Money management for a Marrakech wedding has two sides: how you pay your vendors and how your guests handle daily expenses. Let me cover both in detail. The local currency is the Moroccan Dirham (MAD), and the exchange rate sits at roughly 1 euro to 11 MAD. This rate fluctuates slightly but has been stable within a narrow band for years, so you do not need to worry about major currency swings between booking and your wedding day. For vendor payments, the good news is that most wedding planners invoice in euros, which simplifies everything. You pay your planner in euros via bank transfer, and they handle all dirham-denominated payments to local vendors on your behalf. This is one of the many reasons having a planner is valuable. Without one, you are navigating Moroccan banking yourself, which involves unfamiliar transfer systems and occasional delays. Venue deposits are typically paid in euros or dirhams via international bank transfer. Expect to pay a 30 to 50% deposit at booking and the balance 30 to 60 days before the wedding. Wire transfer fees from European banks run 5 to 15 euros per transaction. If your bank charges high international transfer fees, consider using Wise (formerly TransferWise), which offers better exchange rates and lower fees than traditional banks. I have saved couples 200 to 400 euros on total transfer costs by recommending this. Some vendors, particularly smaller ones like henna artists, drummers, and specific entertainment acts, prefer cash payment in dirhams on delivery. Your planner manages this, but you should budget accordingly. Provide your planner with the total cash float needed in advance, usually in euros, and they exchange it locally at a bureau de change where the rates are better than at the airport. For your guests, here is what to include in your wedding information pack. ATMs are widely available in Marrakech, concentrated in the Medina around Jemaa el-Fna and throughout Guéliz (the modern district). They dispense dirhams, and most accept Visa, Mastercard, and Maestro cards. Daily withdrawal limits are typically 2,000 to 4,000 MAD (180 to 360 euros). Tell guests to notify their bank before traveling to avoid card blocks. Credit cards are accepted at luxury hotels, upscale restaurants, and established shops. But cash is essential for the souks, petits taxis, tips, street food, and smaller restaurants. I always tell guests to carry small denominations, specifically 10 and 20 MAD notes, for tips and daily purchases. Breaking a 200 MAD note at a small shop or with a taxi driver can be difficult. Currency exchange at the airport arrivals hall offers decent rates, surprisingly competitive with city bureaux de change. The difference is usually less than 2%, so exchanging 100 to 200 euros at the airport for immediate cash needs is perfectly fine. Avoid street money changers in the Medina entirely. They operate without licenses, the rates are poor, and some use sleight-of-hand tricks to shortchange tourists. One financial caveat that catches couples off guard. Morocco has a closed currency system, meaning you cannot buy dirhams outside Morocco, and you cannot take large amounts of dirhams out of the country. Any unspent dirhams at the end of the trip can be exchanged back to euros at the airport, but keep your original exchange receipts as some bureaux require them. Tell your guests to exchange only what they need for the trip to avoid this hassle.
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