Morocco
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- Capital City
Rabat
- Currency
Moroccan dirham (DH, MAD)
- Languages
Arabic
- Population size
37,112,080
Employment termination in Morocco
Termination process
Employee contracts can be terminated if a just cause is established, such as dishonesty, negligence, fraud, or any other work-related offenses and prior notice should be provided in advance.
Notice period
Notice periods under Moroccan law are dependent on an employee’s tenure, i.e., how long they’ve worked with the employer.
Notice periods for executive staff
1 month: up to 1 year of employment
2 months: 1 – 5 years of employment
3 months: More than 5 years of employment
Notice periods for non-executive staff
8 days: Up to a year of employment
1 month: 1 – 5 years of employment
2 months: 5+ years of employment
Severance pay
Employees are entitled to a severance package after having worked with the employer for at least six months, structured according to the employee’s tenure with the employer.
First five years of employment: 96 hours pay
6 – 10 years of employment: 144 hours pay
11 – 15 years of employment: 192 hours pay
15+ years of employment: 240 hours pay
Probation periods
Probationary periods are allowed and may be renewed once. For indefinite term contracts, their initial durations are:
- 3 months for executives
- 1 1/2 months for white collar workers
- 15 days for blue collar workers
Fixed term contracts may have probationary periods of up to one day per week of the contract, with a cap of 2 weeks for contracts of less than six months and a cap of one month for contracts of longer than six months.