Four venues stacked on one Rue Ibn Aicha address, with live bands playing every night of the week from 10pm.
Montecristo runs a whole night out under one roof on Rue Ibn Aicha, where Hivernage meets Guéliz. The official program lists four spaces: a restaurant, a live music bar, a sky lounge on the roof, and a nightclub that carries the crowd into the early hours. Most regulars treat it as a progression, dinner first, then the band, then upstairs or down to dance.
The live bar is the reason to come. Bands play every night of the week from 10pm to 2am, working through rock, pop, soul, and blues standards, and Tripadvisor reviewers repeatedly single out the musicians as the best part of the venue. One recent review called the live music phenomenal and the band legit, with an incredibly talented guitar player.
Who would hate it? Anyone after a quiet drink or local prices. This is a dressed-up, big-energy room with bottle service economics, and budget drinkers will feel the bill.
The decor leans into the Cuban name: dark wood, leather, red accents, and a haze of theatrical lighting across the stage. Wanderlog's Marrakech party roundup lists Montecristo among the city's essential nightlife stops, and the room is built for volume, with the bar two or three deep once the band starts. The rooftop sky lounge gives smokers and talkers an escape from the noise.
Stick to the classics. Mojitos and whisky highballs move fastest and suit the Cuban styling; the cocktail list is competent rather than experimental. Expect international pricing, with cocktails from around 150 dirhams and bottle service climbing steeply from there. Reviewers on Tripadvisor flag the prices as high for Marrakech and note that the band takes paid song requests, a custom that surprises some visitors.
The crowd mixes well-off locals, expats, and hotel guests from the Hivernage strip, and it skews dressy; trainers and shorts read out of place after 10pm. The room shifts around midnight, when the restaurant tables clear and the club floor takes over.