April 16, 2026
Top Attractions Near El Badi Palace, Marrakech
Bahia Palace, the Saadian Tombs, and the old Mellah quarter all sit within a short walk of El Badi Palace. Here's how to combine them into a single Kasbah exploration.
Read More →Marrakech · Kasbah district · since 1578
Marrakech's magnificent ruin — a 16th-century Saadian masterpiece stripped of its treasures, now alive with storks and shadows.
In 1578, fresh from his victory at the Battle of the Three Kings, the Saadian sultan Ahmad al-Mansur set out to build a palace that would announce Morocco's new power to the world. He called it El Badi — "the Incomparable" — and for roughly twenty-five years, caravans crossed the Sahara carrying gold from Timbuktu while Italian merchants shipped Carrara marble to Marrakech in exchange for Moroccan sugar. When it was finished, El Badi held some 360 rooms arranged around a vast courtyard measuring 135 by 110 metres, its sunken orange gardens framing a reflecting pool nearly 90 metres long.
The palace's glory did not last. Barely a century after it was completed, Sultan Moulay Ismail ordered it stripped bare to build his new capital at Meknes — marble, cedar beams, gold leaf, and tilework were carted north piece by piece, leaving behind the roofless pisé walls that stand today. What remains is less a monument to Saadian wealth than to its undoing: a vast, sun-bleached ruin where white storks now nest on the ramparts, and where, inside a small pavilion, the exquisite 12th-century Koutoubia minbar survives as a reminder of just how much finer craftsmanship once filled these walls.
A reflecting pool nearly 90 metres long anchors the main courtyard, flanked by sunken gardens planted with orange trees — the heart of al-Mansur's original design.
Inside a dedicated pavilion, marvel at the 12th-century minbar carved in Córdoba for the Koutoubia Mosque — one of the finest surviving pieces of Almoravid-era woodwork.
White storks have nested on El Badi's earthen walls for generations, turning the ruined battlements into one of Marrakech's most photographed wildlife sights.
Climb to the rooftop terrace for a panorama stretching to the Atlas Mountains, then descend into the palace's cool underground passages and storerooms.
Opening Hours
9:00 AM – 5:00 PM daily (last entry 4:30 PM)
Entry Price
100 MAD for foreign visitors
Suggested Duration
1–1.5 hours
Location
Ksibat Nhass, Kasbah district, Marrakech
El Badi Palace sits in the heart of the Kasbah district, within easy walking distance of two more Marrakech icons.
The lavishly restored burial chambers of the Saadian dynasty, hidden for centuries and rediscovered in 1917.
A 19th-century vizier's palace celebrated for its painted cedar ceilings and tranquil courtyards — a lavish counterpoint to El Badi's bare ruins.
April 16, 2026
Bahia Palace, the Saadian Tombs, and the old Mellah quarter all sit within a short walk of El Badi Palace. Here's how to combine them into a single Kasbah exploration.
Read More →
April 15, 2026
A realistic one-day Marrakech itinerary built around El Badi Palace: morning in the Kasbah, lunch near Place des Ferblantiers, and an afternoon in the souks and Jemaa el-Fna.
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April 14, 2026
There's no official audio guide at El Badi Palace, but independent local guides are usually available near the entrance. Here's what a guide adds versus visiting with the info panels alone.
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