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Morocco 2030 World Cup Stadiums: Host Cities, Capacities and Venue Guide

Morocco will co-host the 2030 FIFA World Cup with Spain and Portugal, and its stadium plan is one of the biggest parts of the project. The Moroccan venue list centers on six cities and six major stadiums: Tangier, Marrakech, Agadir, Rabat, Fez and Benslimane-Casablanca.

This guide explains the confirmed Moroccan stadiums for 2030, using current official venue information available in May 2026. Capacities, construction details and final match allocations can still evolve before the tournament, so the page is framed as a planning guide rather than a final ticket map.

Morocco 2030 Stadiums at a Glance

  • Grand Stadium Hassan II, Benslimane-Casablanca: 115,000 gross capacity planned.
  • Grand Stadium of Tangier: 75,600 gross capacity planned.
  • Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium, Rabat: 68,700 gross capacity planned.
  • Stadium of Fez: 55,800 gross capacity planned.
  • Grand Stadium of Agadir: 46,000 gross capacity planned.
  • Grand Stadium of Marrakech: 45,860 gross capacity planned.

Grand Stadium Hassan II: Benslimane-Casablanca

The headline project is the new Grand Stadium Hassan II in Benslimane-Casablanca. With a planned gross capacity of 115,000 seats, it is designed to be Morocco's showpiece venue and one of the largest football stadiums in the world.

The stadium is listed as ongoing construction, and its scale makes it central to Morocco's 2030 image. Even if final match allocations are decided later, this venue will likely be the main symbol of Morocco's World Cup infrastructure push.

Tangier: Grand Stadium of Tangier

Tangier gives Morocco a northern gateway venue close to Europe. The Grand Stadium of Tangier is planned at 75,600 gross capacity for 2030, making it one of the country's largest tournament stadiums.

The city also has strong travel appeal, with ferry links, a major port, fast rail connections and a location between the Atlantic and Mediterranean. For visitors, Tangier can work as both a match city and an entry point into Morocco.

Rabat: Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium

Rabat's Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium is planned at 68,700 gross capacity for 2030. As the capital's major football venue, it is important not only for matches but also for the image of Morocco's administrative and cultural center.

Rabat is likely to be one of the easiest host cities for visitors who want a calmer base than Casablanca or Marrakech. It has coastal neighborhoods, historic sites, rail access and a more relaxed city rhythm.

Fez: Stadium of Fez

The Stadium of Fez is planned at 55,800 gross capacity for 2030. Fez brings a different kind of host-city identity: older, more traditional and strongly tied to Morocco's spiritual and intellectual heritage.

For fans, Fez could combine World Cup matches with one of the country's deepest cultural experiences. The challenge will be balancing match traffic with the historic medina and visitor flow.

Agadir: Grand Stadium of Agadir

The Grand Stadium of Agadir is planned at 46,000 gross capacity. Agadir adds a beach and resort dimension to Morocco's World Cup map, with sunshine, hotels, Atlantic coastline and access to Souss-Massa and nearby surf towns.

It may appeal to fans who want a softer match-city experience, with beach time and easier relaxation between games. Transport and hotel demand will still need careful planning during tournament weeks.

Marrakech: Grand Stadium of Marrakech

The Grand Stadium of Marrakech is planned at 45,860 gross capacity. Marrakech is already Morocco's most famous tourism city, so its World Cup role will connect football with medina visits, gardens, restaurants, riads and day trips to the Atlas Mountains.

Demand in Marrakech will likely be high because many fans may choose it even when they do not have match tickets. Booking early and planning transport carefully will matter more here than in quieter cities.

What Still Needs Confirmation

The venue list and planned capacities are clear, but several details may change before 2030: exact match allocations, ticket categories, fan zones, transport operations, security plans and final stadium delivery milestones.

Fans should be careful with claims about the final, opening match or semi-finals until FIFA and tournament organizers publish official allocations. Stadium capacity alone does not guarantee a specific match.

Travel Planning for Fans

Morocco's host cities are spread across the country, so fans should think in routes, not only stadium names. Tangier, Rabat and Casablanca can connect well by high-speed rail. Marrakech and Agadir work better as southern bases, while Fez is useful for cultural itineraries and connections toward the Middle Atlas.

A smart World Cup trip might combine two or three cities instead of trying to chase every match. Distances, ticket availability and hotel prices will shape the best plan.

Final Takeaway

Morocco's 2030 stadium plan is ambitious: one giant new venue near Casablanca and five upgraded or expanded stadiums across major host cities. The strongest page for fans is not hype about dream stadiums, but a clear guide to where the venues are, what their planned capacities are, and what still needs official confirmation.

For wider planning, see our Morocco travel guide, Marrakech itinerary and Agadir guide.

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