Paradise Valley Agadir: The Hidden Gem Day Trip You Need a Car For
About 60 km north of Agadir, tucked into the foothills of the Anti-Atlas mountains, lies one of Morocco's most spectacular natural secrets: Paradise Valley (Vallée du Paradis). A series of crystal-clear natural pools, pink granite cliffs, palm groves, and Berber villages — completely inaccessible by public transport. This is why you rented a car.
Quick Facts
- Distance from Agadir Airport: ~60 km (45 min drive)
- Best for: Swimming, cliff jumping, hiking, picnics
- Best months: April–October (pools are fuller March–June)
- Entry: Free (small "guardian" fee sometimes requested, 10–20 MAD)
- Road type: Paved all the way to the main viewpoint; last 2 km is rough piste (doable in a standard car carefully)
- Bring: Swimwear, water shoes, sunscreen, cash, snacks
How to Get There: The Route
- Head north from Agadir on the N1 coastal road toward Taghazout.
- Pass Taghazout village and continue 12 km to Tamraght.
- Turn east (inland) at the sign for Aourir / Imouzzer onto the P1017 road.
- Follow the P1017 up into the mountains through argan tree valleys.
- After ~35 km of gorgeous inland driving, watch for the Paradise Valley sign on your right.
GPS coordinates: Approximately 30.47°N, 9.54°W. Search "Paradise Valley Agadir" in Google Maps — it pins accurately.
The Pools: What to Expect
The valley has three tiers of natural pools, connected by hiking paths along the canyon floor. The water is cold even in summer (fed by mountain springs) — refreshing rather than chilly once you're in. The lowest pool, closest to the parking area, gets the most visitors. Hike 20 minutes upstream for near-complete solitude.
- Lower pool: Easiest access, most crowded, 3m cliff jump. Good for families.
- Middle pool: 20-min hike, turquoise water, dramatic overhanging rock. The best photo spot.
- Upper pools: 45-min scramble from the car. You'll likely have them to yourself.
Local Berber Café
At the valley entrance, two small Berber cafés serve mint tea, tagine, and omelettes under palm shade. Prices are fair — 40–60 MAD for a full lunch. Eating here supports local families directly and is worth the experience alone.
Tips for the Drive
- The P1017 road is paved but narrow in places — drive at a moderate pace and use your horn on blind corners (local custom).
- Fill up fuel in Agadir. There is one small station in Aourir but no guarantee it's open.
- Arrive before 10am on weekends — the parking area fills by noon in summer.
- A standard economy car handles this road fine. You do not need a 4×4.
- Watch out for goats and donkeys on the road — they have absolute right of way.
Combine with Imouzzer des Ida Outanane
If you're already driving inland, continue 15 km past Paradise Valley to Imouzzer des Ida Outanane — a charming Berber mountain village known for its honey market (held every Thursday). The waterfalls near Imouzzer flow January through March and are spectacular. A perfect full-day loop: Agadir → Paradise Valley → Imouzzer → back via Agadir.
Read next: Best Beaches Near Agadir Only Reachable by Car →
FAQ
~60 km north, about a 45-minute drive: the N1 toward Taghazout, then inland at Aourir on the P1017.
No — it's paved almost all the way; only the last ~2 km is rough piste, doable carefully in an economy car.
Yes — three tiers of spring-fed pools. The lower pool is easiest (3m cliff jump); hike 20–45 min upstream for quieter ones.
Entry is free; a small guardian/parking fee of 10–20 MAD is sometimes requested.
April–October (fullest pools March–June). Arrive before 10am on summer weekends — parking fills by noon.
Swimwear, water shoes, sunscreen, snacks and cash. Fuel up in Agadir first.
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