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Moroccan Rug Buying Guide — A Clear-Eyed Walkthrough

Buying a Moroccan rug well requires understanding what you are actually purchasing — not just visually, but structurally and economically. The market is wider than most categories of home furnishings: at the premium end sit museum-grade antiques selling at six figures; at the bottom sit machine-made polypropylene imitations at $200. Between those poles lies a spectrum where price, quality, and authenticity vary considerably and where most buyers make their decisions. This guide walks through every decision in order — tradition, size, quality, price, and verification — to land you confident in a purchase that lasts decades.

Step One — Choose the Tradition

The first decision is which Berber weaving tradition you want. Each has a distinct visual character and price profile. Beni Ourain — cream wool with dark geometric motifs, plush pile — is the contemporary design default; works in Scandinavian, mid-century modern, and minimalist interiors. Azilal — bright dyed motifs on cream — brings colour and artistic character. Boujaad — warm reds, ochres, terracotta — anchors warm-toned rooms. Boucherouite — recycled fabric in chaotic colour — bohemian, playful, lower price. Beni Mrirt — high-density Beni Ourain successor — collector-grade, more expensive. Kilim (Hanbel, Glaoua) — flat-woven, lighter, faster to make.

Match the tradition to the room. A bedroom wants the warmth of pile and the calm of Beni Ourain. A dining room benefits from the chair-glide of flat-woven Hanbel. A child's room or playful space welcomes Boucherouite. A formal living room can carry the precision of Beni Mrirt or the colour of Azilal. There is no single 'best' tradition; there is the right one for your room.

Step Two — Get the Size Right

The most common sizing mistake is undersizing. Designers' rule of thumb: the rug should extend at least 12 inches past either side of a sofa or bed in normal-scale rooms, and the front legs of furniture should rest on the rug. For a standard 86-inch three-cushion sofa with side chairs and a coffee table, that means 8×10 or 9×12 — not the 5×7 most online listings push toward buyers.

Standard sizes and where each fits: 3×5 — entryway, bedside, kitchen accent. 5×7 — apartment living room, foot of queen bed. 6×9 — mid-size living room, six-seat dining table, foot of king bed. 8×10 — primary living rooms, smaller dining rooms. 9×12 — open-plan living, full king bed, larger dining. 10×14 and up — great rooms, open-plan main floors with high ceilings.

Step Three — Verify Authenticity

Three checks separate authentic hand-knotted wool from machine-made or hand-tufted imitations. First — back of the rug. Always ask for a photograph of the reverse. Hand-knotted rugs show individual knots and weft lines visibly on the back; the pattern is legible from both sides. Machine-made and tufted rugs show uniform mesh or latex backing. Second — fringe. Genuine fringe is the continuation of the warp threads, structurally part of the rug. Pull gently; if it comes loose, it was sewn on (tufted or machine-made). Third — weight. A 5×7 hand-knotted wool rug weighs 11–15 kg. Significantly lighter is synthetic; significantly heavier (over 20 kg) is tufted with latex.

Beyond the structural checks: ask about provenance. A legitimate seller can name the specific co-operative or village, the approximate weaving period, and the wool source. Vague 'sourced in Morocco' descriptions without specifics are a red flag. Photographs that show only the pile side and never the back are another.

Step Four — Know the Price Bands

Honest price ranges for genuine hand-knotted wool Moroccan rugs, direct from Moroccan co-operatives or importers without intermediate retail markup. 3×5: $550–$900. 5×7: $1,100–$1,800. 6×9: $1,800–$2,800. 8×10: $3,200–$4,800. 9×12: $3,800–$5,800. 10×14: $4,500–$7,200. These are for standard 80-KPSI Beni Ourain in good wool grade. Higher-density Beni Mrirt: 1.8 to 2.5× these numbers. Vintage premium (40+ year): 1.5 to 3×.

Western boutique retail typically applies 2 to 4× markup over direct-import pricing. So a 9×12 Beni Ourain in a New York gallery often runs $12,000–$22,000. That markup pays for showroom, sales labour, and importer overhead — not additional craft value.

Step Five — Red Flags That Signal Counterfeit

Five warning signs of misrepresented product. One: a 9×12 'hand-knotted Moroccan rug' priced under $600. The labour math simply does not allow this — the rug is machine-made or tufted, regardless of marketing language. Two: 'Moroccan-style,' 'Berber-inspired,' or 'Moroccan-pattern' as the only descriptor. These phrases all indicate machine-made imitation. Three: no back-of-rug photograph in the listing, and the seller resists providing one. Four: 'sourced in Morocco' without any specific co-operative or tribe attribution. Five: 'discount' or 'sale' pricing that would put a rug at unsustainably low cost for genuine production.

When in doubt, ask the seller to provide: back-of-rug photograph, weight specification, co-operative or tribe name, approximate weaving period, and wool source region. A legitimate seller responds with specifics; a counterfeit seller deflects or provides vague answers.

Hvad du kan verificere om os

Direkte indkøb
Atlas-kooperativerIngen mellemmænd mellem væveren og dig.
Konstruktion
Håndknyttet uldVerificeret i hvert trin — aldrig maskintuftet.
Herkomst
Dokumenteret pr. stykkeLandsby, væveperiode og, hvor vi har det, væverens navn.
Returnering
14 dageI modtaget stand, fuld refundering af købsprisen.

Ofte stillede

Spørgsmål

How much should a Moroccan rug cost?
For genuine hand-knotted wool, direct from co-operative: 3×5 from $550, 5×7 from $1,100, 6×9 from $1,800, 9×12 from $3,800. Western boutique retail typically 2–4× these prices. Below these floors, expect machine-made or tufted.
How do I know if a Moroccan rug is real?
Three checks: (1) back of rug shows visible knots and pattern; (2) fringe is woven into the warp, not sewn on; (3) weight matches hand-knotted wool expectations (e.g., 5×7 = 11–15 kg).
Which Moroccan rug tradition should I buy?
Depends on room and aesthetic. Beni Ourain for minimal/modern (cream + dark motifs). Azilal for colour and art. Boujaad for warm reds. Boucherouite for playful bohemian. Beni Mrirt for collector-grade. Kilim for flat-weave under dining tables.
What size Moroccan rug do I need?
Most common mistake is undersizing. Rule: rug extends 12+ inches past sofa/bed sides, front legs of furniture rest on rug. Standard living room: 8×10 or 9×12. Apartment: 5×7 or 6×9.
Should I buy directly from Morocco or from a Western retailer?
Direct from a Moroccan co-operative typically saves 50–70% on price but requires more verification work. Western retailers add value through curation, return policies, and showroom inspection. Both can be legitimate.
Are vintage Moroccan rugs better than new?
Not 'better' — different. Vintage rugs (1950–1990) often have superior wool quality and natural dyes that have aged into patina. New rugs from good co-operatives use the same techniques with fresh material. Both are legitimate purchases.
What if my rug doesn't match my expectations?
Hand-knotted rugs vary by 2–5% from listed dimensions and have natural colour variation. Any reputable seller offers a return window. Inspect on arrival; check back, weight, and feel against the listing claims.

Sources & References

What this page rests on

  1. 1. Atlas Co-operative Direct-Import Standards
  2. 2. Rug Buyers Trust Guide
Youssef, grundlægger af ARINID

Personen bag stykket

“Før du køber, sender jeg dig en video af det rigtige tæppe i dagslys — ikke et katalogfoto. Jeg svarer selv på beskederne.”

Jeg hedder Youssef. Jeg startede ARINID, fordi dette marked er fyldt med mellemmænd og maskinfremstillede efterligninger, der sælges som ægte — og jeg voksede op tæt nok på vævene til at kende forskellen.

Hvert stykke, vi fører, kan spores tilbage til det kooperativ, der vævede det. Vil du tale om mål til dit rum, er jeg i den anden ende af beskeden. Et tæppe på dette niveau er en beslutning for tredive år. Du bør kunne se den, der sælger det til dig, i øjnene.

Youssef

Grundlægger, ARINID

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