She was a glittering travel influencer living the dream – sun-kissed beaches, exotic adventures, thousands of adoring followers. But behind the filtered smiles, Rachel Kerr was spiralling into a terrifying personal crisis that has left her family and friends fearing the absolute worst.

Now police are treating the 31-year-old Scottish beauty as a potential danger to herself, with suicide concerns rocketing to the top of the investigation as the days tick by with no trace of the vibrant Dunblane woman.

Pals have painted a devastating portrait of a young woman in meltdown: emotionally shattered, completely out of cash, isolated thousands of miles from home, and refusing desperate pleas from her own brother to come back to Scotland. Her last Instagram post – a hauntingly serene snap simply captioned “la marina” – now feels like a final, cryptic goodbye.

Rachel Kerr vanished after checking out of the Caribbean Village Agador hotel in Agadir, Morocco, on Saturday April 25. Her phone has been switched off ever since. No contact. No sightings. Just a black void that has plunged her loved ones into hell.

A close contact dropped the bombshell detail that has haunted everyone: “She ran out of money completely on Friday.” Yet hours later she was still out partying at the SMART Nightclub until the early hours, last seen deep in conversation with a mystery man around 4-5am before slipping away.

That desperate, cashless night out may have been her final cry for help – or the moment everything went fatally wrong.

Family and friends now openly fear Rachel was a “danger to herself” amid a full-blown mental health crisis. Insiders say she had been in “a bad mental place” for weeks, extending her trip far beyond her original work plans, missing flights home and hiding her passport when her brother flew out in a bid to rescue her. A whirlwind romance with a local man had left her heartbroken and vulnerable, confiding in strangers that she felt used, alone and deeply uncomfortable.

One holidaymaker who crossed paths with her described a fragile “little Scottish girl” who had fallen hard only to be left emotionally crushed. Another revealed she admitted to being in turmoil while overstaying in Agadir long after her bookings ran out.

Now authorities are seriously considering the suicide angle. With no evidence of abduction so far and her fragile state well documented, police are probing whether Rachel – broke, isolated and in despair – may have taken her own life in the vast Moroccan wilderness or the crashing waves of the Atlantic coast.

The nightmare has triggered a massive international search. Scottish police are involved. The UK Foreign Office is supporting the family. Relatives are flying out to pound the streets and beaches themselves. But as hope fades with every silent hour, the focus has shifted to the darkest possibility.

Rachel wasn’t just another tourist chasing likes. She was a rising star – model, photographer, published author, public speaker and brand ambassador who turned solo adventures into a thriving business. Educated at City of Glasgow College, the Falkirk-linked beauty inspired thousands with her bikini shots on golden sands, deep cultural dives into Morocco’s souks and Atlas Mountains, and fearless globe-trotting spirit. She had even been planning group tours back to Agadir for October.

Family left ¿extremely concerned¿ after Brit, 31, goes missing on trip to tourist hotspot

Her Instagram was a window into paradise. Sun-drenched posts about soaking up “proper vitamin D,” meeting new people, learning new things. But the last one on April 13 – that simple “la marina” – now reads like a farewell note from a woman whose inner storm had become unbearable.

By Friday she had hit rock bottom financially. No money left after overstaying. Yet she still dragged herself to the SMART Nightclub – a venue whispered about in tourist circles for its darker side, including drink-spiking fears. Eyewitnesses spotted a woman matching Rachel’s striking description locked in conversation with an unidentified man at the bar in the pounding early hours. She left around 5am. Checked out of her hotel shortly after. Then disappeared.

Was that final chat a lifeline – or the last human contact before she chose to end it all?

Friends like Alexis Shaw have been vocal about the urgency: police are involved, and they just want her home safely. Cousin Claire Hill’s viral appeal broke hearts worldwide: “My cousin Rachel Kerr, 31, is missing in Agadir, Morocco. Last known to be staying at the Caribbean Village hotel however she checked out on Saturday and we haven’t heard from her since. Her phone has been switched off… We are extremely concerned for her welfare.”

The family’s desperation is raw. They know Rachel could be impulsive and trusting – traits that powered her adventurous career but left her exposed when life turned sour. A local fling gone wrong, mounting debts from the extended trip, the crushing isolation of being far from her support network in Scotland – it all piled up into what pals now describe as a perfect storm for self-harm.

Agadir’s golden beaches and year-round sunshine mask a harsher reality for vulnerable visitors. Solo female travellers, especially those running low on funds and emotionally fragile, can quickly find themselves in danger – whether from external threats or their own inner demons. Drink spiking remains a whispered concern in some late-night spots like SMART Nightclub. But as police dig deeper, the suicide theory is gaining traction precisely because of Rachel’s documented crisis.

Searches are intensifying. CCTV from the nightclub, hotel lobby and surrounding streets is being scoured. Appeals have gone out for anyone who saw the 5ft 6in blonde with the bright eyes and Scottish accent in those final hours. Her distinctive look and voice would have stood out amid the tourist crowds.

But with her phone dead and no financial trail left, the trail is ice cold.

This is the stuff of every family’s darkest nightmare: a bright, beautiful young woman who lit up social media with her wanderlust, now potentially lost to the very adventures that defined her. Rachel lived life at full throttle – bikini shoots, exotic markets, plans for future tours. She encouraged followers to chase the horizon. Now her own horizon has vanished.

Pals fear the combination of heartbreak, financial ruin and mental fragility pushed her to the brink. “She was in crisis,” one source close to the family admitted. “We’re terrified she became a danger to herself.”

As Moroccan authorities, British officials and desperate relatives comb the coastline, hotels, and remote spots, the clock is ticking. Every passing day without a sighting or a signal from her phone deepens the dread that Rachel may have made a fatal choice in her lowest moment.

Her last post – that peaceful “la marina” image – haunts everyone who knew her. Was it a final moment of calm before the storm consumed her? Or is she still out there, confused and in need of help?

The family’s plea is urgent and breaking: any information, no matter how small. Anyone who saw Rachel in her final hours at the SMART Nightclub or after checkout. Anyone who knows the mystery man she was speaking to. Come forward now.

Rachel Kerr chased the world’s beauty. She built a life inspiring others to explore. But in the glittering lights of Agadir, her own story took a devastating turn into the shadows.

Police are braced for the worst. Her loved ones are praying for a miracle. And Britain watches in agony as one of its brightest young adventurers may have become her own greatest threat.

The beaches are still golden. The clubs still pulse. But one Scottish smile is missing – and the fear she chose to disappear forever grows stronger by the hour.

If you have any information on Rachel Kerr, contact authorities immediately. Time is running out.