Sahara Desert from Agadir by Car: The 2026 Honest Guide (Erg Chigaga & Erg Chebbi)
The Moroccan Sahara is closer to Agadir than most foreign tourists realise — and further than most travel blogs admit. From Agadir Al Massira airport to Erg Chigaga (the wilder, less-visited dune sea) is 750 km and two days of driving. To Erg Chebbi at Merzouga (the more famous, more developed dunes) it's 970 km and three days minimum if you want time to actually be in the desert.
This guide is what we tell our customers who land in Agadir with a 7-day or 10-day trip and ask: can I do the Sahara? Yes, with the right car, the right itinerary, and the right honesty about how much driving is involved. Most of the trip is asphalt; only the last 4–60 km is real off-road.
The Two Saharas — Chigaga vs Chebbi
| Erg Chigaga | Erg Chebbi | |
|---|---|---|
| Distance from Agadir | 750 km | 970 km |
| Driving days each way | 2 | 2.5 |
| Dune character | Larger area, lower peaks | Smaller area, taller peaks (to 150 m) |
| Crowds | Quiet | Busy in season |
| Off-road to camp | 60 km piste | 4 km easy track |
| Camp options | ~50 | 200+ |
| Best for | Adventurous, want isolation | First-timers, families |
For most foreigners visiting Morocco for the first time, Erg Chebbi is the easier choice. For travellers who want the real thing, Erg Chigaga is the move.
The Route to Erg Chigaga (Agadir → M'Hamid)
| Day | Section | Distance | Drive time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Agadir → Marrakech (A7) | 273 km | 3h |
| 2 | Marrakech → Ouarzazate (Tizi n'Tichka) | 195 km | 4h |
| 2 | Ouarzazate → Zagora (Drâa valley) | 170 km | 3h |
| 3 | Zagora → M'Hamid el Ghizlane (last asphalt) | 95 km | 1h30 |
| 3 | M'Hamid → Erg Chigaga (hire local 4×4) | 60 km piste | 2h |
Park your rental at M'Hamid. The last 60 km is a marked-but-unpaved 4×4 piste. Local 4×4 drivers know it. Your rental does not.
The Route to Erg Chebbi (Agadir → Merzouga)
| Day | Section | Distance | Drive time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Agadir → Marrakech (A7) | 273 km | 3h |
| 2 | Marrakech → Ouarzazate | 195 km | 4h |
| 2 | Ouarzazate → Tinghir (Todra Gorge) | 170 km | 2h30 |
| 3 | Tinghir → Erfoud → Merzouga (last 4 km dune approach) | 230 km | 3h30 |
The Erg Chebbi route bonus: Todra Gorge (a 300 m-deep limestone canyon) and Skoura palm oasis (authentic kasbahs in palm groves), both worth stopping at.
The Car Category Honest Answer
Short answer: no, you don't need a 4×4 rental from Agadir. The asphalt route — A7, N9, N10, all the way to Zagora or Merzouga — handles in any car. The only off-road section is the last 4 km to Erg Chebbi (compacted, fine in any car driven slowly) or the last 60 km to Erg Chigaga (real piste, requires 4×4 you hire locally).
- Couple, light luggage: Automatic from €30/day — comfort sweet spot for the long drive.
- Couple wanting more space: SUV from €32/day — higher seating, softer ride on long desert days.
- Family of 4+ or group: 7-seater family car — the space matters.
What Happens at the Dune-Edge Town
- Park your rental at the camp's office or a paid lot (10–20 MAD/day).
- Transfer by camel (1h30 to camp) or 4×4 (30 min). Most camps offer both.
- Arrive at camp in late afternoon, in time for sunset.
- Sunset, dinner (tagine + bread + tea), gnaoua music, stargazing.
- Sleep in Berber tent or luxury camp tent.
- Sunrise — usually the highlight.
- Return to the rental car at the dune-edge town.
Most foreigners do 1 night. 2 nights is better if your itinerary allows.
When NOT to Drive to the Sahara
- You have 5 days or fewer total in Morocco. The drive alone consumes too much. Use the time for Atlas + Marrakech + Essaouira instead.
- It's July or August. Daytime dune temperatures reach 50°C. Postpone or pick March/April/October/November.
- A serious storm warning is active. The Tizi n'Tichka pass closes occasionally; the Drâa valley floods rarely. Check the forecast.
What to Bring to the Desert Camp
- Layers. Daytime hot, night cold even in summer. Long-sleeve t-shirt, light fleece.
- Closed shoes for the camel trek. Open sandals = sand everywhere.
- Sunglasses + sunscreen + hat.
- Phone power bank — camps may have intermittent solar charging.
- Cash. ATMs end at Zagora or Erfoud. Bring enough dirhams for the camp, tips (~€10 per guide).
What to Do Next
For the Atlas portion, read the Atlas mountains drive guide. For the Agadir–Marrakech first leg, see Agadir to Marrakech by car. For driving safety on mountain and rural roads, see is it safe to drive in Morocco. For Marrakech itself, see the Marrakech destination guide. Want specific advice on which camp or which dune system? WhatsApp our team.
FAQ
How far is the Sahara from Agadir?
Erg Chigaga is 750 km, around 11 hours of driving across two days. Erg Chebbi (Merzouga) is 970 km, ~14 hours across two days. Both require an overnight in Marrakech or Ouarzazate on the way.
Do I need a 4×4 for the Sahara?
For the asphalt routes — A7, N9, N10, all the way to Zagora or Erfoud — no. The last 30–60 km of dune access requires a 4×4 or camel transfer. You hire those locally.
Erg Chigaga or Erg Chebbi — which is better?
Chigaga: wilder, less touristy, 60 km off-road from M'Hamid. Chebbi: more famous, easier to reach (4 km off-road), 200+ camps. Chigaga for authentic isolation; Chebbi for first-timers.
When is the best time to visit the Moroccan Sahara?
October–April. Summer is brutally hot (45–50°C). March–April is the sweet spot: warm days, mild nights, clear skies.
What does a typical Sahara experience look like?
Drive to the dune-edge town, leave the rental parked, switch to 4×4 or camel to camp. Sunset, dinner, music, stargazing. Sunrise camel return. Total: 24–48 hours minimum.
How much does a Sahara overnight cost on top of the rental?
Basic camel + camp: €50–€80/person. Mid-range comfort camp: €100–€180/person. Luxury: €250–€600/person. Book directly with the camp — not through intermediaries who charge 30–50% markup.
Can I drive my rental into the dunes?
No. Off-road driving on dunes is excluded from all rental insurance. Park at the dune-edge town. Damage from sand/off-road driving: assume €1,500–€3,000 to rebuild an engine that ingested sand.
Is the road to the Sahara safe?
The paved routes are fine: A7, N9, N10. All maintained and signposted. The risk is the long drive (don't push 8+ hours in one day) and the last unsigned dirt sections — take a local guide for those.