group tour and charge a 50–100% markup. Buy at the ticket booth on Boulevard de la Corniche.
Do I need a transport pass for Casablanca's tram? expand_more
Only if you will make 8+ tram rides in a week. The Casa Tramway weekly pass costs 60 MAD plus about 15 MAD for the smart card on first purchase, while a single journey is a flat 8 MAD. For 2–3 day visits, single tickets at vending machines are cheaper and simpler. Buy passes at Casa-Voyageurs station or the larger tram stops.
Are there free museums or free days in Casablanca? expand_more
Yes. Villa des Arts de Casablanca on Boulevard Brahim Roudaini is free year-round for permanent and temporary exhibitions. The Museum of Moroccan Judaism offers free admission on Wednesdays. The Hassan II Mosque exterior, Quartier Habous, the Ain Diab Corniche promenade, Parc de la Ligue Arabe and the Sacré-Cœur Cathedral are all free to walk through or photograph.
Is the Hassan II Mosque included in any combo ticket or city card? expand_more
No official pass or combo includes the Hassan II Mosque. The Foundation only sells the 140 MAD guided tour ticket directly at its own booth. Any 'Casablanca combo' or 'mosque pass' offered by an online travel agency is a resold single ticket with commission added — not a discount product.
How much does it cost to visit every major attraction in Casablanca in one day? expand_more
About 216 MAD (~€20) for a foreign adult: 140 MAD for the Hassan II Mosque guided tour, 60 MAD for the Slaoui Foundation Museum, 0 MAD for Villa des Arts and around 16 MAD for tram rides between sites. Add the Jewish Museum (~20–50 MAD, or free on Wednesday) and you are still under €28 for a maxed-out cultural day.
Can students or children get discounts at Casablanca attractions? expand_more
Yes, directly at the ticket booth. Foreign students with ID pay 70 MAD at the Hassan II Mosque and 10 MAD at Slaoui. Children under 6 are free at the mosque, children under 12 are free at Slaoui, and children under 18 months are free at Amuzeum. Morocco does not have an EU-style under-26 free policy; these discounts are site-specific and apply only with valid ID.
Is there a hop-on hop-off bus in Casablanca? expand_more
No permanent hop-on hop-off bus circuit operates in Casablanca as of 2026. Online travel platforms sometimes list 'hop-on hop-off' category pages that actually point to private guided day tours in the 400–800 MAD range. If you want a circuit-style overview, book a licensed half-day private tour through a reputable platform rather than a street-sold ticket.
Are OTA 'Casablanca passes' and 'skip-the-line' tickets worth buying? expand_more
In almost every case no. Since the Hassan II Mosque is the only high-value site and it has no official online ticket, everything sold as a 'Casablanca pass' is a resold single ticket plus commission. You pay more for the same group tour the walk-up crowd joins, with no genuine queue-skip. Buy at each attraction's booth on the day.
What's the safest way to pay for museum and mosque tickets in Casablanca? expand_more
On-site at the official ticket booth, in cash or by card. The Hassan II Mosque, Slaoui Foundation and Amuzeum all have staffed counters. For transport, buy tram tickets or passes at station vending machines or the Casa-Voyageurs ticket office. Avoid paying street 'guides' or social-media-only vendors asking for bank transfers.