Every summer, over 3 million MREs cross Moroccan borders as part of Operation Marhaba. Customs allowances, Temporary Admission of your car, regulated items: here's everything you need to know to clear customs without unpleasant surprises.
Understanding your customs allowances
As an MRE, you benefit from a customs allowance for your personal effects and gifts with a maximum value of 6,000 DH (approximately £550) per trip. Beyond this, you must pay customs duties calculated on the excess value. For currency, carrying foreign banknotes is free up to the equivalent of 100,000 DH — beyond this amount, a mandatory declaration must be made to customs upon entry into the territory. Keep your recent purchase receipts to justify values.
💡 Tip — Keep receipts for all recent purchases (electronics, jewellery, expensive gifts) — customs may ask you to justify the value of your belongings.
Temporary Admission (TA) of your vehicle
If you enter Morocco with a vehicle registered abroad, you automatically benefit from Temporary Admission (TA). Form D16 Ter is personal: only the holder of the foreign residence permit may drive this vehicle. The maximum duration is 6 months per year. TA is strictly non-transferable — lending your car to someone else is a serious offence that may result in vehicle seizure and a severe fine.
💡 Tip — NEVER lend your vehicle under TA to a resident Moroccan national — this is punishable by a fine of up to 100% of the vehicle's value and seizure.
⚠️ Warning — TA is strictly personal. If your vehicle is driven by another person during a check, it may be seized immediately.
Regulated and prohibited items
Certain items require prior authorisation: drones must be declared to ANRT and a usage authorisation must be obtained before entering Morocco. Psychotropic medicines (anxiolytics, sleeping pills) require a medical prescription translated and legalised in Arabic. Counterfeit products, firearms (even replicas), and pornographic products are strictly prohibited. Tobacco quantity is limited to 200 cigarettes or 250g.
💡 Tip — For drones, request authorisation from ANRT (anrt.ma) several weeks before departure — the procedure takes time.
⚠️ Warning — Psychotropic medicines without a valid prescription may be confiscated and their holder prosecuted. Always carry the original translated prescription.
Relocation: total allowance under conditions
If you are returning permanently to Morocco after at least 2 years of continuous residence abroad, you may benefit from a total customs allowance for your movable goods (furniture, household appliances, personal effects). Conditions: goods acquired and used abroad, not intended for resale, transport by a certified international transporter with detailed valued inventory. The application must be made within 3 months following your permanent return.
💡 Tip — Have the valued inventory of your belongings established by the certified transporter — it will serve as supporting documentation for customs and may be requested years later.
In case of customs dispute
If customs issues you with a seizure report or imposes a fine that you contest, you have official recourse options. Within 30 days, you can file an administrative appeal with the competent Regional Customs Directorate. If the dispute persists, you can refer to the Kingdom's Ombudsman within 2 months. Keep all your supporting documents (invoices, declarations, receipts) to support your contestation.
💡 Tip — In case of unjustified seizure, immediately request an official seizure receipt with the value recorded. This document is essential for any subsequent appeal.
❌ Common mistakes to avoid
- ✕Lending your vehicle under TA to a Moroccan national — risk of immediate vehicle seizure
- ✕Importing a drone without prior ANRT authorisation — systematic confiscation
- ✕Not keeping receipts for recent purchases to justify the value of goods to customs
🔗 Official links and resources
❓ Frequently asked questions
Need an expert for your project?
Find a Moroccan professional verified by LesMRE to guide you step by step.
Find a verified expert