
Tahiti Beach Club
Tahiti Beach Club is a daytime-to-evening venue on Boulevard de la Corniche that captures the beach club format popular across Mediterranean resort destinations. The setup includes a swimming pool, sun loungers, a bar, a restaurant, and a DJ booth. During the day, the pool and loungers fill with Casablanca's leisure class: families earlier, couples and young professionals later. As afternoon turns to evening, the DJ increases the tempo, cocktails replace sodas, and the atmosphere shifts toward a party. Summer weekends (June through September) produce the most energetic sessions, with the pool becoming part of the dance floor and the music carrying until sunset and beyond. Day access costs 100-200 MAD (9.25-18.50 EUR / 10-20 USD), sometimes waived with food and drink minimums. Cocktails cost 100-160 MAD (9.25-14.80 EUR / 10-16 USD). Beer runs 50-70 MAD (4.60-6.50 EUR / 5-7 USD). Food ranges from 80-200 MAD for burgers, salads, and grilled items.
What to Expect
A pool-centered venue where the progression from relaxation to party happens over hours rather than minutes. Early afternoon is calm: swimming, reading, occasional drinks. By 3 PM the music is audible. By 5 PM people are standing, dancing by the pool, and ordering cocktails. The transition is Tahiti's charm. The Atlantic Ocean and Casablanca's skyline provide the backdrop.
Relaxed, sun-soaked, and progressively social. Tahiti captures the Mediterranean beach club spirit on the Atlantic coast.
Deep house and lounge music during early afternoon. Progressive house and commercial dance as the day progresses. Summer peak sessions get energetic with vocal house and afrobeats.
Beach and resort wear during the day. Swimwear at the pool. As afternoon turns to evening, the standard shifts to resort casual. You're not walking into a nightclub, but looking put-together helps.
Summer visitors. Pool party enthusiasts. People who want a day-into-evening social experience. Couples and groups.
Cards and cash accepted at the bar and restaurant.
Price Range
Day access 100-200 MAD, cocktails 100-160 MAD, food 80-200 MAD
≈ EUR 9.25-18.50 access / $10-20
Hours
Daily 10 AM to 8 PM (summer to 10 PM), extended hours for special events
Insider Tip
The sweet spot is Saturday afternoon from 2 to 7 PM. Arrive early enough to get a decent lounger. The poolside bar is faster than the restaurant service. Bring sunscreen; the Atlantic reflects and the Casablanca sun is strong. The DJ sets peak at 5-6 PM during summer. If you want quiet pool time, come on a weekday.
Full Review
Tahiti Beach Club works best when you understand what it is and what it isn't. It's a daytime social venue built around a pool and the Casablanca coast. It's not a nightclub. The venue closes before the corniche clubs open. Its strength lies in the hours between 1 PM and 7 PM when the sun, the pool, and the gradually building music create an experience that indoor venues can't replicate.
The pool is the center of gravity. It's not enormous, but it's well-maintained and positioned to catch the Atlantic light. Loungers ring the pool, organized in concentric rows. The front row (poolside) commands the highest informal status. Arriving early on Saturday is the only way to secure one. The further back you go, the less immersed you are in the pool scene.
The bar operates from a station near the pool, serving cocktails, beer, and soft drinks. The cocktails are straightforward: mojitos, caipirinhas, and vodka-based drinks dominate. They're well-made and cold, which is what matters poolside. The restaurant section offers burgers, grilled fish, salads, and Moroccan dishes. Food quality is decent without being remarkable.
The DJ booth sits at one end of the pool area. During early afternoon, the music is background deep house. As the crowd builds and drinks accumulate, the DJ reads the room and pushes the energy upward. By 5 PM on a good summer Saturday, the poolside feels like a proper outdoor party. People stand in the shallow end of the pool with drinks. Groups dance on the deck. The atmosphere is joyful and communal.
The crowd is mixed but leans young and well-off. Casablanca families use the pool during the week and morning hours. The weekend afternoon crowd skews 25-40, professional, and social. There's a visible international segment, particularly French and Gulf visitors during summer.
The seasonal nature is the main limitation. In winter (November through March), the pool closes or operates at reduced capacity. The venue functions as a cafe and restaurant during colder months but loses its primary appeal. Plan your visit between May and October for the beach club experience.
Sunscreen is not optional. The Atlantic coast reflection intensifies UV exposure, and the Casablanca sun at poolside altitude is strong. The venue doesn't always provide shade for all loungers.
The Neighborhood
On Boulevard de la Corniche in the Ain Diab strip. Other beach clubs, restaurants, and nightlife venues are nearby along the boulevard. The Morocco Mall is within walking distance.
Getting There
Petit taxi from central Casablanca costs 30-50 MAD (2.75-4.60 EUR). From Maarif, 20-35 MAD. The venue is on the main boulevard and easy to find. Parking is available along the corniche.
Other Venues in Ain Diab

Le Balcon 33
Multi-level nightclub on the corniche with a terrace overlooking the Atlantic. House and commercial dance music. Attracts Casablanca's young professional crowd. Dress code enforced on weekends.

Ain Diab Club
One of the corniche's established nightclubs with a large dance floor and VIP sections. Music ranges from R&B to house depending on the night. Popular with a mixed Moroccan and international crowd.

La Bodega
Spanish-themed restaurant and bar on the corniche that transitions to a party venue after 11 PM. Tapas, sangria, and live music or DJ sets. More relaxed than the dedicated nightclubs.

Le Cabestan
Upscale seafood restaurant perched on the rocks at the western end of the corniche. The bar area draws a well-dressed crowd for sunset drinks. Less of a nightclub, more of a high-end social venue.