The TGV Rail Network
Al Boraq, Africa's first high-speed train — Tangier to Casablanca in 2h10, and the expansion south
Al Boraq launched on November 15, 2018 — the first high-speed rail service in Africa. The line runs 323 kilometres from Tangier to Casablanca via Kenitra, cutting the journey time from 4 hours 45 minutes to 2 hours 10 minutes. The trains — Alstom Euroduplex double-deck TGVs — run at a maximum speed of 320 km/h. The project cost approximately $2.4 billion, co-financed by France, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE.
The Tangier-Kenitra section is the high-speed segment — 186 kilometres of dedicated track built to European LGV standards. South of Kenitra, the trains run on upgraded conventional track at reduced speed. The engineering was demanding — the route crosses the Gharb plain, which required extensive ground stabilisation due to soft alluvial soil.
Passenger numbers have exceeded projections. Al Boraq carried over 3 million passengers in 2023. The service runs roughly every hour during peak times, with business and economy classes. The impact on the Tangier-Casablanca corridor has been significant — business travel that once required overnight stays can now be done as day trips.
The extension to Marrakech is the next phase. The Casablanca-Marrakech high-speed line — approximately 200 kilometres — is in advanced planning and early construction. When complete, it will connect Morocco's three largest cities and its two primary tourist destinations in a single high-speed corridor. Journey time from Tangier to Marrakech will drop from 8 hours to approximately 3 hours 30 minutes.
The broader vision is a national high-speed network connecting Tangier, Rabat, Casablanca, Marrakech, Fes, Meknes, and Oujda. The timeline extends to 2040. The World Cup in 2030 provides a deadline for the Marrakech extension and potentially an Agadir connection.
Morocco's rail ambition is strategic. The high-speed network positions Morocco as a modern, connected, investable country. It also concentrates development along the Atlantic corridor — reinforcing the economic dominance of the Tangier-Casablanca-Marrakech axis.
Explore the full interactive module — with route maps, ridership data, speed profiles, and the expansion timeline — at Dancing with Lions: https://www.dancingwiththelions.com/data/tgv-rail-network
Interactive Module
Data and visualisation by Dancing with Lions





