Riad investment in Marrakech Medina remains one of the most compelling entry points into Morocco’s premium hospitality real estate market. When an asset of this scale — approximately 999 m² of total built area, anchored in the Lakssour / Mouassine hospitality district — comes to market off-book, it represents precisely the kind of opportunity that serious investors rarely encounter.
CHANTIER ROYAL Real Estate Investment is pleased to present this off-market heritage riad for review by qualified investors. The asset is positioned at the intersection of authentic Moroccan heritage architecture and boutique hospitality conversion potential. All details in this article are presented for informational purposes only. All figures and assessments are preliminary and subject to full independent due diligence.
A Rare Off-Market Riad Opportunity in Marrakech Medina
The Marrakech Medina hospitality real estate market is characterised by a structural imbalance between demand and supply. International tourism to Marrakech continues to grow — the city receives over 4 million visitors per year — while the inventory of quality, large-format heritage riads available for acquisition remains extremely limited. Properties of this scale, in this location, rarely enter the market through conventional channels.
This asset is located in the Lakssour / Mouassine area, one of the Medina’s most commercially active and culturally significant hospitality districts. The immediate neighbourhood is home to established boutique riads, high-rated guesthouses, and a mature luxury tourism ecosystem that creates a natural demand floor for well-positioned accommodation assets.
What makes this opportunity structurally compelling is not simply location — it is scale, architectural integrity, and scarcity. A heritage riad with an estimated total built area of approximately 999 m², retaining original zellige floors, horseshoe arches, carved cedar elements, and an exceptional central courtyard configuration, at this asking price point, represents a genuine off-market investment thesis for the right buyer.
Large-format heritage riads in Marrakech Medina’s active hospitality corridors are increasingly scarce. Most comparable assets in Lakssour / Mouassine are already operating as boutique riads or private residences. New inventory is limited by the physical constraints of Medina urban fabric and heritage preservation regulations.
Asset Snapshot
The following table summarises the key asset data available at this stage. All surface areas and development potential figures are to be confirmed during formal due diligence. Documentation is available upon request to qualified investors.
| Asset type | Traditional heritage riad — existing structure |
| Location | Lakssour / Mouassine district, Marrakech Medina |
| Nearby landmark | Sidi El Ghazouani area — active hospitality corridor |
| Asking price | USD $1,200,000 (approximately 12,000,000 MAD) |
| Official parcel area | 401 m² (Plan Parcellaire — Dossier 2024) |
| Est. ground footprint | ~463 m² (commercial reference — to be verified) |
| Est. total built area | ~999 m² (to be confirmed by architect metric survey) |
| Potential suites / rooms | 10–14 (subject to architectural design and licensing) |
| Condition | To renovate / restore — structural audit required |
| Legal status | Non-immatriculée / Milkya — Plan Parcellaire available |
| Documentation | Available upon request to qualified investors |
| Potential use | Boutique riad, luxury guesthouse, wellness riad, hybrid hotel |
| Investment positioning | Heritage-sensitive restoration → boutique hospitality conversion |
Why Lakssour / Mouassine Matters for Investors
Location within Marrakech Medina is not uniform. The Medina covers a substantial area, and the commercial, cultural, and hospitality value of a given property is heavily influenced by its precise positioning within the urban fabric. Lakssour and Mouassine represent two of the most strategically valuable districts for hospitality investment within the Medina.
Tourism density: The area sits within walking distance of Jemaa El Fna, the city’s principal tourism anchor. Foot traffic from international visitors is consistent year-round, with clear peak periods during Moroccan cultural events, school holidays, and the December–February European winter season.
Hospitality ecosystem: The immediate neighbourhood includes operating boutique riads with verified guest reviews, rated at 4 and above, with daily rates positioning them in the $200–$500 bracket. This confirms active market demand for quality heritage accommodation at this price point.
Supply constraints: The Medina’s urban fabric is dense and regulated. Opportunities for new-build hospitality development are essentially non-existent. Existing heritage structures represent the entire available supply, and large-format assets in this corridor are rarely transacted. This creates a structural pricing floor for well-restored assets.
Cultural and experiential positioning: GCC and European travellers increasingly seek authentic cultural immersion rather than standardised hotel experiences. Marrakech Medina riads deliver this experience inherently — the architecture, the courtyard, the zellige, the proximity to souks and cultural monuments — creating a hospitality product that cannot be replicated in a modern hotel.
Architectural and Heritage Value
Based on site photography and the Plan Parcellaire reviewed by CHANTIER ROYAL, this asset retains a significant portion of its original Moroccan heritage architectural elements. These represent both the primary aesthetic asset of the property and the most significant value-creation lever through heritage-sensitive restoration.
Central courtyard (patio): The riad’s courtyard is of substantial scale, with traditional zellige mosaic floors in good original condition. The courtyard configuration — open to sky, with peripheral arcades — is the defining spatial element of the Moroccan riad typology and the primary selling point for boutique hospitality positioning.
Horseshoe arches and arcade structure: Multiple horseshoe arches frame the courtyard perimeter across all four wings. The arcade structure provides the principal circulation and social space that supports a boutique riad operating model.
Zellige and tadelakt: Original zellige tile work is visible throughout the courtyard floor, lower wall borders, and decorative niches. The quality and extent of the original zellige makes this asset significantly more valuable than a comparable structure where these elements have been removed or damaged.
Carved cedar and moucharabieh: Exceptional carved cedar elements — doors, window screens, ceiling details, and an ornate fountain niche with full stucco surround — are present throughout the property. These artisanal elements, produced by traditional maâlem craftsmen, represent considerable embedded value and are extremely costly to reproduce.
While the architectural elements described above are visible from site photography, a full structural engineering audit and certified architect metric survey are mandatory before any investment commitment. Visible cracks, moisture penetration, and general ageing of finishes are noted and must be professionally assessed. Renovation cost estimates are preliminary until such audits are completed.
Boutique Hospitality Conversion Potential
The scale, courtyard configuration, and multi-level layout of this riad support several hospitality conversion scenarios. All scenarios are indicative and subject to licensing, regulatory approval, structural feasibility, and full due diligence.
Boutique Luxury Riad (10–14 suites)
The most direct and commercially proven conversion model for this asset type. Operating riads in the Mouassine corridor consistently achieve ADRs of $250–$500 per night for well-positioned 5-suite to 12-suite properties. A larger, premium-positioned property with strong heritage restoration and amenities (pool, hammam, rooftop terrace) could target the upper end of this range.
Wellness Riad Concept
The scale of the property supports integration of a dedicated hammam, treatment rooms, and wellness programming alongside standard accommodation. This positions the asset within the growing luxury wellness travel segment, which commands significant ADR premiums above standard boutique riad rates.
Private Cultural Residence / Event Venue
A hybrid model combining private accommodation with curated cultural events, art residencies, or private dining experiences. This model targets a premium ultra-high-net-worth clientele and enables higher per-night rates through exclusive buyout pricing.
Hybrid Hotel / Maison d’Hôtes
A licensed Maison d’Hôtes operating model would allow the property to list on mainstream OTA platforms (Booking.com, Airbnb Luxe, Mr & Mrs Smith) under a regulated hospitality classification. This model supports the broadest market reach and most scalable revenue model. Feasibility requires confirmation from Moroccan tourism authorities and local Arrondissement.
Preliminary Investment Logic
The following represents a high-level, preliminary investment framework based on comparable Marrakech Medina riad investment data and CHANTIER ROYAL’s market knowledge. All figures are indicative estimates only and must be validated through formal due diligence, structural audit, and quantity survey before any investment decision.
Acquisition price: USD $1,200,000
Acquisition costs (notary, legal, titrage ~8%): ~$96,000–$114,000
Renovation budget estimate (heritage premium): ~$850,000–$1,100,000
FF&E, branding and soft costs: ~$100,000–$200,000
Total project cost range (indicative): ~$2.25M–$2.65M
Potential revenue (base case — 12 suites, $320 ADR, 55% occupancy): ~$770,000/yr
Potential NOI (indicative, ~30% opex): ~$540,000/yr
Indicative yield on total investment: ~20–24%
All figures are preliminary assumptions. Subject to due diligence, structural audit, licensing outcome, and market conditions. CHANTIER ROYAL makes no revenue guarantee.
Comparable renovated riad investment data from the Marrakech Medina market — including documented projects at the $3,000–$5,000 per m² total-cost range for heritage boutique properties — supports the feasibility of this investment thesis, subject to successful due diligence.
Key Due Diligence Points
CHANTIER ROYAL recommends that any qualified investor approach this asset with a structured due diligence process covering the following areas:
Ideal Buyer Profile
This opportunity is best suited to investors who understand both the value creation potential and the inherent risks of heritage Medina riad acquisition. CHANTIER ROYAL is presenting this asset to the following qualified investor segments:
Value Creation Path
CHANTIER ROYAL maps the value creation journey for this asset across eight sequential stages:
CHANTIER ROYAL’s Role in This Acquisition
CHANTIER ROYAL Real Estate Investment offers qualified investors end-to-end support throughout the acquisition, restoration, and operational lifecycle of this asset. Our team’s expertise in Marrakech real estate investment, heritage restoration strategy, and hospitality asset management provides investors with a single, experienced counterpart across all phases.
Specifically, CHANTIER ROYAL can support with: investor qualification and initial consultation; due diligence coordination (legal, technical, financial); legal and technical verification strategy; architectural brief and renovation strategy development; hospitality concept positioning and brand strategy; property management and concierge operations post-opening; and exit strategy preparation for institutional buyers.
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Frequently Asked Questions
At the time of this publication, the asset is classified as non-immatriculée — meaning it does not hold a registered Titre Foncier. Ownership is documented through Milkya (traditional adoul notarial deeds). A Plan Parcellaire (topographic parcel plan) is available upon request. Title registration (Titrage) is potentially feasible but must be formally confirmed through legal due diligence before any acquisition commitment.
Yes. Foreign nationals — including GCC, European, American, and international buyers — are legally permitted to purchase property in Morocco, including heritage riads in Marrakech Medina. Rental income generated from Moroccan real estate can be legally repatriated under Moroccan foreign exchange regulations. However, the legal process and risk profile vary significantly depending on whether the asset holds a Milkya or Titre Foncier, and independent legal counsel specialising in Moroccan real estate law is strongly recommended for all foreign buyers.
A Titre Foncier is a formal government-registered land title issued by ANCFCC (Agence Nationale de la Conservation Foncière, du Cadastre et de la Cartographie). It provides the highest level of legal certainty for property ownership in Morocco. A Milkya is a traditional form of property ownership documented through adoul (Moroccan notarial) deeds, predating the modern cadastral registration system. While Milkya ownership is legally recognised under Moroccan law, it carries a higher legal risk profile — particularly for institutional investors and foreign buyers — because ownership history can be complex and undisclosed heirs or disputes are harder to verify. Converting a Milkya to a Titre Foncier (Titrage) is possible in many cases and is strongly recommended before major investment commitments.
The architectural configuration, central patio, scale, and location of this riad indicate strong boutique hospitality conversion potential. However, this is subject to multiple verifications: a structural engineering assessment to confirm the building’s capacity, Marrakech Medina urban planning and heritage authority approval for any modifications, and formal Maison d’Hôtes licensing through Moroccan tourism authorities (Arrondissement and Ministry of Tourism). All these assessments are part of the mandatory due diligence process and must be completed before any development commitment.
Acquiring a heritage riad in Marrakech Medina requires a comprehensive due diligence process covering: (1) verification of the complete Milkya ownership chain and confirmation of the absence of undisclosed heirs or legal disputes; (2) assessment of Titre Foncier registration feasibility; (3) structural engineering audit by a certified engineer; (4) architect metric survey to confirm actual surface areas; (5) urban planning note and heritage restriction review; (6) pre-assessment of hospitality license feasibility from Moroccan tourism authorities; (7) Medina access and logistics evaluation; and (8) full tax and notary cost review. CHANTIER ROYAL can coordinate this process on behalf of qualified investors.
CHANTIER ROYAL Real Estate Investment provides qualified investors with end-to-end support throughout the full investment lifecycle: investor qualification and initial confidential discussion; due diligence coordination across legal, structural, and commercial dimensions; legal and technical verification strategy; renovation strategy and budget framework; hospitality concept positioning and brand development; post-acquisition asset management; and property management and concierge operations for the operating riad. We are positioned as the investor’s single experienced counterpart in Marrakech throughout the entire process.
Request the Confidential Investment Teaser
Qualified investors may request the full confidential investment teaser, documentation summary, preliminary renovation cost breakdown, and a private discussion with CHANTIER ROYAL’s acquisition team.