Taghazout and Tamraght sit 3 km apart but feel completely different. An honest comparison to help you choose the right base for your surf trip.

Taghazout and Tamraght sit three kilometres apart on the same stretch of Atlantic coast, and travelers researching a surf trip constantly mix them up — understandably, since both get lumped together as "the surf area near Agadir." They're not interchangeable, though: each has a genuinely different personality, and picking the right one changes the whole feel of your trip. Here's the honest comparison.
Choose Taghazout if you want the buzzier village experience — more cafés, more surf shops, nightlife, and easy access to the famous point breaks like Anchor Point.
Choose Tamraght if you want a quieter, more residential base — still walking distance to good beginner surf at Banana Beach, but with fewer crowds, lower prices, and a slower pace.
Both work equally well if your priority is simply "good surf lesson access" — they're 5-10 minutes apart by taxi or a manageable walk, so you're never actually cut off from the other village's cafés or breaks.
| Taghazout | Tamraght | |
|---|---|---|
| Vibe | Buzzy surf-village, more nightlife | Quiet, residential, slower pace |
| Best known break | Anchor Point (advanced) | Banana Beach (beginner-friendly) |
| Crowds | Busier, especially in peak season | Noticeably quieter |
| Accommodation prices | Higher, especially surf camps | Generally lower for similar quality |
| Cafés & restaurants | Many, wide variety | Fewer, more local |
| Surf schools | Highest concentration | Several good ones, less choice |
| Distance to Agadir | 18 km / ~25 min | 21 km / ~30 min |
| Best for | First-timers wanting energy and social scene | Travelers wanting calm and value |
Taghazout is the name everyone knows, and for good reason — it's where Morocco's surf reputation was actually built, thanks to Anchor Point's long right-hand point break drawing international surfers since the 1960s. The village itself has grown into a proper surf-town hub: rooftop cafés serving good coffee and avocado toast next to traditional fish tagine spots, surf shops on every corner, and an evening scene that's lively without being a party town. If you want to be in the middle of the action — easy walk to multiple breaks, cafés, and a social atmosphere where meeting other travelers happens naturally — Taghazout delivers that.
The trade-off: it's busier, prices for surf camps and accommodation run higher (especially July-August), and popular breaks get crowded in peak season.
Tamraght is Taghazout's quieter neighbor, and increasingly the choice for travelers who've already done the "busy surf village" experience and want something calmer, or first-timers who'd rather avoid the crowds entirely. It's home to Banana Beach (also called Crocs Beach), one of the best genuinely beginner-friendly breaks in the whole area — sandy bottom, gentle white water, plenty of space. The village itself is smaller and more residential, with fewer tourist-facing businesses, which some travelers find refreshing and others find limiting, depending on what you're looking for.
The trade-off: fewer dining and nightlife options within walking distance, and a noticeably quieter evening atmosphere — genuinely peaceful if that's what you want, potentially too quiet if you're hoping for a social surf-camp scene every night.
Tamraght generally runs cheaper for comparable accommodation quality — smaller supply of tourist-facing guesthouses and less demand pressure than Taghazout's more established surf-camp market. If budget is a real constraint, Tamraght is worth checking first. That said, the price gap has narrowed as Tamraght has become better known, so it's worth comparing specific properties rather than assuming a blanket discount.
Yes, easily — this is worth knowing if you're torn between them. A taxi between the two villages costs next to nothing and takes 5-10 minutes, and plenty of visitors base themselves in Tamraght for quieter evenings while still visiting Taghazout's cafés and surf shops during the day, or vice versa. Neither choice locks you out of the other village's advantages.
If this is your first surf trip and you're not sure which vibe you prefer, Taghazout is the safer default — it has the widest range of surf schools, the most established infrastructure for first-timers, and enough going on that you won't feel isolated if you're traveling solo. Consider Tamraght specifically if quiet and value are higher priorities for you than social atmosphere, or if you've already experienced Taghazout on a previous trip and want a change of pace.
Either way, both villages sit within the same surf lessons network, and most tours pick up from either location without issue.
Generally yes, for comparable accommodation quality — Tamraght has less tourist infrastructure and lower demand pressure. The gap has narrowed as Tamraght's popularity has grown, so it's worth comparing specific properties rather than assuming automatic savings.
Both have genuinely good beginner breaks — Taghazout's Banana Beach area and Tamraght's own Banana Beach/Crocs Beach are both sandy-bottomed and forgiving for first-timers. The real difference is village atmosphere, not surf quality for beginners.
About 3 km, roughly a 5-10 minute taxi ride or a walkable (though not super short) distance along the coast road.
It's busier than it was a decade ago, especially July-August and the winter surf season (October-April), but it hasn't lost its village character. If crowds are a real concern, Tamraght is the better base, or visit Taghazout in the shoulder months (May-June, September).
No — Anchor Point is a powerful, experienced-level point break, not suitable for beginners. First-timers surf at the beach breaks nearby (Banana Beach in both Taghazout and Tamraght, plus sections of Agadir's own beach), not at Anchor Point itself.

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