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Real Estate & Legal

Home renovation in Morocco from abroad: avoiding scams

60% of MREs report budget overruns or scams when managing renovation work in Morocco from abroad. This guide details the legal protections, the recommended procedure to secure a building site remotely, and available remedies in case of dispute. Written contracts, traceable payments and weekly monitoring are the keys to a successful project.

Last updated: April 2026 · Written and verified by the LesMRE editorial team

🕐 10 min read📋 5 stepsVerified content 2026

Managing real estate work from abroad is one of the most frequent and risky challenges for MRE property owners in Morocco. According to several surveys conducted by the Hassan II Foundation for MREs, more than 60% of Moroccans living abroad who have commissioned remote construction work report significant budget overruns, uncorrected defects, or cases of financial misappropriation. Yet legal protections exist and rigorous procedures can significantly reduce these risks.

1

Obtain three competing quotes from verified companies

Before any financial commitment, request at least three detailed quotes from separate companies or craftsmen. Each quote must detail: materials used (brand, reference, quantity), labor (number of workers, duration), work schedule, and payment terms. To identify reliable contractors, consult the register of accredited architects of the National Order of Architects (ONA) or regional councils, local Chambers of Commerce and Industry (CCI), and MRE community recommendations. Systematically request the contractor's RC (Commercial Registry) number and CNSS affiliation certificate.

💡 Tip — Hire a government-diploma architect (DPLG) accredited by the ONA to supervise the work: their fees (3-7% of the construction budget) are largely offset by the security they provide.

⚠️ Warning — Refuse any contractor who cannot present a valid RC number or who requests full payment before the start of work.

2

Draft and sign a detailed written contract

The contract must be written in Arabic or French (or bilingual), signed by both parties, and notarized if possible by an adoul or notary. Essential clauses: precise description of the work (plans and quotes annexed), schedule with start and end dates, total amount and payment schedule, 10% retention clause on the final balance releasable at final acceptance, penalty clause for delays (1-3% per week), termination and refund conditions, liability for defects and correction timeline (maximum 30 days).

⚠️ Warning — An oral contract has no evidentiary value before Moroccan courts. In case of dispute, only the written and signed contract can be produced as evidence.

3

Secure payments

Absolute rule: never pay in cash, via Western Union, MoneyGram, or anonymous mobile money. All payments must be made by bank transfer from your account abroad to the contractor's professional bank account, or from your MDM account in Morocco. Keep all transfer confirmations. Recommended payment schedule: 30% upon contract signing, 30% at mid-construction (documented by photos), 30% at completion of rough work, 10% retention released at final acceptance with signed acceptance certificate.

💡 Tip — Open a Moroccan MDM (Convertible Dirham) bank account at Attijariwafa Bank, BMCE, or CIH to facilitate DH payments from abroad.

4

Ensure remote monitoring

Establish a weekly monitoring protocol with the contractor: dated photos and videos of construction progress on a dedicated WhatsApp group, weekly video call for a real-time site tour. If you have no trusted person on-site, appoint a professional property manager (independent real estate manager) or supervising architect. Keep all written exchanges (WhatsApp, email): they constitute evidence in case of dispute.

💡 Tip — Apps like Comeen or construction management tools (PlanRadar, BIM Track) allow professional timestamped photographic monitoring.

5

Accept the work with an acceptance certificate

At the end of the work, conduct a contradictory acceptance: either by visiting in person, or by formally mandating a relative (legalized power of attorney) or an architect. Draft an acceptance certificate listing any reservations (defects, incomplete work). The 10% retention guarantee is only released after all reservations are lifted and the final acceptance certificate is signed.

⚠️ Warning — Without a signed acceptance certificate, you lose all legal basis to claim subsequent corrections or withhold the final payment.

❌ Common mistakes to avoid

  • Paying the full amount upfront in exchange for a 'better price': once paid, the contractor has no incentive to complete the work or correct defects.
  • Relying solely on verbal recommendations from a neighbor or friend without verifying the contractor's legal identity (RC, CNSS, national ID).
  • Omitting the retention guarantee clause in the contract: without it, you have no financial leverage to obtain the correction of defects observed at acceptance.
  • Using informal transfers (hawala, cash via an intermediary) to pay for construction work: in case of dispute, you cannot prove the payments made.
  • Not keeping timestamped photos and videos of construction progress: without documentary evidence, it is impossible to establish a timeline of shortcomings before a court.

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