Independent
La Mamounia
La Mamounia is one of those rare hotels that genuinely earns its legendary status — a 1923 art deco palace reimagined by Patrick Jouin and Sanjit Manku into something that feels simultaneously palatial and alive, where every corridor, garden path, and tiled archway has been hyper-considered. The grounds alone — lush olive trees, manicured cacti, garden pavilions, a Pierre Hermé tea room — justify the stay, and the Moroccan design language is executed with more authenticity and depth than any competitor in the city. Service is where the picture gets more complicated: repeat guests rave about it, but a consistent thread of reports describes uneven frontline attentiveness, occasional snobbery at the door, and management that can fall short on service recovery when things go wrong. Dining shows the same split — the Sunday brunch and the revamped Italian restaurant draw genuine praise, while the buffet and poolside options underwhelm on flavor despite strong presentation. At rates starting around $900 and climbing to $13,000 a night, you're buying the most iconic address in Morocco, and for most guests that bargain holds — but the gap between the hotel's physical perfection and its human delivery is real enough to mention.