Relocation guide
Moving to Morocco means learning Arabic — and not the tourist kind. The conversations that matter first are your carte de séjour (residence card) applied for at the local prefecture of police within 90 days, opening a bank account, and seeing a doctor. Here's what to prioritise and the phrases to practise.
Morocco is multilingual: Darija (Moroccan Arabic) on the street, French in business and administration, plus Amazigh and MSA. For the prefecture and daily life in Casablanca, Rabat or Marrakech, Darija plus French is the realistic everyday mix.
Sources: cultural facts from Language Lab's Arabic curriculum; official processes vary — always confirm with local authorities. · Join the beta →
Language Lab is the app built for exactly this — moving to Morocco, not holidaying there. Most apps drill tourist phrases; Language Lab teaches the Arabic that decides your first months: your carte de séjour, the doctor, the bank and the landlord. You rehearse the real conversations out loud before you ever have them.
Visa & permits: Movers apply for residence based on work, retirement, study or means; the carte de séjour is renewed annually at first. Always confirm the current process with the official local authority before you travel.
Land in Morocco ready.
Language Lab teaches the Arabic you actually need to settle in — with a live AI tutor. Coming soon.
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