Agadir Airport to Taghazout: How to Actually Get There Without Getting Fleeced
You've just landed at AGA, it's 11pm, the air smells like jet fuel and orange blossom, and a guy in a leather jacket is already telling you the taxi to Taghazout costs 600 dirhams. It doesn't. Here's what it actually costs, and how to get there without spending your first hour in Morocco arguing about money.
Short answer: A grand taxi from Agadir Al Massira Airport to Taghazout should cost 250–350 MAD for the whole car (about 40 minutes). A pre-booked private transfer runs 300–450 MAD and is the sane choice if you're landing after midnight or hauling a board bag. The AL27 bus exists, but it's not a real plan unless you're travelling light and feeling chaotic.
How to get from Agadir Airport to Taghazout: the four real options
Agadir Al Massira (AGA) sits about 25km southeast of Agadir city, roughly 35km from Tamraght and 40km from Taghazout. There's no train, no tram, no Uber. You've got four options, all unglamorous in their own way. Ranked by how stressful they are at 1am with a 7'2" mini-mal in a coffin bag:
- Pre-booked private transfer — 300–450 MAD. Boring. Works.
- Grand taxi (Mercedes 240) — 250–350 MAD for the whole car. The local move.
- Car rental — from ~250 MAD/day. Only worth it if you're staying two weeks plus.
- AL27 bus — 7 MAD. A mild adventure. Not a plan.
The difference between paying 250 MAD and 600 MAD for the same ride is just knowing what to say. So let's break each one down.
Grand taxis: the local way, if you can hold the line
The grand taxis at Agadir airport are the big cream-coloured Mercedes 240s that look like they've been driven since the Hassan II era. Because they probably have. They're what locals use, and they're the cheapest way to do the airport-to-Taghazout run short of the bus.
The honest price for a private grand taxi (the whole car to yourself, up to four passengers plus driver) from AGA to Taghazout is 250–300 MAD by day, 300–350 MAD at night. That's it. That's the price.
What you'll be quoted: 500, 600, sometimes 700 MAD. The driver will blame the airport tax, the night, the petrol, the moon, his uncle's wedding. Smile, say "la, shukran" (no, thanks), and walk to the next car. The fourth driver will quote you 300.
Pro tip: walk past the first row of taxis, out toward the car park exit. The drivers parked closest to arrivals charge the most because they pay a premium for the spot. Twenty metres of walking saves you 200 dirhams.
Three things to know:
- Agree the price before your bag goes in the boot. Once your luggage is in, your leverage is gone.
- Name your destination clearly — Taghazout or Tamraght, ideally with your camp or riad. Some drivers will drop you on the main road and shrug.
- Have small notes. Nobody at 1am has change for a 500 MAD bill. Break it at the airport ATM if you have to.
Pre-booked private transfer: the boring option that everyone should probably take
If your flight lands after 11pm — and if you're flying Ryanair, EasyJet, or Transavia from northern Europe, it almost certainly does — just pre-book a transfer. Pay the extra 50–100 MAD. Sleep on the plane knowing someone with your name on a sign will be standing in arrivals.
Most surf camps in Taghazout and Tamraght (us included, obviously) offer airport transfers for around 300–400 MAD per car. Independent transfer companies charge similar. You'll find them on WhatsApp more than on websites — this is Morocco, that's how things work.
Why this is the right call for first-timers:
- You're tired, you've never been here, and you don't know the route off the N1 to the Tamraght exit.
- The driver will take your board bag without sucking through his teeth and asking for an extra 100 MAD.
- You won't have the "is this the right turn?" panic when the taxi cuts through Aourir at midnight.
It's the unsexy answer. It's also, statistically, the answer that ends with you eating tagine the next day instead of writing a TripAdvisor review about how Morocco scammed you.
The AL27 bus from Agadir Airport: a mild adventure
People love writing about the AL27 like it's some hidden hack. It's not. It's a public bus that costs 7 MAD and runs on a schedule loosely related to the laws of physics.
The AL27 doesn't go directly from the airport. You take a small connector bus (or a short taxi) from the airport to Inezgane bus station, then catch the AL27 north along the coast through Agadir, Aourir, Tamraght, and finally Taghazout. Total cost: maybe 20–30 MAD. Total time: 1.5 to 2.5 hours, depending on traffic and luck.
When the AL27 makes sense:
- You arrive between 8am and 6pm.
- You have a small backpack, not a board bag.
- You actually want the slow-travel experience and you're in no rush.
When it doesn't:
- You land after dark — the connections stop.
- You have a board. Buses here aren't built for 7-foot foam.
- You value your shoulders, your sanity, or your time.
It's a fun way to arrive if you're solo, light, and curious. For everyone else, the 250 MAD saving isn't worth the 90 extra minutes.
Renting a car at Agadir Airport: only if you're staying a while
If you're here for two weeks or more and want to explore Imsouane, Mirleft, Tafraoute, or Paradise Valley on your own time, a rental car is a great call. Local agencies (not the big international chains) start around 250 MAD per day for a basic Dacia Sandero. The internationals will quote 400–600 MAD for the same car.
The catch: parking in Taghazout village is a mild nightmare in high season, the road is narrow, and Moroccan driving requires a certain mental flexibility. Roundabouts are suggestions. Indicators are decorative.
For a one-week surf trip where you'll mostly walk from your room to Anchor Point and back, a car is overkill. Use grand taxis (10–20 MAD between villages) and put the savings toward better food at Auberge or a sunset beer at Munga.
The 1am Ryanair reality nobody warns you about
Half the budget flights into Agadir land between 11pm and 2am. The airport empties out fast. By the time you clear immigration (which can take 45 minutes on a busy night), the official taxi rank has thinned out and the remaining drivers know they have leverage.
This is the moment people get fleeced. Here's how to not be one of them:
- Book a transfer in advance. Genuinely, just do it. 350 MAD versus 600 MAD isn't the hill to die on at 1am.
- Get cash before you leave the terminal. The ATMs are in arrivals. Drivers don't take cards. Western-style "I'll Revolut you" energy doesn't work here.
- Don't follow anyone who approaches you inside the terminal. Licensed taxis wait outside at the rank. Anyone inside offering you a ride is freelancing, and freelancing is expensive.
- Have your accommodation address written down in French or Arabic. Not everyone speaks English, and "the surf camp near the beach" isn't an address.
FAQ
How long does it take to get from Agadir Airport to Taghazout?
About 40–50 minutes by taxi or private transfer, depending on traffic through Agadir. The AL27 bus takes 1.5 to 2.5 hours, including the connection from the airport to Inezgane.
What's the Taghazout taxi price from the airport?
A private grand taxi should cost 250–300 MAD by day, 300–350 MAD at night, for the whole car. Anything above 400 MAD is the tourist tax. Negotiate or walk to the next driver.
Is it safe to take a taxi alone from Agadir Airport at night?
Yes. Licensed grand taxis at the airport rank are safe, including for solo women. The risk isn't safety, it's overpaying. Stick to the official rank outside arrivals and agree the fare before you load your bags.
Can I take a grand taxi with a surfboard?
Yes, but the driver will probably ask for an extra 50–100 MAD to tie it on the roof. Worth it. If you've got a big coffin bag, a pre-booked transfer with an estate car or minivan is less stressful.
Should I take the AL27 bus from Agadir to Taghazout?
Only if you're travelling in daylight, with a small bag, and you genuinely enjoy the slow version of arriving somewhere. With a board, or after dark, take a taxi.


