L'Mida

Rooftop Bars $$

A chic Moroccan table with one of the highest rooftops in the medina, steps from the spice square. No alcohol, no compromise: signature fruit mocktails, mint tea at sunset, and the Atlas Mountains on the horizon.

L'Mida sits at 78 Bis Derb Nkhel, a narrow alley off Rahba Kdima, the spice square at the center of the Marrakech medina. Two friends, Omar and Simo, opened it as a chic Moroccan table, and the name means exactly that in Darija, the local dialect. The kitchen belongs to chef Nargisse Benkabbou, the cookbook author behind My Moroccan Food, who reworks traditional recipes with a seasonal, avant garde hand.

Here is the honest framing: L'Mida serves no alcohol. If your evening requires a Negroni, walk fifteen minutes to Café Arabe in Marrakech, which holds a license. What L'Mida offers instead is the best argument in the medina that a rooftop evening does not depend on a wine list. The signature fruit mocktails are composed drinks, not afterthoughts, and at 45 MAD they cost a third of a hotel bar cocktail.

Top 25 Restaurants calls the rooftop terrace the restaurant's crown jewel, and the description holds up. The terrace ranks among the highest in the medina, with a view across the rooftops to the Atlas Mountains and jasmine scent drifting up from the garden below. Reservations matter: the room seats around 30, the rooftop is the seat everyone wants, and the restaurant books out in high season, per the official site and Tripadvisor reviewers.

The building is a traditional Marrakchi house on two levels, redesigned by Noon Interior Studio. White marble tables, deep green and mustard benches, and rattan seating set a tone that blends traditional craftsmanship with an industrial edge. The materials are the point: this is Moroccan artistry presented without souvenir shop clutter.

Upstairs, the terrace runs green with planting and pop color accents. Come an hour before sunset, take the rooftop seat, and watch the medina turn amber while the call to prayer rolls across the rooftops. Winter evenings get cold up there, so bring a layer after dark.

L'Mida hides in Derb Nkhel, a narrow alley off Rahba Kdima, about ten minutes on foot from Jemaa el-Fna. Walk into the spice square, find the alley on its north side, and look for the discreet doorway at number 78 Bis. Petits taxis drop at the edge of the medina; the last stretch is walking only.

The kitchen runs from noon to 11pm daily, and the rooftop is open in both sessions. Lunch is the easier walk-in; dinner on the terrace needs a reservation most of the year. For the wider picture of the quarter, our medina bars guide for Marrakech maps every terrace and courtyard worth your evening, and the date night bars in Marrakech page sets L'Mida alongside the licensed alternatives.

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