Measurements of soil erosion on the Moroccan landscape using classical erosion methods have been the objective of several research studies, but these classical methods are difficult to conduct, time consuming and very expensive and the quantitative estimation of soil loss remains insufficient particularly in the North of Morocco. In this study, we present results on soil erosion quantification using 137Cs and 210Pb in three dam catchments: El Hachef, Raouz and Nakhla.In each area inventories of 137Cs and 210Pbex were measured in cultivated soils and compared to reference inventories (noneroded) measured in the same area. The differences were converted onto erosion or accumulation rate using mass balance models (MB1 and MB2).In El Hachef, the mean erosion rates using 137Cs with MB1 and MB2 models and 210Pbex with MB2 model are respectively 32tha−1yr−1, 29tha−1yr−1 and 20tha−1yr−1.In Raouz, the mean erosion rates using 137Cs with MB1 and MB2 models and 210Pbex with MB2 model are respectively 13.9tha−1yr−1, 12.2tha−1yr−1 and 16.1tha−1yr−1.In Nakhla, the mean erosion rates using 137Cs with MB1 and MB2 models and 210Pbex with MB2 model are respectively 33.1tha−1yr−1, 41.3tha−1yr−1 and 20tha−1yr−1.These results show the severity of erosion in North West Morocco compare to other Mediterranean countries and the necessity to seek for urgent solutions to stem this problem.