Surf Tips & Safety Feb 9, 2025 9 min read

Best Restaurants in Taghazout (2026) : Where to Eat

Steeve By Steeve

Taghazout has gone from sleepy fishing village to surf-foodie pin on the map in just a few years. Since 2018, breakfast cafés, rooftops and beach kitchens have multiplied, and you can now walk to 30-plus places without leaving town. Add seafood at Aourir’s banana village, cliff-edge crêperies in Imouran, and Agadir wine dinners 25 minutes south, and your post-surf options get serious. Most spots run 30 to 150 MAD (about 3 to 14 euros). Cash still rules small cafés, cards work at hotels and rooftops, and alcohol shows up at a handful of rooftops plus most Agadir restaurants.

Breakfast and brunch spots

Mornings in Taghazout split between two camps: a quick coffee-and-msemen before dawn patrol, or a long post-surf brunch that turns into lunch. The strip from the main square down to Hash Point covers both ends, and the M14 road towards Tamraght adds another handful of breakfast hideouts. Cash is your friend here, most of these spots don’t take cards.

Cafe Mouja (brunch and digital-nomad favourite)

Smoothie bowls, pancakes, good coffee, bring a laptop off-peak. Typical breakfast 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros). Try the smoothie bowls at Cafe Mouja. The terrace gets sun from about 9am, and the wifi holds up well enough for a morning email session before the offshore window closes.

digital nomad in cafe in taghazout

Windy Bay (classic seafront staple)

All-day menu with breakfasts, juices, and sunset plates. Breakfast 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros). It’s the easy default if you can’t decide, the seafront tables put you ten metres from the water and the kitchen runs the same menu from 8am to 9pm.

Le Petit Kawa / Babakoul KM14 (KM14 road)

Beloved for msemen, omelettes, avocado smoothies, bastilla. 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros). Worth the short hop out of town if you want a proper Moroccan breakfast spread, the amlou-and-msemen plate alone justifies the detour.

Moroccan Breakfast

World of Waves (beachfront boutique hotel restaurant)

Bowls, coffee, and long post-surf breakfasts right by the sand. Breakfast 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros). The boutique-hotel pricing creeps in for lunch and dinner, but breakfast stays in the same range as the local cafes and the beach-front terrace is hard to beat after a Panorama session.

Cheap eats and local favourites

Lunch in Taghazout is where the value is. 70 to 120 MAD gets you a generous main, a salad, bread and a tea, with change for an espresso. These three spots are where surf-camp guests refuel between sessions and where the local crowd actually eats.

Munga’s Kitchen (comfort dishes and wood-fired pizzas)

Post-surf carbs: pizza, pasta, burgers. Mains 70 to 120 MAD (6.50 to 11 euros). The wood-fired oven runs from lunch through to late, and the same group runs The Favela rooftop two floors up if you want to climb upstairs for dessert and a sunset.

munga kitchen taghazout

Aftas Restaurant (central, simple and handy)

Pizza and fresh pasta, easy for groups. Mains 70 to 120 MAD (6.50 to 11 euros). Sits right above Aftas Bay (the beginner break), so you can walk out of the water and into a plate of pasta in five minutes. Service is fast, the room handles surf-camp groups of eight without fuss.

Dar Josephine (French-Moroccan comfort)

Tajines and seafood specials in a cozy spot. Mains 80 to 120 MAD (7 to 11 euros). The fish tajine with chermoula is the order, and the room feels more like someone’s home than a restaurant, which is the point.

Seafood and the Banana Village ritual

If you do one food thing while you’re here, do this one. The fish market at Aourir, ten minutes south of Taghazout in the so-called Banana Village (named for the small banana plantations that line the road), is where the local catch lands every morning. It’s loud, smells like the ocean, and runs on the kind of choreography that only works in fishing towns.

How to do Aourir (Banana Village) like a local:

  1. Visit the fish market (morning or afternoon) and choose your fresh catch. Prices run about 30 to 120 MAD per kilo (3 to 12 euros) depending on fish.
  2. Take it to a nearby grill shop (check the restaurant or coffee place facing the fish market). They will clean it, season it with chermoula, and grill it for you.
  3. Add bread, olives, salad, mint tea. Pay a small grill fee. 20 to 30 MAD per person (2 to 3 euros).

Sit-down seafood nearby: Complexe Yassmina (known for mixed grills), Restaurant Tanit (reliable tajines, couscous and grills), and Ayour Beach (seaside fish plates).

Moroccan Grill fish

Rooftops and date-night dining

Once the offshore drops and the light turns gold, Taghazout’s rooftops earn their keep. Book the 6.30 to 7.30pm slot in winter (the sun drops fast), or 8pm in summer. Cocktails happen at a few of them but not all, so confirm when you book if wine matters.

The Favela (Munga Rooftop)

Moroccan-Mediterranean plates with ocean views, book the golden-hour slot. Mains 110 to 150 MAD (10 to 14 euros). Sunset tapas at The Favela rooftop.

table in the rooftop, view on the moroccan ocean

Rooftop Restaurant Taghazout (local-run)

Mixed Moroccan and international dishes with panoramic views. Mains 80 to 130 MAD (7 to 12 euros).

Panorama Restaurant (classic terrace)

Traditional Moroccan menu with a wide bay lookout. Mains 80 to 130 MAD (7 to 12 euros).

For bars and after-dinner hangouts, see our Taghazout Nightlife Guide.

Tamraght and Imouran add-ons

Tamraght is the slightly quieter sister 4km south, and Imouran is the cliff stretch in between with the headland views. Worth the 10-minute taxi (15 to 20 MAD) for a change of scene or if you’re surfing Devil’s Rock and Banana Beach.

Le Navire (Imouran clifftop crepes)

Sweet and savoury crepes plus coffee right on the headland. Snacks 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros).

Timam du Chef (Tamraght late-night lifeline)

Wood-fired pizzas, tajines, harira, open late. Mains 70 to 120 MAD (6.50 to 11 euros).

Happy Tamraght (day cafe)

Smoothie bowls and all-day breakfasts after Devil’s Rock. 30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros).

Moroccan typical breakfast, baghrir, omlette, amlou

Aourir / Banana Village

Beyond the fish market, grab mixed plates along the seafront and in town: Richie’s Beach Club (beach cafe-restaurant) and Ayour Beach (seaside tajines and fish). It’s a 10-minute drive south of Taghazout and pairs nicely with the morning Taghazout-to-Marrakech road trip stop if you’re heading inland.

Agadir day-trip dinners with wine

Twenty-five minutes south of Taghazout sits Agadir, a full-sized city with hotels, a marina, and the closest proper wine lists you’ll find. A taxi runs about 150 to 200 MAD each way (negotiate before, or use inDriver). It’s worth the effort once or twice per trip, especially for an anniversary, a birthday, or the night before flying out.

Pure Passion (Marina)

Polished Mediterranean and seafood, good for special occasions. Mains 130 to 180 MAD (12 to 17 euros). A classic call is Pure Passion for a wine-friendly dinner near Taghazout.

pure passion agadir restaurant

La Scala (long-running classic)

International and seafood, often live music, smart-casual. Mains 130 to 180 MAD (12 to 17 euros).

Le Jardin d’Eau (leafy courtyard)

Garden ambience, Moroccan and European dishes, occasional music nights. Mains 110 to 160 MAD (10 to 15 euros).

Surf-camp stays with strong food

If you’d rather not think about dinner every night, surf-camp meals make life easy. Most include breakfast plus a few communal dinners per week, with BBQ or quiz nights thrown in. Sun House Morocco (Taghazout) runs home-style rooftop meals, Kosa Surf Camp (Aourir) does social BBQ nights, Blue Mind Morocco (Tamraght) leans organic and vegan-friendly, Original Surf Morocco (Tamraght) bundles meals into the package, and Ohana Surf Morocco (Taghazout) gets the local vote for breakfast. Compare packages and food vibes across our Taghazout surf camps.

Taghazout Sun House Surf and Yoga Morocco family dinner

Quick price reference

CategoryTypical priceWhere
Breakfast or brunch30 to 60 MAD (3 to 6 euros)Cafes in town
Mains70 to 120 MAD (6.50 to 11 euros)Local and cheap eats
Fish by weight20 to 200 MAD per kilo (2 to 20 euros)Aourir Banana Village
Rooftop main and cocktail90 to 150 MAD (8.50 to 14 euros)The Favela, Rooftop Restaurant
Wine dinner in Agadir250 to 450 MAD (23 to 42 euros)La Scala, Pure Passion

Tips for eating out

FAQ: eating in Taghazout and Tamraght

What food is Taghazout known for?

Fresh seafood, Moroccan tajines, and smoothie-bowl cafes built for surfers and remote workers. The Aourir fish-market ritual (buy raw, get it grilled next door) is the one local tradition every visitor ends up doing at least once.

Is Taghazout good for vegetarians or vegans?

Yes. Most cafes run salads, bowls and veggie tajines, and you’ll find plant-based menus across the strip. In Tamraght, Blue Mind Morocco’s kitchen leans organic and vegan-friendly, and Happy Tamraght does solid plant bowls.

How much does eating out cost in Taghazout?

See the quick price reference table above for category-by-category numbers. The short version: breakfast around 3 to 6 euros, mains 6 to 11 euros, rooftop date-night around 14 euros, and a proper wine dinner in Agadir lands closer to 25 to 40 euros per head.

Where do surfers usually eat after a session?

Beach cafes like World of Waves, pizza at Munga’s, rooftops like The Favela, or back at the surf camp for communal dinners. Breakfast usually happens at Cafe Mouja, Le Petit Kawa or whichever spot is closest to the morning’s lineup.

Are there restaurants with alcohol in Taghazout?

Yes, but fewer than in Agadir. A handful of rooftops and hotel restaurants pour wine and cocktails, and most surf camps are fine with BYO at dinner. For a full wine list, head 25 minutes south to Pure Passion or La Scala in Agadir.

When do restaurants open and close in Taghazout?

Breakfast cafes open around 8am and run lunch through to about 5pm. Most dinner spots get going by 7pm and stay open until 10:30 or 11pm. During Ramadan, daytime service is limited or paused, but kitchens stay open well past midnight after iftar. Late-night options are slim, so Timam du Chef in Tamraght is the go-to lifeline after 10pm.

Can I pay by card in Taghazout restaurants?

Mixed. Hotel restaurants, rooftops and Agadir spots take cards reliably. Small cafes, beachfront grills and the Aourir fish market are cash-only. Carry 200 to 400 MAD in small notes for a typical day. ATMs sit on the main road in Taghazout and are easier to find in Agadir.

Where is the freshest seafood and how does the Aourir fish market work?

Aourir, 10 minutes south of Taghazout, has a small daily fish market that’s freshest mid-morning. Pick your fish (sea bream, sardines, sole and prawns are common), pay by weight, then walk it next door to one of the grill shops facing the market. They clean it, rub it with chermoula and grill it over coals while you wait, charging a small fee for the work. Full sit-down plate plus drinks comes in around 80 to 150 MAD per person.

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