15 Best Beaches in Cuba for 2026, Ranked by Locals
Powder-white sand, water that’s somehow even bluer than the photos. Cuba has more good beaches than any country its size has a right to. This is the honest local ranking — not what the all-inclusive brochures say.
Ask any Cuban which beach is the country’s best and you’ll get an argument. Ask three Cubans and you’ll get a fistfight. The Varadero crowd swears there’s nothing better. People from Holguín will look at you like you’ve insulted their mother. Anyone who’s been to Cayo Coco mentions the sand. The Trinidad locals point south and say Ancón. The few who’ve made it out to Maguana, near Baracoa, say everything else is overrated.
The truth is that Cuba has so many genuinely world-class beaches that the ranking only matters if you’re trying to pick one for a short trip. If you have a week or more, you’ll see several of them, and you’ll come back with your own opinion. This guide is the consensus a beach-obsessed Cuban friend would give you if you sat down with a bottle of decent Cuban rum and demanded the actual answer.
What follows is 15 beaches ranked, with the local context that explains why each one is where it is on the list — the water clarity, the sand grade, the crowd, the access, what’s worth doing there. Plus a comparison table, the best months by region, and how to combine multiple beaches into a single trip without burning your whole budget on internal travel.
The Six Cuban Coastlines You Need to Know
Cuba’s beaches aren’t randomly scattered — they cluster on six distinct stretches of coast, each with its own personality, water character, and crowd. Knowing which region you’re heading to matters more than picking individual beaches, because the regions are far enough apart that you can’t realistically combine the far ends in a single trip.
- Varadero Peninsula (Matanzas): The most famous, the longest unbroken stretch of beach in the country, and the highest density of resort development. Roughly 20 km of continuous white sand, two hours east of Havana.
- Jardines del Rey Cayos (north-central): The chain of small offshore cays — Cayo Coco, Cayo Guillermo, Cayo Santa María — reached by raised causeways. Cleaner sand and water than Varadero, fewer crowds, almost entirely all-inclusive territory.
- South coast around Trinidad: Playa Ancón is the headline, but the whole southern coast from Cienfuegos east has lower-key beaches that pair beautifully with colonial Trinidad. Best for travelers combining beach with culture.
- Bay of Pigs (Zapata Peninsula): Playa Larga and Playa Girón. Less white-sand-perfect than the cayos but home to some of the best snorkeling and diving on the entire island.
- Holguín province (north-east): Guardalavaca, Playa Esmeralda, Playa Pesquero. The locals’ choice. Often empty, water that competes with anything in the Caribbean.
- Far east — Baracoa & Maguana: Wilder, harder to reach, no resort development. The reward for travelers who push past where the package tours stop.

One thing worth saying upfront: Cuba’s beaches are mostly free and public, including the ones in front of the all-inclusive resorts. Cuban law guarantees public beach access. You can stay in a cheap casa particular, walk five minutes to a beach that the $400-a-night Iberostar guests think is “theirs,” and use it freely. This makes Cuba an unusual destination: you can have a world-class beach holiday on a backpacker budget if you understand how the access actually works. The full mechanics of doing this affordably are in our $50-a-day Cuba budget breakdown.
The 15 Best Beaches in Cuba, Ranked
The order isn’t about which beach has the whitest sand or the bluest water — at the top end the differences are marginal and mostly down to taste. It’s about the overall package: water and sand quality, accessibility, atmosphere, what else there is to do nearby, and how Cubans themselves actually rank them when you ask. The first five are the unanimous picks. After that the order gets more contested.

Playa Pilar
Named after Ernest Hemingway’s boat. Routinely ranked among the best beaches in the Caribbean by every list that gets the matter seriously — including by Cubans who’ve spent their lives on the island’s coast. The sand is the powder-sugar kind, fine enough that it squeaks underfoot. Dunes rise behind the beach (rare in Cuba), and the water stays waist-deep for what feels like a hundred meters out, with no rocks, no seaweed bands, and visibility good enough that you can see your feet at chest-deep. The catch: Pilar is at the far western tip of Cayo Guillermo, which means it requires a deliberate detour even from the cayo’s main resort strip. That same remoteness keeps the crowd manageable. Bring water and snacks — there’s a small bar but provisions are minimal.

Playa Paraíso
A separate island reachable only by short charter flight from Havana or Varadero — and the price is worth it. Paraíso is the postcard beach: a long, narrow sandbar with shallow, glass-clear water on both sides. At low tide you can wade hundreds of meters out and never lose your footing. Visibility is so good that pilots have been known to deliberately overfly it on the route in. The beach itself is undeveloped — a small bar, restrooms, and nothing else — which keeps it feeling pristine. Cayo Largo is also one of the easiest places in Cuba to see sea turtles, both at the beach and on the reefs offshore. The downside is the flight cost ($120–200 round trip from Havana) and that the whole island operates on resort time, with very few independent options.

Playa Varadero (Main Beach)
Cuba’s most famous beach for a reason. The Varadero peninsula has 20 km of continuous, talcum-soft white sand with calm, knee-deep-for-ages water, all of it backed by either resorts, a long beachfront promenade, or sand dunes depending on which kilometer you’re standing on. It’s not perfect — the central stretches near the resort strip can feel crowded in peak season and the all-inclusive culture means the beach gets a lot of foot traffic. But the sheer length means you can always walk fifteen minutes and find genuinely uncrowded sand. The beach is rated number 3 here rather than higher because the sand and water are slightly less spectacular than the top two — but Varadero compensates with accessibility, infrastructure, and the broadest range of accommodation in any Cuban beach destination.

Playa Esmeralda
The name means “emerald” and the water genuinely is that color — a green-turquoise tone you don’t see in the western cayos. Esmeralda sits about 60 km from Holguín city and 4 km from Guardalavaca, on a curved bay protected by limestone cliffs. The setting is dramatic in a way that the flat Varadero peninsula isn’t: vegetation pushes right up against the sand, the bay forms an almost-perfect crescent, and the water clarity is exceptional. Local consensus often ranks this higher than I have it here, but the relative difficulty of getting to Holguín province means it requires more planning than its rank suggests. Two large hotels sit on the beach, but the strand itself is broad enough that they don’t dominate it.

Playa de Cayo Santa María
Cayo Santa María is the newest of the main Cuban cayos to be developed, reached by an extraordinary 48-km causeway that crosses open shallow sea — the drive in alone justifies the trip. The beach is a long, gently curving strand with sand on the fine end of the Cuban spectrum and the same shallow, warm water as the rest of the Jardines del Rey chain. The development is heavily resort-oriented but the beach itself is broad and public; if you stay on the mainland in nearby Caibarién and drive the causeway as a day trip, you’ll save serious money and get the same beach. A few sections — particularly the eastern end — feel almost untouched in low season. Best combined with a stop in colonial Remedios on the way back.
Ask a Cuban which beach is the country’s best and you’ll start a fight that takes three drinks to settle. Ask which one to actually go to with limited time, though, and the answer is consistent: you can’t do badly with the first five on this list.

Playa Ancón
The best beach within easy striking distance of a major historic town. Ancón is a 4-km stretch of pale-gold sand fifteen minutes from colonial Trinidad, and it’s the southern coast’s standout. The water is calm year-round (the Caribbean side gets less swell than the north coast), the sand is a touch coarser than the cayos but still excellent, and the surrounding setting — distant mountains visible inland — gives it more visual character than the offshore cays. Three modest hotels sit on the beach but most travelers stay in Trinidad and come down by colectivo or hired taxi (about $5 each way). The reef just offshore offers some of the better budget snorkeling on the south coast. Worth checking our snorkeling guide for Cuba before you go.
Playa Los Flamencos
Cayo Coco’s signature beach, named for the flamingos that gather in the lagoons inland. The strand is over 4 km long, with the broad shallow shelf that the Jardines del Rey is known for and sand that earns its reputation. Los Flamencos is the most accessible of the cayo’s beaches and consequently the most developed — most of Cayo Coco’s resorts cluster within walking distance — but the sheer length means you’re never crowded in. The reef offshore is closer than at most other Cuban beaches; you can swim out and reach interesting coral within a few minutes. Birdwatchers should plan a sunset drive through the inland lagoons, where the flamingos themselves congregate. For deeper context on diving the area, see our scuba diving guide.

Playa Guardalavaca
“Save the cow” — the literal translation of the name, supposedly because Spanish-era cattle herders used the bay as shelter — and a beach that earns its place on this list through sheer all-around quality. The sand is fine and bright white, the water is shallow for a long way out (making it one of the best Cuban beaches for families with young kids), and the surrounding bay shape protects from any significant swell. Guardalavaca itself is the most developed of the Holguín beaches but never reaches Varadero-level density. The town behind the beach is small and walkable. Several decent paladares operate nearby. Worth pairing with a half-day at Bahía de Naranjo — the small marine park just down the coast where you can swim with rays.

Cayo Levisa
A small, almost-undeveloped island off the north coast of Pinar del Río, reached by a 30-minute boat transfer from Palma Rubia on the mainland. One modest hotel sits on the island; everything else is sand, palm forest, and water. The beach faces northwest, which means the sunsets are particular: long, low, and reflected off the calm surface for half an hour. Cayo Levisa is what people imagine when they think “deserted tropical island,” because in low season it almost is one. Easy combination with a few days in Viñales — the same province, the same drive west from Havana.

Playa Pesquero
A few kilometers from Guardalavaca and Esmeralda, and consistently overlooked because it doesn’t have the brand recognition of its neighbors. This is to your advantage. Pesquero offers similar sand and water quality to Esmeralda but with significantly thinner crowds — sometimes the beach has a third of the people of Guardalavaca on the same Saturday. The reef sits about 200 meters offshore and is reachable by swimming or short kayak rental from one of the resorts. The 5-star Playa Pesquero hotel takes up a chunk of the beach but, as everywhere in Cuba, the sand itself is public. Walk past the resort frontage and the beach opens up into long stretches that feel essentially private.

Playa Maguana
Twenty kilometers north of Baracoa — Cuba’s oldest Spanish settlement — Maguana sits at the country’s far eastern end and feels like a different Cuba entirely. The setting is wilder than anything in the western half of the island: jungle pushes right to the sand line, coconut palms lean over the water, and the reef offshore is alive in a way that the more trafficked north-coast beaches have lost. It’s not the country’s best beach by sand-and-water metrics — the strand is shorter and slightly coarser — but the package is unique. Baracoa itself is one of Cuba’s strangest and most rewarding small towns, the route in is dramatic (the road over La Farola pass), and Maguana feels genuinely off the tourist track. Worth the effort for travelers who can give Cuba two weeks.

Playa Jibacoa
An hour east of Havana on the road to Varadero, Jibacoa is the best snorkeling-from-the-beach in Cuba. The reef starts twenty meters offshore — close enough that you don’t need a boat — and the coral is in better condition than at most beach sites on the island. Sand quality is decent rather than spectacular (this is a coral-rubble coastline rather than pure powder), and the strand is short. But for snorkelers and divers who want a beach experience that’s mostly about the water rather than the sand, Jibacoa is hard to beat. A few small hotels operate here; budget travelers can stay in nearby casas particulares for a fraction of the resort price. Easy day trip from Havana if you don’t want to commit to multiple nights.
Playa Larga
The beach is honest about itself — Playa Larga doesn’t pretend to compete with the cayos on sand quality, and the strand is mid-sized rather than dramatic. What it has is access to some of the most extraordinary diving and snorkeling sites in Cuba: the cenotes and underwater cave systems just inland, the reef at Punta Perdiz down the road, and the freshwater dive at Cueva de los Peces. Travelers who care more about what’s under the water than what’s on the sand often rank Playa Larga among their favorites. The Zapata Peninsula is also Cuba’s best birdwatching area — bring binoculars or rent a guide locally. Casas particulares here are some of the cheapest in any Cuban beach destination ($25–35 a night).
Cayo Jutías
A smaller cousin to Cayo Levisa, Jutías is reached by causeway from the mainland (no boat needed) and is the best beach day-trip from the Viñales area — roughly two hours each way by collective taxi or rental car. The beach is small but exceptional: powder sand, calm water, and a backdrop of low coastal vegetation. No accommodation on the cayo itself; everyone day-trips from Viñales or further afield. Bring food (there’s a basic ranchón restaurant but the menu is limited), and time your departure to be on the cayo by 10am, off it by 4pm — the road back is best driven in daylight. Cayo Jutías is the answer for travelers who want a real Cuban cayo beach experience without committing nights of their itinerary to it.
Santa María del Mar (Playas del Este)
The honest answer to “is there a good beach near Havana?” — yes, this is it. Santa María del Mar is the best of the Playas del Este stretch, 25 km east of central Havana and reachable by city taxi for about $25 each way. Cuban families use it heavily on weekends, which is part of its character; on weekdays it’s much quieter. Sand is good (not cayo-grade, but legitimately fine), water is clear, and the closeness to the city means it makes a perfect afternoon excursion if you only have a Havana trip but still want beach time. Stay in Havana, take an early lunch at a paladar, taxi out at 1pm, sunset on the beach, taxi back for dinner. The whole loop costs roughly $50 including transport. Worth pairing with our 3-day Havana itinerary.
A few well-known beaches were considered and left off this list deliberately. Playa Bacuranao, just east of Playas del Este, is fine but a clear downgrade from Santa María with the same access. The smaller Cayo Coco beaches outside Los Flamencos (Las Coloradas, Playa Prohibida) are excellent but functionally part of the same Los Flamencos package for travelers — not separate enough to rank individually. And Cayo Macho de Afuera, off Cayo Santa María, is technically reachable but logistically too complicated to recommend for most trips. The 15 above represent the best mix of quality, accessibility, and realistic ability to include in a Cuba itinerary.
All 15 Beaches Compared Side by Side
| Rank | Beach | Region | Sand | Water | Crowds | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Playa Pilar | Cayo Guillermo | Crystal | Light | Best overall sand & water | |
| 2 | Playa Paraíso | Cayo Largo | Crystal | Sparse | Sandbar + sea turtles | |
| 3 | Playa Varadero | Matanzas | Clear | Busy | Easy access, longest beach | |
| 4 | Playa Esmeralda | Holguín | Emerald | Moderate | Most dramatic setting | |
| 5 | Cayo Santa María | Jardines del Rey | Crystal | Moderate | Length + causeway drive | |
| 6 | Playa Ancón | Trinidad area | Calm | Light | Pairing with colonial Trinidad | |
| 7 | Playa Los Flamencos | Cayo Coco | Crystal | Moderate | Resorts + reef snorkeling | |
| 8 | Playa Guardalavaca | Holguín | Clear | Moderate | Families with young kids | |
| 9 | Cayo Levisa | Pinar del Río | Clear | Empty | Genuine deserted-island feel | |
| 10 | Playa Pesquero | Holguín | Clear | Light | The underrated alternative | |
| 11 | Playa Maguana | Baracoa | Vivid | Empty | Wild, off-track travel | |
| 12 | Playa Jibacoa | Mayabeque | Reef-clear | Light | Snorkeling from shore | |
| 13 | Playa Larga | Bay of Pigs | Spectacular | Light | Divers, birdwatchers | |
| 14 | Cayo Jutías | Pinar del Río | Crystal | Light | Day-trip from Viñales | |
| 15 | Santa María del Mar | East of Havana | Clear | Variable | Half-day from Havana |
The Best Time to Visit a Cuban Beach
Cuba has a coastal climate that doesn’t vary dramatically — the difference between July and January in beach water temperature is about 3°C, which nobody can really feel. What does vary substantially is rainfall, humidity, hurricane risk, and crowd density. The honest answer on timing is that the peak window is November through April, and within that window December and March are the sweet spots.
Cuba Beach Season by Month
The hurricane window (officially June to November, in practice mostly August to October) doesn’t necessarily mean a ruined trip — major hurricanes are infrequent enough that most travelers in that window get good weather. But the risk is real, and travel insurance becomes non-negotiable rather than recommended during these months. For full breakdown of what each month actually looks like in Cuba, see our month-by-month guide with weather data. December specifically has its own considerations covered in our December Cuba guide.
The cheap travel insurance policies often exclude or under-cover hurricane disruption. If you’re going to Cuba between August and October, read the small print carefully — you want a policy that covers trip interruption, evacuation, and weather-related cancellations. Our breakdown of the best travel insurance for Cuba covers what’s worth the money and what isn’t.
Getting to These Beaches Without Burning Your Budget
Cuba’s beaches are spread across an island that takes 14 hours to drive end to end, and internal transport eats budgets fast if you don’t plan. Domestic flights exist but are limited (Havana–Holguín, Havana–Cayo Coco, Havana–Cayo Largo are the main routes) and book up. Cubatur operates a tourist bus network (Viazul) that’s reliable but slow. Taxi colectivos — shared long-distance taxis — are often the best balance of speed, price, and reliability.
Beach-by-Beach Transport Strategy
- Varadero from Havana: 2-hour Viazul bus ($10) or shared taxi ($20–25 per person). Multiple departures daily. The easiest journey in Cuba.
- Cayo Coco / Cayo Guillermo: Domestic flight from Havana ($100–130 one way) is the realistic option. Driving takes 7+ hours. The flight saves you a whole travel day.
- Cayo Santa María: Best reached by overland transport — taxi or rental car to Caibarién (5 hours from Havana), then 48-km causeway. Stay overnight in Caibarién or Remedios.
- Holguín beaches (Guardalavaca, Esmeralda, Pesquero): Domestic flight Havana–Holguín ($120 one way), then 45-minute taxi to the beaches. Don’t try to drive from Havana — 14+ hours.
- Cayo Largo: Charter flight only — about $150–200 round trip from Havana. No other access.
- Playa Ancón (Trinidad): Viazul Havana–Trinidad (6 hours, $25) or colectivo ($30–40 per person, faster). Stay in Trinidad, taxi to beach daily ($5 each way).
- Cayo Levisa / Cayo Jutías: Both from Viñales area. Combined with a Viñales stay, both are easy half- or full-day trips by colectivo taxi.
- Playa Maguana / Baracoa: Domestic flight from Havana ($130) or Cubana flight via Holguín. Overland is brutal — at least 16 hours.
- Playas del Este / Santa María del Mar: Taxi from Havana ($25 each way). Or city bus T3 for $0.50, slower but legitimate option.
The bigger budget question — how to fund the internal transport without burning through cash — comes back to how you handle money in Cuba, which is a non-trivial logistics challenge in itself. Plan ahead on this.
Practical Tips for a Cuban Beach Day
- All beaches are legally public, including in front of resorts
- Water temperature stays 25–28°C year-round
- Sun is intense even when overcast — Cuba sits at 22°N
- Lifeguard coverage exists at major beaches in season
- Reef snorkeling is excellent at multiple beaches without boat trips
- Beach bars and ranchóns sell cold beer for $1–2
- Sand fleas at dusk on south coast and Maguana — wear repellent
- Strong currents at unguarded beaches — ask locals first
- Sunscreen prices in Cuba are absurd ($15+ for a small bottle)
- Sargassum seaweed on east-facing beaches in some years
- Strong sun reflects off white sand — eye protection essential
- Theft of valuables left unattended on beach — never leave a phone
What to Pack From Home (Things You Cannot Buy in Cuba)
- Reef-safe sunscreen, lots of it. Sunscreen in Cuba costs three to four times what it does abroad and is often poor quality. Bring enough for your whole trip. SPF 50, multiple tubes.
- A reef-safe insect repellent. Especially for the south coast (Bay of Pigs, Ancón) and the eastern beaches at dusk.
- A microfiber beach towel. Light, dries fast, doesn’t take up half your bag. Cuban casas usually provide a regular towel but it’ll be small.
- Snorkel gear if you’re serious about it. Rentals exist but quality is patchy and prices are inflated. A basic mask and snorkel is light to pack and pays for itself in two uses.
- A waterproof phone pouch. Cuban beaches don’t have lockers and you’ll often be the only person watching your bag. A lanyard pouch lets you keep the phone with you in the water.
- Cash in small denominations. Beach vendors and ranchóns won’t have change for big notes. Bring lots of $1, $5, $10 bills (euros or CAD work too).
The full Cuba packing question is bigger than just the beach gear — our carry-on-only Cuba packing list covers the rest. If you’re booking a casa near the beach rather than a resort, the casa particular guide is the companion read.
How to Combine Multiple Beaches in One Trip
The 7-Day Beach Trip (Havana + One Beach Region)
With seven days, you can do Havana plus one beach destination — and that’s it. Don’t try to add a second region; the internal travel will eat your time and budget. The strongest 7-day combinations:
- Havana (3 nights) + Varadero (4 nights): Easiest logistics, most reliable beach experience. Suits first-time visitors.
- Havana (3 nights) + Cayo Coco/Cayo Guillermo (4 nights): Higher cost but materially better beaches than Varadero. Worth it.
- Havana (3 nights) + Trinidad + Ancón (4 nights): The best culture-plus-beach combination. Trinidad is one of Cuba’s most rewarding small towns and Ancón is 15 minutes away.
The 10-Day Trip (Havana + Two Beach Regions)
Ten days gives you the room to combine two distinct coastal experiences:
- Havana → Viñales (with Cayo Jutías day trip) → Trinidad → Ancón → Havana — a culture-heavy west-to-south loop.
- Havana → Cayo Santa María → Trinidad → Ancón → Havana — east-and-south, two beach regions with colonial Remedios as a stop on the way.
- Havana → Holguín fly-in → Guardalavaca + Esmeralda → Havana — most ambitious beach-focused option, requires the domestic flight.
The 14-Day Trip (The Full Beach Tour)
Two weeks is when Cuba really opens up. Suggested route:
- Days 1–3: Havana
- Days 4–5: Viñales + Cayo Jutías day trip
- Days 6–8: Trinidad + Ancón
- Days 9–10: Cayo Santa María (overland via Remedios)
- Days 11–13: Fly to Holguín — Guardalavaca/Esmeralda
- Day 14: Fly back to Havana, departure
This covers four major beach regions, two colonial cities, and Cuba’s most scenic agricultural region in a single trip. It’s an ambitious schedule but doable, and it gives you the full picture of what the country’s coast offers. For a more relaxed version, drop Cayo Santa María and add an extra day to each remaining stop.
🌴 Pre-Departure Checklist for a Cuban Beach Trip
- Cuba e-visa applied for at evisacuba.cu and received
- Travel insurance with hurricane/medical cover confirmed
- D’Viajeros health/customs form completed within 7 days of arrival
- Internal flights booked if going to Cayo Coco / Cayo Largo / Holguín
- Cash brought in EUR, CAD or GBP (avoid USD where possible)
- Reef-safe sunscreen packed (multiple tubes, SPF 50)
- Insect repellent for south coast and east coast beaches
- Snorkel and mask packed if serious about reef time
- Microfiber beach towel — saves casa towel use
- Waterproof phone pouch with lanyard
- Cash budgeted for taxis between beach destinations
- First-night casa or hotel booked with address written down
Frequently Asked Questions
One final thing before you book
Cuba’s coast still does something that most Caribbean coasts have lost. The combination of underdevelopment, public-access law, and the sheer scale of the coastline means that even today, on the best beaches in the country, you can walk fifteen minutes and find a stretch of sand that no Instagram crowd has reached. The water is still genuinely the color the photos suggest. The sand at the top-tier places is still the sugar-soft real thing.
None of this is guaranteed forever. Pressure is building. Several of the cayos have shifted notably toward all-inclusive monoculture in the last decade. The Varadero stretch is busier than it was. The next decade will probably push the wilder beaches (Maguana, Levisa, Jutías) closer to mainstream as more travelers reach them.
Go now. Bring sunscreen, cash, and a willingness to take internal transport that’s slower than you’d like. Then sit on Playa Pilar or Esmeralda for a day and understand why every Cuban you’ll talk to about beaches has such strong opinions on the matter. You’ll come back with your own.