by Magicalmorocotravel@gmail.com 27th Jun, 2026 9 mins Read

This is one of the most common questions I get from travellers planning a Morocco trip — and one of the most difficult to answer. Not because either gorge is disappointing, but because they’re so different that comparing them is a bit like asking whether you’d prefer mountains or sea.

I’m Youssef, and I’ve been guiding tourists through both the Dades Gorges and Todra Gorge for over a decade from my base here in the Dades Valley. I’ve watched hundreds of travellers come through both canyons and I’ve heard what they say afterwards. In this guide, I’ll give you the honest comparison — what each gorge actually looks like, what you can do there, who each one suits, and whether you should try to visit both.



Table of Contents

  1. Quick Comparison: Dades Gorges vs Todra Gorge
  2. What Does Each Gorge Look Like?
  3. Hiking: Which Gorge Has Better Trails?
  4. Cultural Experiences: Villages & Berber Life
  5. Photography: Where Are the Better Shots?
  6. Practical Differences: Distance, Access & Cost
  7. Who Should Choose Dades Gorges?
  8. Who Should Choose Todra Gorge?
  9. Can You Visit Both?
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

1. Quick Comparison: Dades Gorges vs Todra Gorge

FeatureDades GorgesTodra Gorge
Scenery typeWide, open, cinematic canyon with winding roadNarrow slot canyon, dramatic vertical walls
Wall heightUp to 300mUp to 300m — but closer together
Famous forMonkey Fingers, winding road, kasbahs, rose valleySheer limestone walls, rock climbing
HikingVaried routes, multiple day optionsShorter canyon walks, ridge hikes
Rock climbingLimitedExcellent — 150+ routes
Berber cultureDeep — many traditional villagesPresent, but smaller selection
Distance from Marrakech~4 hours~5 hours
Distance from each other~1 hour apart on the N10
Best forPhotography, culture, hiking, familiesClimbers, dramatic scenery, short visits
CrowdsModerateHigher (especially at the main canyon)

2. What Does Each Gorge Look Like?

Dades Gorges

The Dades Gorges are wide and cinematic. The canyon stretches for 28 miles through the High Atlas, its walls striped in shades of pink, terracotta, orange, and ochre. The famous winding switchback road snakes up through hairpin bends with the valley spread out below. Along the gorge floor, ancient kasbahs in reddish mud-brick blend so well into the canyon walls they look like they grew there.

The Monkey Fingers rock formations — eroded limestone pinnacles near the village of Aït Arbi — are the most photographed geological feature. The gorge feels like a landscape from a Western film: vast, silent, and ancient. There’s space here. The canyon opens up rather than closes in.

Todra Gorge

Todra is the opposite of Dades in almost every way. The gorge narrows to just 30 metres at its most dramatic point, with limestone walls soaring 300 metres on either side. Standing in the canyon you feel genuinely small in a way that Dades doesn’t quite produce.

The Todra River runs through the base of the canyon — shallow but clear. The walls are pale, almost white in midday light, and they turn shades of pink and gold as the sun moves. It’s a more contained, intense experience. You feel enclosed by the rock in a way that’s exhilarating rather than claustrophobic.


3. Hiking: Which Gorge Has Better Trails?

Dades Gorges wins for hiking variety.

The Dades offers everything from a gentle 2-hour riverside walk to a full-day plateau trek with panoramic Atlas views. The Monkey Fingers loop (3–4 hours, moderate) is the signature hike — through the strange rock formations, up to a viewpoint, and back through a Berber village. The plateau trek (7–8 hours) is for serious walkers and rewards with views that stretch all the way to the Sahara edge.

Todra Gorge is better for rock climbing.

The main canyon walk in Todra is short — you can walk the full length of the dramatic section in about 20 minutes. There are longer hikes available into the mountains above, but the main draw for active visitors is rock climbing. The Todra cliffs have over 150 established routes, from beginner-friendly sport climbs to multi-pitch routes for experienced climbers.

Verdict: For hiking, Dades. For climbing, Todra.



4. Cultural Experiences: Villages & Berber Life

Dades Gorges wins for cultural depth.

The Dades valley is lined with traditional Berber (Amazigh) villages — Aït Oudinar, Tamlalt, Aït Arbi, and deeper into the upper gorge, M’Semrir. The communities here are farming communities: rose cultivation (the valley produces some of the world’s finest rose oil), almonds, wheat, and vegetables grown on terraced plots that have been worked for centuries. Staying in a Berber guesthouse here and having dinner with a local family is one of the best cultural experiences in Morocco.

The Dades Valley is also at the heart of the Valley of Roses. In April and May, the Damask rose harvest transforms the whole valley — the scent carries for miles and the hills turn pink. The rose cooperatives run year-round and welcome visitors.

Todra has warm Berber hospitality — you’ll find it at the guesthouses and small restaurants in the canyon — but the valley is narrower and has fewer villages. The cultural experience is present but shallower.

Verdict: Dades wins for Berber culture, by a clear margin.


5. Photography: Where Are the Better Shots?

Both gorges are spectacular to photograph, but they offer different kinds of images.

Dades Gorges photography:

  • The winding switchback road from above — one of Morocco’s most iconic shots
  • Monkey Fingers at golden hour (the rock goes from ochre to deep red)
  • Wide valley panoramas with kasbahs in the foreground
  • Berber village life — women in colourful djellabas, men on donkeys, children in the fields
  • Night photography: Milky Way above the canyon rim (zero light pollution, high altitude)

Todra Gorge photography:

  • The narrow canyon entrance — sheer walls and a thin strip of sky above
  • Rock climbers on the limestone faces
  • The river at the base of the canyon, reflecting the cliff walls
  • Early morning mist in the canyon

Verdict: Dades for landscape and cultural photography. Todra for dramatic canyon shots and climbing action.


6. Practical Differences: Distance, Access & Time

Getting there from Marrakech:

  • Dades Gorges: ~320 km, ~4 hours via Ouarzazate
  • Todra Gorge: ~375 km, ~5 hours via Ouarzazate and Tinerhir

Distance between the two gorges: They’re about 1 hour apart on the N10 — perfectly positioned for a combined visit.

Time needed:

  • Dades Gorges: Minimum 1 full day, ideally 2
  • Todra Gorge: The famous narrow canyon can be seen in a morning. For hiking or climbing, allow a full day or overnight.

Crowds: Todra’s narrow canyon entrance tends to be busier, especially during peak season (March–May and September–November). Dades is more spread out and feels less crowded even when visitor numbers are similar.


7. Who Should Choose Dades Gorges?

Choose the Dades Gorges if you:

✔ Want varied hiking — from easy walks to serious full-day treks ✔ Are interested in Berber culture and village life ✔ Love photography, especially landscape and golden-hour shots ✔ Are travelling with family (all ages and fitness levels catered for) ✔ Want a 4×4 adventure into remote terrain ✔ Are interested in the Valley of Roses ✔ Want to stargaze (the night sky here is exceptional) ✔ Prefer a less-crowded, more spread-out experience

→ Explore our Dades Gorges activities and tours


8. Who Should Choose Todra Gorge?

Choose Todra Gorge if you:

✔ Are a rock climber (150+ routes on excellent limestone) ✔ Want the most dramatically narrow, vertical canyon experience ✔ Are short on time and want to see a spectacular gorge in half a day ✔ Want to combine the gorge with the palm oasis at Tinerhir ✔ Prefer shaded, riverside walks


9. Can You Visit Both Dades Gorges and Todra Gorge?

Yes — and this is what I recommend to almost everyone who asks.

The two gorges are about 1 hour apart, on the same road (the N10) heading east from Ouarzazate toward the Sahara. Most 3-day tours from Marrakech to the Sahara include both gorges as stops along the route.

A typical combined itinerary:

Day 1: Marrakech → Aït Ben Haddou → Ouarzazate → Dades Gorges (arrive late afternoon, overnight in the gorge) Day 2: Full day in Dades Gorges — morning hike, Monkey Fingers, Berber village lunch, sunset at the canyon rim, overnight Day 3: Dades → Todra Gorge (morning visit) → continue east toward Merzouga and the Sahara

This way you get the full experience of Dades — the hiking, the villages, the stargazing — and the dramatic intensity of Todra, without having to choose.

→ See our 3-day and 5-day desert tours that include both gorges



Frequently Asked Questions: Dades Gorges vs Todra Gorge

Which gorge is better, Dades or Todra? They offer genuinely different experiences. Dades is wider, more varied, and better for hiking and cultural experiences. Todra is narrower, more dramatic in a contained way, and better for rock climbing. Most travellers who visit both prefer Dades overall, but Todra’s canyon entrance is hard to beat for sheer visual impact.

How far apart are Dades Gorges and Todra Gorge? About 70 km apart, roughly 1 hour by road on the N10. They’re easy to combine on the same trip.

Can you visit both gorges in one day? Technically yes, but it’s rushed. You’d see both canyon roads and the Todra entrance, but you’d miss the hiking, villages, and proper exploration of Dades. Better to spend a night in Dades and visit Todra the following morning.

Which gorge is better for families? Both are family-friendly, but Dades offers more activities across a wider range of ages and fitness levels. The easy riverside walk in Dades is perfect for families with young children.

Is Todra Gorge or Dades Gorge closer to Marrakech? Dades is slightly closer — about 320 km and 4 hours from Marrakech. Todra is about 375 km and 5 hours. Both require a full day of driving to reach from Marrakech.

Which gorge is better for photography? Dades for landscape photography, especially golden hour shots of the Monkey Fingers and the winding road. Todra for dramatic vertical canyon shots and rock climbing photography.


Conclusion

If you only have time for one gorge, choose Dades. It offers more variety, more hiking, deeper cultural experiences, and the unique Monkey Fingers formations that you won’t find anywhere else.

But if your itinerary allows it — and if you’re travelling the classic Marrakech–Sahara route — visit both. Dades and Todra are only an hour apart, and they complement each other perfectly. Dades opens the gorge experience wide; Todra closes it into something narrow and vertical and startling.

Either way, I’d love to show you around. As a local guide born in the Dades Valley, I know every trail, every viewpoint, and the best place to watch the sun set over the canyon. Get in touch and we’ll build your itinerary together.

Plan your Morocco gorge tour with Youssef WhatsApp: +212 723-047402

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