Passenger ferry route could open between Morocco and the Canary Islands

Dec 7, 2020

2 MIN READ

Canary Islands, La Gomera, Spain, Stian Klo, Sunset, Valle Gran Rey
The village of La Calera set at the foot of the mountains on La Gomera.

I'm a US/UK-based freelance travel writer and guidebook author specializing in off-the-beaten-track and underloved places from the Midwest to the Middle East. For several years, I worked as Lonely Planet’s editor for Middle East and North Africa, and I continue to travel the region widely, from scouting out traces of the Islamic empire on the southernmost tip of Spain to walking alongside nomads in the remote mountains of Iran. Originally from Kansas, I also lived in Germany for a year and …

Morocco is looking to create a new passenger and freight ferry route to Spain’s Canary Islands, and the Moroccan government is currently seeking proposals from companies to operate the line.

The Canary Island of Fuerteventura lies less than 100km off Morocco’s Atlantic Coast, and the route would operate from the remote Moroccan port town of Tarfaya, which is nearly 800km south of Marrakesh. The Moroccan government hopes that ‘this direct link will contribute to the economic and social development of the Southern Provinces of the Kingdom and will further facilitate the flow of goods and passengers’. The journey by boat could take under two hours, and Tarfaya’s port was recently renovated to accommodate larger vessels.

The ferries would help travelers get to the Canary Islands © lunamarina / Shutterstock
The ferries would help travelers get to the Canary Islands © lunamarina / Shutterstock

Occasional flights from Royal Air Maroc and Spanish airline Binter operate between Moroccan cities and the Canary Islands, but they don’t run every day and are mostly scheduled in the summer high season between July and September. Most visitors who want to want to travel between Morocco and the Canary Islands must connect through mainland Spain. A ferry previously operated the route between Tarfaya and Fuerteventura in 2008, but after just five months in service, it ran aground off the Moroccan coast because of strong winds, and the route was never resurrected.

At the moment, the Moroccan government is only requesting expressions of interest, so there’s no firm date when the route would be operational for travelers.

In September, Morocco reopened its borders to travelers with hotel reservations, and the Canary Islands are open to EU residents as well as citizens from countries with low coronavirus case loads, such as South Korea, New Zealand and Australia. Some of the remote Canary Islands, such as El Hierro and Isla Graciosa, have not registered any coronavirus cases.

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