Best Coffee in Taghazout
Specialty roasters and laptop-friendly coffee shops, ranked by price with verified WiFi and work-friendly scores.
Taghazout has 5 laptop-friendly coffee shops for remote workers, with an average coffee price of $1.80. The most affordable is Oasis Cafe at $1 per coffee. Every spot in our guide is verified for quality coffee and a workspace that supports productivity — WiFi reliability, power outlets, and the kind of ambiance that makes long sessions enjoyable.
Coffee Culture in Taghazout
Moroccan coffee tradition centers on two drinks: "noss noss" (half-half), which is espresso mixed with equal parts steamed milk served in a small glass, and the ubiquitous mint tea, which technically competes with coffee for the national drink title. Noss noss costs 10-15 MAD ($1-1.50) at local cafes and is ordered by simply saying "noss noss, afak" (please). The drink reflects Morocco's French colonial coffee heritage filtered through local tastes — strong, small, and always served with sugar nearby. Traditional cafes in the village serve it alongside msemen flatbread and honey for a classic Moroccan breakfast.
The international surf community has layered a specialty coffee scene on top of the traditional one. Cafes like Teapot and spots along the main Taghazout road now serve flat whites, V60 pour-overs, and oat milk lattes at 30-50 MAD ($3-5) — still cheap by global standards. Some source beans from Moroccan micro-roasters experimenting with beans from Ethiopia and Brazil. Fresh-squeezed orange juice at 5-10 MAD ($0.50-1) from street vendors competes with coffee as the preferred morning fuel, and avocado juice at 15-20 MAD is a local specialty worth trying alongside your espresso.
Oasis Cafe
Oasis Cafe hides behind a petrol station on the road between Tamraght and Taghazout, its entrance giving no hint of the garden compound that opens up beyond. The setting is built around water and greenery — a waterfall feature, lush tropical plants, covered seating areas, and even a children's playground tucked into the landscaping. The space feels like a walled garden carved from the dry coastal hillside, offering shade and calm that contrasts sharply with the exposed, sun-baked roads outside. The crowd is sparse and local-leaning: Moroccan families, a few surfers who learned about the spot from their riad hosts, and remote workers who discovered it through the nomad grapevine.
WiFi connects at approximately 30 Mbps with good reliability, strong enough for video calls and standard remote work in an area where connectivity can be inconsistent. Power outlets are available in the covered seating areas, and the quiet noise level — buffered by the garden walls and flowing water — makes this one of the most peaceful work environments in the Taghazout zone. Seating comfort is good with a mix of covered tables and garden chairs, though the outdoor setting means you're subject to temperature shifts between morning cool and midday warmth.
More Coffee Shops in Taghazout
World of Waves Restaurant
Beachfront boutique-hotel restaurant where you can literally dine with your toes in the sand while watching surfers carve the Atlantic swell — it is the only beachfront spot in Taghazout that serves alcoholic beverages, a rare perk in this part of Morocco. The restaurant provides free WiFi, EU-standard power outlets, and a relaxed atmosphere that digital nomad blogs describe as a tranquil spot to work on your laptop while enjoying the sea breeze. Morning sessions before the lunch crowd are ideal for focused laptop work with sunrise ocean views, though service can be inconsistent during busy periods.
Adam's Cafe
Small, family-run gem in Tamraght with a leafy terrace, fibre-optic WiFi, and a handful of power outlets scattered among the outdoor tables. There is no minimum consumption and no day-pass system: just order a coffee or lunch and settle in for as long as you like, making it the most laid-back work option in the area. The menu leans toward hearty Moroccan home cooking with plenty of healthy and vegan options, and the cappuccinos are famously topped with a mountain of chantilly cream. Draws a mellow crowd of surfers and remote workers who prefer a quieter pace than the bustling Taghazout center.
Windy Bay Restaurant
Perched on the oceanfront in central Taghazout with a dedicated 120-square-metre coworking space upstairs featuring 200/20 Mbps fibre, continental power sockets, a printer, and a kitchenette with free tea and coffee. Day passes for the coworking space cost just 100 MAD (roughly 10 EUR), and the space caps at 25 people, keeping it productive without feeling empty. The ground-floor restaurant serves excellent Moroccan and Mediterranean cuisine with panoramic Atlantic views that make sunset sessions unforgettable. With 2,000+ reviews and a reputation as the best coworking-cafe hybrid in the Taghazout area, it is the go-to for serious remote workers who want ocean views without sacrificing fast internet.
Teapot Cafe
Social hub for travellers and digital nomads on Taghazout's main drag, with a first-floor coworking lounge bathed in natural light, communal desks, comfortable seating, and numerous power outlets throughout. The coworking space is free to use with a minimum 50 MAD (5 EUR) food or drink order, making it one of the most affordable work spots in town. The cafe is known for serving some of the best coffee and fresh juices in Taghazout alongside a solid food menu. It can get busy during peak hours given its central location and popularity, but the atmosphere is buzzy and motivating rather than distracting.
Price Comparison
| Cafe | Coffee Price | Score | WiFi | Hours |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ☕Oasis Cafe | $1 | 7 | 30 Mbps | 00:00–23:59 |
| World of Waves Restaurant | $2 | 7 | 30 Mbps | 08:00–21:00 |
| Adam's Cafe | $2 | 7 | 50 Mbps | 08:15–23:00 |
| Windy Bay Restaurant | $2 | 9 | 200 Mbps | 09:00–22:00 |
| Teapot Cafe | $2 | 8 | 50 Mbps | 09:30–20:30 |
Why Taghazout for Remote Work?
This Moroccan surf village has quietly built one of the strongest cafe-work scenes on Africa's Atlantic coast. The 5 mapped cafes average an impressive 72 Mbps WiFi at just $1.80 per coffee, powered by fiber connections that coworking spaces like SunDesk and Coworksurf have brought to the village. Fixed broadband averages 62 Mbps across the area, and the growing coliving scene bundles reliable internet into accommodation packages along the Taghazout-Tamraght coastal strip.
A medium-sized nomad community peaks from November through March when Atlantic swells deliver world-class surf at Anchor Point and Killer Point. English proficiency is medium — sufficient in the international cafe scene but limited in local shops where French, Arabic, and Tashelhit Berber dominate. At $1,200 per month, Taghazout offers over 300 sunny days, $3-5 tagine dinners, and a laid-back atmosphere that makes work-life balance feel effortless rather than aspirational. The walkability score of 7 keeps the compact village navigable on foot.
Internet outages still happen during storms, and power cuts can disrupt work unexpectedly — keep your laptop charged and a Maroc Telecom SIM as hotspot backup. There is no ATM in Taghazout village, requiring trips to Aourir or Agadir for cash withdrawals. Street harassment affects solo women travelers, though the village feels significantly safer than Morocco's imperial cities. Alcohol is largely unavailable in local establishments due to conservative culture, and the community thins out considerably during summer when surf conditions flatten and temperatures climb.
Tips for Working From Cafes in Taghazout
Find Apartments Through Local Networks
Airbnb prices run 2-3 times higher than local rentals in Taghazout. Join the Taghazout Digital Nomads Facebook group, walk the village for Arabic signs, or ask fellow nomads for landlord contacts. Always negotiate — the first quoted price is never final.
Get a Maroc Telecom SIM Day One
Maroc Telecom has the strongest coastal coverage around Taghazout. A SIM costs $2-3 and 30 GB of data runs $17 per month. Use it as your primary hotspot backup for cafe WiFi outages and power cuts during storms.
Stock Cash Before Arriving
There is no ATM in Taghazout village. Withdraw MAD at Agadir airport or Aourir before heading to the village. Most cafes and restaurants are cash-only, and running out means an unplanned trip to town.
Buy Every 2-3 Hours
Order a drink or snack every couple of hours to support the cafe and keep your seat.
Test WiFi First
Run a quick speed test before settling in to avoid surprises during important calls.
Visit Off-Peak
Arrive 8-11am or 3-5pm to grab the best seats and the fastest WiFi.
Bring Headphones
Noise-cancelling headphones are essential for blocking lunch rushes and chat.
Carry a Power Bank
Outlets aren't guaranteed everywhere — a backup keeps you working.
Respect Quiet Zones
Take long video calls outside or in coworking spaces, not in quiet cafes.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Plan your stay in Taghazout
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