🇲🇦Morocco Visa for Israeli Citizens2026 Requirements, Fees & Documents
Israeli passport holders can apply online for a Morocco e-Visa before travel. Unlike an eTA, this is an actual visa — just issued digitally — so no embassy visit is needed for eligible short-term visits. Eligibility and covered purposes vary, so check the conditions below.
Category A e-visa for ordinary passport holders. E-visa launched 10 July 2022. Valid 30 days, extendable up to 6 months with multiple entries. Processing 24-72 hours. Apply via www.acces-maroc.ma
diplomatie.ma ↗How Israeli citizens apply for a Morocco visa
- → Apply for the e-Visa online before travel and carry the approval. Apply here ↗
Morocco visa cost for Israeli citizens
Morocco eVisa (Acces Maroc / acces-maroc.ma)
Fee not published by Morocco
Ordinary tourist visa (single entry, up to 90 days)
MAD 220 (~$22)
Ordinary visa, multiple entries (up to 90 days per stay)
MAD 330 (~$33)
Fees checked 2 Jul 2026 · sourced from official government fee schedules
Morocco visa types
Short-Stay Visa (Visa de Court Séjour)
Tourism, leisure, and short visits to Morocco for nationals not exempt from visa requirements. Required for stays up to 90 days for visa-obligated nationalities.
Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate. Most Western nationals receive visa-free access instead. Processing times are approximately 5-10 business days per unofficial sources. Official fees and processing times not available from official sources due to WAF access restrictions on consulat.ma.
Apply here ↗Business Short-Stay Visa
For foreign nationals visiting Morocco for business meetings, commercial activities, or professional visits of short duration not requiring work authorization.
Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate. Many nationalities receive visa-free entry for business purposes (e.g., German, UK, US, Canadian nationals for up to 90 days). This visa is for visa-obligated nationals conducting business activities. Official fees not published on accessible official sources.
Apply here ↗Transit Visa (Visa de Transit)
For foreign nationals travelling to a third State who need to cross Moroccan territory en route. Not for entry/stay in Morocco itself.
Official definition (consulat.ma): the transit visa authorises a foreigner travelling to a third State to cross the territory of Morocco; it may be issued for one or two transits, with the duration of each transit not exceeding 72 hours. Required only for nationals of countries that require a transit visa for Morocco; most nationals who are visa-exempt for Morocco do not need one. Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate. In exceptional cases the security services may issue short-stay and transit visas at border posts.
Apply here ↗Conference/Seminar Short-Stay Visa (Visa Conferences)
For foreign nationals attending a conference, seminar, workshop, or professional meeting in Morocco.
One of the ordinary visa purposes officially listed by the Moroccan consular services (Tourism, Work, Business, Investor, Conferences, Student, Intern, Researcher, Family reunification, Journalist). Short-term visa (1-90 days per stay). Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate; typically requires an official invitation letter from the organising body. Not available online. Official fees not published on accessible official sources (consulat.ma is WAF-protected).
Apply here ↗Journalist Visa (Visa Journaliste)
For foreign media professionals travelling to Morocco to carry out press, reporting, or media activities.
One of the ordinary visa purposes officially listed by the Moroccan consular services. Issued for professional journalism/media activity; typically requires accreditation or authorisation from the relevant Moroccan authorities (Ministry of Communication/press accreditation) in addition to the standard visa file. Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate; not available online. Official fees not published on accessible official sources.
Apply here ↗Other Morocco visa categories (10)Hide other visa categories
These don't apply to a typical short visit, but cover other reasons people travel to Morocco. Eligibility varies by visa type — some are limited to specific nationalities, so check each one's conditions.
Work/Employment Long-Stay Visa
For foreign nationals intending to take up paid employment in Morocco. Applicants require a work contract from a Moroccan employer and approval from the National Agency for the Promotion of Employment and Skills (ANAPEC).
Long-stay visa (visa de long séjour). After arrival, holders must obtain a Certificat d'Immatriculation (residence permit) from the Bureau des Etrangers of the local police prefecture or Commissariat Central within 90 days. Requires an employer-signed work contract and ANAPEC endorsement for most nationalities.
Apply here ↗Student Long-Stay Visa
For foreign nationals admitted to a Moroccan educational institution for studies of more than 90 days duration. Requires proof of enrollment in a recognized Moroccan institution.
Long-stay visa (visa de long séjour - étudiant). Requires university or school acceptance letter, proof of financial means for the duration of study, and accommodation proof. After arrival, holders must register for a residence permit (Certificat d'Immatriculation).
Apply here ↗Investor Long-Stay Visa
For foreign nationals intending to invest in Morocco, requiring a recommendation from official investment authorities including Regional Centers of Investment (C.R.I.) or the Management of External Investments.
Requires recommendation from the Management of External Investments, a professional federation, a proper authority for supervision, Regional Centers of Investment (C.R.I.), or a Moroccan partner or foreign investor branch in Morocco. No formal minimum investment threshold is published on official sources. This is a long-stay visa within the ordinary visa framework, not a golden visa or CBI program.
Apply here ↗Family Reunification Long-Stay Visa
For foreign nationals joining a spouse, parent, or other close family member who is legally residing in Morocco. Enables long-term family reunification stays.
Long-stay visa (visa de long séjour - regroupement familial). Requires proof of family relationship, proof that the sponsor is legally resident in Morocco with a valid residence permit (Certificat d'Immatriculation), and proof of adequate housing and financial means.
Apply here ↗eVisa (Visa Electronique - Category A: Nationality-Based)
Electronic visa for tourism and short stays, available to nationals of specific countries who are otherwise subject to standard visa requirements. Applied for online prior to travel via the official acces-maroc.ma portal.
Launched 10 July 2022 via the official acces-maroc.ma portal. Valid for 30 days, extendable up to 6 months, with multiple entries. Processing time 24-72 Moroccan working hours. Category A nationalities (nationality-based): Thailand, Israel, India (effective 10 Jan 2023), Jordan (effective 10 Jan 2023), Guatemala (effective 10 Jan 2023), and others including Benin, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam per secondary sources. Eligible nationals apply online without visiting an embassy.
Apply here ↗eVisa (Visa Electronique - Category B: Credential-Based)
Electronic visa for tourism and short stays available to any nationality that holds a valid residence permit or multiple-entry visa issued by an eligible country (EU states, US, UK, Canada, Japan, Norway, Switzerland, New Zealand, Australia, Israel, UAE).
Credential-based eVisa eligibility: (1) valid residence permit of an EU member state, US, UK, Canada, Japan, Norway, Switzerland, New Zealand, Australia, Israel, or UAE - valid minimum 180 days from application date; OR (2) valid non-electronic multiple-entry visa of the US, Australia, Canada, UK, Ireland, New Zealand, or Schengen area - valid minimum 90 days from application date. Apply via www.acces-maroc.ma. Visa valid 30 days, extendable up to 6 months with multiple entries. Processing 24-72 Moroccan working hours.
Apply here ↗Electronic Travel Authorization (AEVM - Autorisation Electronique de Voyage au Maroc)
Required prior travel authorization for visa-free nationals of certain countries (Congo Brazzaville, Guinea Conakry, Ecuador, Ghana). Not a visa but a mandatory pre-registration for otherwise visa-free nationals.
Required permanently for Congo (Brazzaville), Guinea (Conakry), Ecuador, and Ghana nationals despite their visa-free status. Applied for online via www.acces-maroc.ma before departure. This is not a visa - it is an electronic pre-authorization for entry. Several other African nations had temporary AEVM requirements for AFCON 2025 (25 September 2025 to 25 January 2026) which have since been lifted.
Apply here ↗Intern/Trainee Visa (Visa Stagiaire)
For foreign nationals undertaking an internship or professional training placement with a host organisation in Morocco.
One of the ordinary visa purposes officially listed by the Moroccan consular services. Requires an original copy of the internship/training agreement signed by the host organisation. Issued as a short-stay visa (up to 90 days) or, for placements exceeding three months, as a long-stay visa after which the holder must obtain a registration card (Certificat d'Immatriculation) from the DGSN. Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate. Official fees not published on accessible official sources.
Apply here ↗Researcher Visa (Visa Chercheur)
For foreign nationals conducting research hosted by an approved Moroccan research organisation.
One of the ordinary visa purposes officially listed by the Moroccan consular services. Requires a hosting agreement signed with an approved Moroccan research organisation. Issued as a short-stay visa (up to 90 days) or, for stays exceeding three months, as a long-stay visa after which the holder must obtain a registration card (Certificat d'Immatriculation) from the DGSN. Applied for at a Moroccan embassy or consulate. Official fees not published on accessible official sources.
Apply here ↗Visa Issued at the Border (Border Visa)
Short-stay or transit visa granted, in exceptional cases, at Moroccan border posts (airports/land crossings) by the security services to travellers who could not obtain a visa in advance - typically those whose country of residence has no Moroccan diplomatic mission.
One of the four official entry-visa types listed by the Moroccan consular services (short-term visa, long-term visa, transit visa, and visa issued at the border). Per the official wording, 'in some exceptional cases the Security Services may issue short-stay and transit visas at the Border Posts.' This is not a guaranteed visa on arrival - it is issued only in exceptional circumstances and does not confer an irrevocable right of entry. A traveller whose country of residence has no Moroccan diplomatic mission may request a border/airport visa in advance from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Directorate of Consular and Social Affairs in Rabat (visa@maec.gov.ma). Official fees not published on accessible official sources (consulat.ma is WAF-protected).
Apply here ↗Morocco visa for Israeli citizens — FAQ
Do Israeli citizens need a visa for Morocco?
Yes, but it can be completed entirely online — no embassy visit is required for eligible short-term visits.
What documents do Israeli citizens need for Morocco?
A passport valid well beyond your planned stay (commonly three to six months, depending on the destination), proof of onward travel and funds, and any documents required for the specific Morocco visa category — check the official portal for the exact passport-validity rule.
Related visa requirements
For Israeli citizens
United Arab Emirates visa
Thailand visa
United States visa
United Kingdom visa
Germany visa
France visa
Italy visa
Spain visa
Morocco visa for India
Morocco visa for China
Morocco visa for Philippines
Morocco visa for Indonesia
Morocco visa for Vietnam
Morocco visa for Malaysia
Morocco visa for Ghana