MOROCCO · CULTURE
Key Facts
—When & where: Mawazine 2026 runs from 19 to 27 June across Rabat and neighbouring Salé.
—Scale: It is one of the world’s largest music festivals, drawing 3.75 million people in 2025.
—Mostly free: Around 90% of the concerts are free to attend, spread across seven stages.
—Global headliners: Major Lazer, Nicky Jam, Rema, Tyga, ITZY and Tamer Hosny are among the names.
—Opening night: Syrian diva Mayada El Hennawy and French rapper Ninho open the festival on 19 June.
—The mix: The bill spans Afrobeats, reggaeton, K-pop, Arab pop, jazz and Malian roots music.
Mawazine 2026 returns to Rabat and Salé from 19 to 27 June, turning the Moroccan capital into one of the world’s biggest stages for live music. Most of its concerts are free, and the lineup runs from Major Lazer and Nicky Jam to Rema, Tamer Hosny and the K-pop group ITZY.
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What to expect from Mawazine 2026
This is the 21st edition of a festival whose full name, Mawazine – Rhythms of the World, captures the idea. For nine days it scatters concerts across seven stages in Rabat and the twin city of Salé.
The scale is hard to overstate. Mawazine drew 3.75 million people in 2025, ranking it among the largest music festivals anywhere in the world.
What makes that possible is the price. Around 90% of the concerts are free, which turns the Moroccan capital into a vast open-air party for a week each June.
The biggest international names play the OLM Souissi stage, which has drawn crowds well over 100,000 for a single show. Smaller stages lean into Arab, African and Moroccan traditions.
The other stages give the week its character. The Nahda stage is devoted to Arab music, while the Bouregreg, Chellah and Salé stages host African, world and Moroccan acts, and the Théâtre National Mohammed V hosts more intimate concerts.
Mawazine has grown since the early 2000s from a modest cultural event into a fixture of the global festival calendar. It is organised by the Maroc Cultures association.
A lineup that crosses every border
The opening night on 19 June sets the tone. Syrian diva Mayada El Hennawy performs at the Théâtre National Mohammed V, while French rap star Ninho headlines the OLM Souissi stage.
From there the genres pile up. Major Lazer bring their dancehall-pop on 20 June, and reggaeton star Nicky Jam takes the stage on 22 June.
Egyptian pop idol Tamer Hosny closes the festival on 27 June. In between come Nigerian Afrobeats star Rema, American rapper Tyga and the K-pop group ITZY.
The roots of the bill run just as deep. Malian icon Oumou Sangaré, American jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater, French-Comorian artist Imany and a roster of Moroccan stars round out a programme that spans four continents.
Moroccan stars anchor the home crowd, among them pop singer Hatim Ammor. The effect is a single bill where reggaeton, Afrobeats, Gulf pop and K-pop share the same nine days.
That spread is the festival’s signature. A fan can hear Saharan roots music one night and a global pop headliner the next, often without paying a dirham.
Why a free festival matters
Keeping most shows free is a deliberate choice. It lets families and young Moroccans who could never afford a ticket stand in the same crowd as international tourists.
That openness is also the festival’s stated mission, built around cultural diversity and exchange. The result is a rare meeting point for music from Africa, the Arab world, Europe, the Americas and Asia.
For Morocco, the payoff is soft power and tourism. A week of global headlines puts Rabat on the cultural map and fills its hotels and restaurants at the start of the summer season.
For the wider continent, Mawazine is a showcase. It places African artists on the same marquee as the biggest pop acts in the world, in front of millions.
It is also a statement of reach. Few events put Syrian, Malian, Nigerian, American and Korean artists on neighbouring stages within a single week.
Planning a visit
For travellers and expats already in the region, the timing is friendly. The festival opens the summer season, and Rabat is an easy train ride from Casablanca and a short hop from Marrakesh.
The free stages are first come, first served, so arriving early is the price of a good spot. A handful of premium shows are ticketed, but the bulk of the programme costs nothing.
Accommodation fills quickly once the dates land, so booking ahead pays off. Evenings are the heart of the festival, leaving daytime free for the coast or the medina.
Beyond the music, the host cities reward a wander. Rabat’s old medina, the Kasbah of the Udayas and the riverside in Salé are all within reach between concerts.
Frequently asked questions
When and where is Mawazine 2026?
Mawazine 2026 runs from 19 to 27 June across Rabat and the neighbouring city of Salé. It is the 21st edition of the festival.
Who is headlining Mawazine 2026?
Headliners include Major Lazer, Nicky Jam, Rema, Tyga, ITZY and Tamer Hosny. The opening night features Syrian singer Mayada El Hennawy and French rapper Ninho.
Is Mawazine free to attend?
Around 90% of the concerts are free, spread across seven stages. A small number of premium shows are ticketed.
How big is Mawazine?
It is one of the world’s largest music festivals, drawing 3.75 million people in 2025. Its main OLM Souissi stage has hosted crowds of well over 100,000.
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