Beni Ourain vs Beni Mrirt — A Direct Comparison
Beni Ourain and Beni Mrirt are the two most-confused Moroccan rug traditions. Both come from the Middle Atlas, both feature cream wool with dark geometric motifs, both are hand-knotted by Amazigh women, and both have become contemporary-design icons over the past two decades. Yet they are different objects — different tribes, different villages, different knot densities, and dramatically different prices. The difference is technical, not aesthetic, and understanding it changes how you read every subsequent listing.
Origin and Tribal Identity
Beni Ourain is a tribal confederation — actually seventeen distinct sub-tribes — concentrated in the northern Middle Atlas around Boulemane and Taza provinces. Beni Mrirt is a different group of villages, centred specifically around the Khénifra Province further south. The two regions are roughly 200 km apart and have separate weaving traditions, even though both fall under the broader Middle Atlas geography.
The naming confusion stems from Western marketing: in the 1990s and 2000s, 'Beni Ourain' became a marketable category — a clean, minimalist aesthetic that suited mid-century modern interiors. Many Beni Mrirt rugs were sold as 'Beni Ourain' because the brand was stronger. Today, specialised dealers distinguish the two; mass-market retailers often still conflate them.
Knot Density — The Single Most Important Difference
Beni Ourain standard density: 70–100 KPSI (knots per square inch), typically around 80. Beni Mrirt standard density: 120–180 KPSI, typically around 130–160. This is the defining technical difference, and it cascades into everything else — weaving time, wool consumption, weight, and price.
A 9×12 Beni Ourain at 80 KPSI contains approximately 124,400 knots — about 11 weeks of one-weaver labour. A 9×12 Beni Mrirt at 130 KPSI contains approximately 202,200 knots — 18 weeks of labour. The Beni Mrirt simply takes longer to make, and the additional density makes the pile feel denser, more structurally robust, and slightly more compact.
Visual Differences That Are Subtle but Real
Pile depth: Beni Ourain pile typically runs 2.5–4 cm — long, plush, with the loose woolly character that defines the tradition's aesthetic. Beni Mrirt pile is shorter, typically 1.5–2.5 cm, because the higher knot density makes a long pile structurally less stable. A Beni Mrirt feels denser and less 'fluffy' than a Beni Ourain.
Motif style: Both use diamond, lozenge, and geometric line motifs on a cream field — but Beni Mrirt patterns tend to be tighter, more precise, with cleaner straight lines. Beni Ourain motifs are looser, with the hand-drawn character of motifs interpreted differently by each weaver. A Beni Mrirt diamond often looks geometrically perfect; a Beni Ourain diamond looks human.
Field uniformity: Beni Ourain undyed wool shows more visible abrash — natural variation in the cream tone from row to row as different fleeces blend. Beni Mrirt fields tend to look more uniform because higher-density weaving averages out fleece variation visually.
Price Reality
Co-operative pricing for a 9×12 in undyed live-sheared wool: Beni Ourain at 80 KPSI runs $3,800–$5,800; Beni Mrirt at 130 KPSI runs $9,500–$15,500. Beni Mrirt at 160+ KPSI: $14,000–$22,000. The price differential is real and reflects the additional 6–8 weeks of weaving labour for Beni Mrirt at the same dimension.
Western boutique retail markup applies similarly to both — typically 2.5–4× co-operative pricing. So a 9×12 Beni Mrirt at a New York gallery runs $25,000–$45,000, compared to $10,000–$18,000 for a Beni Ourain of the same dimension.
Which Should You Buy?
Beni Ourain is the right choice for: most residential applications where you want the characteristic plush, slightly-irregular Middle Atlas aesthetic; budget-conscious buyers who want a true hand-knotted wool rug; spaces where the Beni Ourain 'fluff' factor matters visually (bedrooms, casual living rooms).
Beni Mrirt is the right choice for: high-traffic locations where the denser knot structure delivers measurably longer life; formal spaces where the tighter, more precise motif work suits the architecture; collectors and investment-grade buyers who value craft intensity at the high end of the tradition.
Neither is 'better' in absolute terms. They represent different points on the craft-intensity-versus-aesthetic-character curve. Many serious collectors own both — a Beni Ourain in the bedroom, a Beni Mrirt in the formal living room.
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よくあるご質問
質問
- What is the main difference between Beni Ourain and Beni Mrirt?
- Knot density. Beni Ourain typically 70–100 KPSI; Beni Mrirt typically 120–180 KPSI. This drives all secondary differences: weaving time, weight, pile structure, and price.
- Is Beni Mrirt more expensive than Beni Ourain?
- Yes — typically 2 to 3 times more for the same dimension, because the higher knot density requires 60–80% more weaving time.
- Which has longer pile, Beni Ourain or Beni Mrirt?
- Beni Ourain — typically 2.5–4 cm pile depth versus Beni Mrirt at 1.5–2.5 cm. The higher knot density of Beni Mrirt makes a long pile structurally less stable, so it is woven shorter.
- Are Beni Ourain and Beni Mrirt the same tribe?
- No. Beni Ourain is a confederation of 17 sub-tribes around Boulemane in the northern Middle Atlas. Beni Mrirt is a separate group of villages around Khénifra, about 200 km south.
- Why are Beni Mrirt rugs often sold as Beni Ourain?
- Marketing reasons — 'Beni Ourain' became a stronger Western brand in the 1990s–2000s, so many Beni Mrirt pieces were marketed under the Beni Ourain name. Specialist dealers today distinguish them; mass-market retailers often still conflate them.
- Which is better for high-traffic areas?
- Beni Mrirt — the denser knot structure delivers measurably longer life in high-traffic locations like dining rooms and entryways. Beni Ourain remains excellent in bedrooms and casual living rooms.
- Can I tell them apart by looking at the back?
- Yes — count knots in a square inch on the back. Below 100: Beni Ourain. 120+: Beni Mrirt. The Beni Mrirt back also shows tighter, more uniform knot rows.
Sources & References
What this page rests on
- 1. Middle Atlas Weaving Census
- 2. Khénifra Co-operative Records

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