Restaurant in Marrakesh, Morocco
Moorish Garden Seclusion

Amanjena is the right choice for a special occasion or group retreat that demands genuine spatial privacy and a setting outside Marrakesh's medina intensity. The first Aman property in Africa, it delivers Moorish architecture and private pavilion living around a central reflecting pool. Best for multi-night stays or private group events — less suited to standalone dinners from elsewhere in the city.
The most common assumption about Amanjena is that it functions like a conventional luxury hotel with a good restaurant attached. That framing undersells it considerably. Amanjena is a destination property where the physical environment — not just the dining or sleeping arrangements — is the primary reason to book. If you are coming to Marrakesh purely for the medina and its souks, staying 12 km out on the Route de Ouarzazate will feel like a miscalculation. If you are coming for a special occasion, a retreat, or a group event that demands a genuinely different spatial setting, Amanjena changes the calculus.
Amanjena was the first Aman property on the African continent, which matters in one specific way: it was designed with the same obsessive spatial logic that defines Aman's approach globally, applied to Moroccan vernacular architecture. The pavilions and maisons are arranged around a large central bassin , a reflecting pool drawn from Moorish garden tradition , and the effect is one of deliberate removal from the city's intensity. For a special occasion dinner, a private celebration, or a business event that requires atmosphere rather than a generic ballroom, this setting is difficult to match in Marrakesh.
The private dining angle is where Amanjena makes the clearest case for itself. Groups that want full spatial privacy , not just a curtained-off section of a main room , will find that an Aman property of this scale is structured to accommodate that. The maison format, in particular, gives larger parties (typically four guests and above) accommodation and entertaining space that functions as a self-contained unit. For a milestone birthday, an anniversary trip, or a corporate retreat where the environment is part of the message, that kind of separation from a shared dining room is a meaningful distinction. Smaller parties of two considering a purely romantic dinner should weigh whether the journey from the medina is worth the additional logistics for a single meal, or whether staying on-property for multiple days makes the experience cohere.
Amanjena sits roughly 12 km south of Marrakesh's medina, which means the decision to stay or dine here is an intentional one. You are not going to wander in after a day in the souks. That physical distance is part of the design: Aman built this property for guests who want to leave the city behind, not dip into it intermittently. For diners visiting from elsewhere in Marrakesh, factor in transfer time and cost. For guests celebrating a special occasion who want the full setting to themselves, the distance is the point.
Booking is relatively direct compared to the most-demanded dining rooms in Marrakesh , Amanjena does not operate on the same razor-thin reservation windows as La Grande Table Marocaine at Royal Mansour, which tends to fill weeks out for prime slots. That said, for major dates or larger group configurations, contacting the property directly and early is the right move. Marrakesh's high season runs roughly October through April, and competition for quality private dining across the city's luxury properties intensifies during that window.
Reservations: Contact the property directly; advance booking recommended for groups and high season. Dress: Smart casual at minimum; the setting warrants dressing up for a special occasion. Getting there: Approximately 12 km from the medina , factor in a taxi or private transfer. Leading for: Couples celebrating, small groups wanting private space, multi-night retreat guests.
For context across Marrakesh's dining and hospitality scene, see our full Marrakesh restaurants guide, hotels guide, and bars guide. Elsewhere in Morocco, Cafe Clock in Fes, Andalus in Tangier, and La Grande Table Marocaine Royal Mansour Casablanca offer useful points of comparison for different trip profiles. For those interested in Morocco's wine country, Château Roslane is worth adding to the itinerary. Within Marrakesh itself, Al Fassia and Amal Gueliz Center offer grounded, locally-rooted alternatives for those who want to stay closer to the medina. For a broader frame of reference at the world-class end of special occasion dining, Le Bernardin in New York and Lazy Bear in San Francisco illustrate what peak-occasion dining delivers in a different cultural register. Other Marrakesh options worth considering include +61, La Grande Brasserie by Helene Darroze, and Sesamo for a range of price points and styles. For those visiting the coast, Hyatt Place Taghazout Bay in Agadir rounds out the regional picture. Explore our Marrakesh wineries guide and experiences guide for broader trip planning.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amanjena | Easy | ||
| La Grande Table Marocaine - Royal Mansour | Moroccan Cuisine | Unknown | |
| Palais Ronsard | Moroccan French | Unknown | |
| L’Italien par Jean-Georges | French Moroccan | Unknown | |
| La Villa des Orangers | Moroccan Cuisine | Unknown | |
| Le Jardin d'Hiver | Moroccan Traditional | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Amanjena and alternatives.
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