Co-Working Cafes in Taghazout and Tamraght
The digital nomad population in Taghazout has grown steadily over the past few years — people who’ve figured out that a winter of surf and Atlantic light is a more compelling working environment than a grey city, and that a morning session at Hash Point and an afternoon of work on a rooftop terrace is a viable daily rhythm.
The infrastructure to support this has followed. A handful of cafes now explicitly cater to the working crowd — decent wifi, power sockets at tables, a tolerance for long stays, and food beyond mint tea and tajine. Here’s where to work and what to expect.
What to Look For
Wifi: Ask the speed before you commit to a table. A basic speed test on your phone (Speedtest.net) takes 30 seconds. For video calls, you want 10 Mbps+ upload. For general work and email, 5 Mbps is manageable. The most reliable options: Teapot Cafe (free wifi with min spend ~€5), Cafe Medina (strong wifi, quieter), and SunDesk (dedicated coworking, fastest and most reliable).
Power sockets: Not every cafe has sockets accessible to customers. The more nomad-oriented cafes have them at tables as a matter of course; the older, less adapted places don’t.
Atmosphere: Some cafes are genuinely quiet enough to focus; others have music at a level that makes concentration difficult. Worth a visit before committing.
Food and drinks: For a full working day, you want a place with a proper food menu (not just coffee) and a policy that doesn’t expect you to order constantly.
Best Co-Working Cafes in Taghazout
Teapot Cafe: Centre of main street. Free wifi, multiple power sockets, coworking area on first floor with natural light. Minimum spend ~€5 (~50 MAD). Smoothie bowls, avocado toast, all-day menu. Moderate noise level — buzzing during peak hours. Best for morning to midday sessions. Run by Mint Surf Morocco.
Cafe Medina: Upscale, peaceful ambiance, elegant Moroccan decor. Strong wifi, quiet. Better for afternoon concentration than Teapot. Good coffee. Slightly more expensive but calmer — better for extended sessions requiring focus.
Best Co-Working Cafes in Tamraght
Tamraght has a slightly more relaxed atmosphere than Taghazout, which some nomads prefer for focused work. The cafes are less busy, there’s less tourist flow, and the pace is more suited to a full working day.
Adam’s Cafe: Family-run, leafy terrace on Tamraght main street next to Let’s Be Healing Food. Fibre optic wifi, no day pass or minimum spend. Best no-fuss option for working over a long lunch.
Hey Yallah: Specialty barista coffee, vegan/gluten-free snacks, minimalist decor. Good wifi when quiet. More social and event-driven — less suitable for deep focus sessions, but excellent for networking and morning work before it fills up.
Kasbari: The dedicated option. A proper coworking space set in a garden in Tamraght. 50 MAD for half a day, 80 MAD for a full day. Discounts for weekly and monthly passes. 200 Mbps wifi, office chairs, meeting room, kitchen, lockers. kasbari.com.
Dedicated Co-Working Spaces
Three confirmed dedicated options in the area (beyond cafes):
- SunDesk (Taghazout): 16-desk coworking and coliving space, ocean views, ~200+ Mbps, day passes available. sun-desk.com
- CoworkSurf (Taghazout): Full floor coworking space with 200 Mbps wifi and ocean view, capacity up to 30 people. coworksurf.com
- Kasbari (Tamraght): Garden-based coworking, 50 MAD/half-day, 80 MAD/full day, 200 Mbps wifi, office chairs, meeting room, kitchen, lockers. kasbari.com
The Digital Nomad Community
The nomad community in Taghazout is looser than in dedicated nomad hubs like Lisbon or Bali — there’s no Nomad List-famous co-working space and no weekly meetup that everyone attends. But the community exists, it surfaces in cafes and surf lineups, and if you’re here for more than a week you’ll find it naturally.
Practical Notes for Remote Workers
- Moroccan SIM card as backup: Maroc Telecom or Orange SIM cards (available in Agadir) provide 4G data as a wifi backup. Essential for video calls if cafe wifi is unreliable.
- Power adaptors: Morocco uses European-style two-pin sockets (Type C/E). Bring a universal adaptor.
- Time zone: Morocco uses GMT+1 year-round (Western European Time, no daylight saving). Good alignment with UK and European clients.
- Bank transfers: Wise/Revolut work well for receiving international payments in Morocco. Standard international transfers via Moroccan banks can be slow — set up your payment infrastructure before you arrive.
FAQ
Is Taghazout good for digital nomads?
Yes — particularly for surf-oriented nomads comfortable with a slower pace of life and limited nightlife. The community is small but genuine, the cost of living is low, and winter light and surf access make it a compelling base.
What’s the wifi like in Taghazout cafes?
Variable — from fast enough for video calls at the better spots, to frustratingly slow at places that haven’t invested in the infrastructure. The guide above identifies the reliable options.
Is there a co-working space in Taghazout?
Yes — two confirmed dedicated spaces: SunDesk (sun-desk.com) and CoworkSurf (coworksurf.com), both with ocean views and fast internet. In Tamraght, Kasbari (kasbari.com) is the garden coworking option. The cafe options listed above are the more casual alternative.
Last updated: March 2026
Cafes in Taghazout Cafes in Tamraght Guide to Taghazout for digital nomads