Airplane flying above the clouds at golden hour — getting to Cuba from the US, UK and Canada
✈️ Flight Guide · 2026 Edition

Cheapest Ways to Get to Cuba from the US, UK & Canada

Real routes, real prices, and every booking trick worth knowing — before you spend a dollar more than you need to.

🕐 14 min read 📅 Updated May 2026 ✅ US · UK · Canada covered

Getting to Cuba costs more than it should, and it doesn’t have to. The flight prices you see on a first Google search are rarely the cheapest options — they’re just the most visible ones. Between charter operators, connecting hub strategies, seasonal timing, and a few booking habits that take about five minutes to develop, there’s usually a meaningful gap between what people pay to get to Havana and what they could have paid.

This guide covers the cheapest ways to get to Cuba from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada — separately, because the answer is genuinely different for each country. You’ll get the actual routes, the airlines worth knowing, realistic price ranges for 2026, and the specific booking moves that make a difference. US travelers have the most complications. Canadians have it easiest. Everyone in between has options that aren’t always obvious.

One note before we start: Cuba’s flight market shifts. Prices in this guide reflect conditions in mid-2026. Treat ranges as baselines, not guarantees. The strategy, however, doesn’t change much.

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The Big Picture: Cuba Flights in 2026

Start here

Cuba has one main international airport that most visitors use: José Martí International (HAV) in Havana. There are also airports in Varadero (VRA), Holguín (HOG), Cayo Coco (CCC), Cayo Largo (CYO), and Santiago de Cuba (SCU) — mostly used by resort packages and charter operators, particularly from Canada. If you’re planning an independent trip and want to spend real time in Cuba rather than on a beach resort, you’re landing in Havana.

The Cuban aviation market is unusual. It’s not a normal hub-and-spoke network. US airlines fly direct to Cuba because of restored air links, but under strict regulatory conditions. European carriers mostly connect through their home hubs. Canadian airlines and charters dominate the resort routes. Understanding which market you’re buying into matters — it affects both price and flexibility.

$150+ US cheapest RT
Miami → Havana
£380+ UK cheapest RT
via connecting hub
C$320+ Canada cheapest RT
Toronto or Montreal
2–12h Travel time range
depending on origin
🇺🇸 From the United States
Best routeMiami → HAV
Cheapest RT$150–$300
Flight time~45 min
ComplicationOFAC license needed
Cards work?No — cash only
🇬🇧 From the United Kingdom
Best routeLHR via Madrid
Cheapest RT£380–£600
Flight time11–14h total
Direct flights?Seasonal charters only
Cards work?Yes — Visa/Mastercard
🇨🇦 From Canada
Best routeToronto → HAV
Cheapest RTC$320–C$550
Flight time~3h 30min
Direct flights?Yes — multiple cities
Ease of accessEasiest of the three
🇺🇸

Getting to Cuba from the United States

Most routes, most restrictions

Flying to Cuba from the US is entirely legal — and has been since commercial service resumed in 2016 — but it comes with conditions that matter. You need to travel under one of the 12 OFAC-authorized categories, the most commonly used being “Support for the Cuban People.” You don’t need prior approval; you self-certify when you book. You do, however, need to keep a record of your travel meeting that standard. For most independent travelers — staying in casas particulares, eating at private restaurants, taking local transport — this is genuinely easy to satisfy. The category exists; the key is understanding it before you book, not after you land.

The bigger practical issue for American travelers isn’t the paperwork — it’s the money. US debit and credit cards don’t work in Cuba. Not even travel cards from fintech banks. This is a banking embargo, not a merchant policy. You bring cash, you manage your cash, and you plan around not having a card safety net. More on what this means in the hidden costs section.

On the route side, the US has the shortest flight to Cuba of any of the three countries in this guide. Miami to Havana is 45 minutes in the air. Fort Lauderdale is barely longer. If you can position yourself in South Florida — even for a night — you’ll get the cheapest fares on the market.

🛫 Miami (MIA) Havana (HAV)
Cheapest Option
$150–$300 RT
✈️ Airlines: American, Spirit
⏱ Flight time: ~45 min
📅 Daily flights: Multiple per day

The busiest US-Cuba corridor and consistently the cheapest. American Airlines dominates this route with multiple daily departures. Spirit also operates here and can undercut AA on price, though with Spirit’s usual baggage caveats. If you’re traveling from elsewhere in the US, a positioning flight to Miami the night before often saves money overall versus flying direct from your home city. Fort Lauderdale (FLL) is an alternative — 35 minutes by shuttle from MIA — and sometimes has lower fares on the same airlines.

🛫 New York (JFK/EWR) Havana (HAV)
Good Frequency
$250–$450 RT
✈️ Airlines: JetBlue, American, United
⏱ Flight time: ~3h 30min
📅 Service: Daily

JetBlue has historically had the most competitive fares on this route and also offers flights to lesser-served Cuban airports (Santa Clara, Cienfuegos, Holguín) which can be useful if you want to start your trip outside Havana. American and United both serve JFK and Newark respectively. Fares from New York to Cuba are meaningfully higher than from Miami — $250 is a good low-season price; expect $400+ in peak months. JetBlue’s fare alerts are worth setting up if you’re booking well ahead.

🛫 Tampa (TPA) / Fort Lauderdale (FLL) Havana (HAV)
Underrated Value
$180–$350 RT
✈️ Airlines: American, Southwest, JetBlue
⏱ Flight time: ~1h
📅 Service: Multiple weekly

Tampa has a significant Cuban-American community, which helps keep fares competitive. Southwest occasionally operates to Havana from both Tampa and Fort Lauderdale, and when they do, the prices can be genuinely low — Southwest’s no-fee change policy also adds flexibility that matters when traveling to Cuba. Fort Lauderdale is often overlooked in favor of Miami but shares the same South Florida advantages without Miami’s airport congestion.

🛫 Other US Cities (Charlotte, Houston, Atlanta) Havana (HAV)
Higher Cost
$300–$600 RT
✈️ Airlines: American, United
⏱ Flight time: 2h 30min–4h
📅 Service: Daily or several/week

American flies to Havana from its Charlotte hub; United from Houston. These work if you’re based in those cities and the nonstop price beats a Miami positioning trip on balance. For most travelers, though, a budget airline to Fort Lauderdale the night before Cuba departure ends up cheaper than flying direct from a secondary US hub. Run the numbers both ways before booking — the gap is often $80–$150.

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US Travelers: Cash Is Your Only Option in Cuba

American Express, Visa, Mastercard — none of it works in Cuba for US cardholders. This isn’t a technology problem that can be solved with the right card. The embargo blocks US-issued financial instruments at the banking level. Bring USD cash. The Cuban peso (CUP) is the local currency; exchange your dollars on arrival at a CADECA exchange house or at the airport (though airport rates are worse). Factor in the total cash you’ll need for your entire trip, plus a 20% buffer. Running out of money in Cuba is a significantly harder problem to solve than in most countries.

Airport terminal departure gates with flight information boards
Multiple US cities now have direct services to Havana — Miami remains the cheapest starting point by some distance.
🇬🇧

Getting to Cuba from the United Kingdom

Always a connection — pick the right one

There’s no scheduled nonstop service between the UK and Cuba that runs year-round as of 2026. TUI has operated seasonal charter flights from Gatwick and Manchester to Varadero and Holguín during the winter sun season (roughly October to April), but these are almost exclusively bundled into package holidays. If you want an independent trip to Havana, you’re connecting somewhere. The question is where, and the answer affects both price and total travel time significantly.

The best connecting hubs for UK travelers are Madrid, Paris CDG, and Amsterdam. Of the three, Madrid via Iberia tends to offer the best combination of frequency, total travel time, and price — particularly if you book Iberia’s Heathrow connections as a single ticket. The Cancún route (flying via Mexico) has become more popular and can occasionally be cheaper, especially if you use a budget transatlantic carrier to Cancún and then a separate hop to Havana — but this requires managing two bookings and the risk that comes with it.

🛫 London (LHR/LGW) Madrid Havana
Best Overall Route
£380–£580 RT
✈️ Airlines: Iberia (both legs)
⏱ Total travel: ~11–12h
📅 Frequency: Daily connections

Iberia’s Madrid hub gives you the most convenient connection to Havana from the UK. The London-Madrid leg takes under 2 hours; Madrid-Havana is 9.5 hours. Booked as a single Iberia ticket, your baggage transfers automatically and you’re protected if the first leg is delayed. The Iberia Plus program accumulates Avios, which are transferable to British Airways Avios — useful if you fly either carrier regularly. Don’t overlook Iberia Express on the London-Madrid segment; it’s often significantly cheaper than full Iberia and feeds into the same Madrid hub.

🛫 London (LHR) Paris CDG Havana
Reliable Alternative
£400–£620 RT
✈️ Airlines: Air France / BA to CDG, then Air France
⏱ Total travel: ~12–13h
📅 Frequency: Several flights/week

Air France operates Havana service from Paris CDG. Getting to CDG from London is easy — Eurostar to Gare du Nord and taxi or RER B, or a short-hop flight — and this is sometimes worth considering if Air France fares are running lower than Iberia in a given booking window. The Eurostar option adds a pleasant dimension if you can spare an extra day in Paris, though it complicates luggage. Check fares on both routes simultaneously before committing; the gap between them fluctuates by as much as £80-100.

🛫 London (LHR/AMS) Amsterdam Havana
KLM Option
£420–£650 RT
✈️ Airlines: KLM
⏱ Total travel: ~12h
📅 Frequency: Several per week

KLM operates Havana service from Amsterdam Schiphol. It’s a solid option and Schiphol is one of Europe’s more pleasant transit airports, but KLM fares to Havana tend to run slightly higher than Iberia. Worth checking in the Flying Blue program (Air France-KLM) if you have points. The London-Amsterdam leg is under 90 minutes and extremely frequent, which gives you good flexibility on connection timing.

🛫 London (LGW/LHR) Cancún Havana
Can Be Cheapest — But Split Booking Risk
£320–£520 RT
✈️ Airlines: TUI/Virgin to CUN, then Interjet/Volaris/Aeromexico
⏱ Total travel: ~14–16h
📅 Frequency: Variable

The Cancún routing can undercut the European hub options by £50–100 when transatlantic sales are running, particularly in the April–October window. The catch: you’re typically managing two separate bookings, which means if your London-Cancún flight is delayed, you may miss your Cancún-Havana connection with no protection. If you go this route, build in a deliberate overnight in Cancún between the two legs and treat it as a feature rather than a cost. It turns a risk into a stop — and Cancún’s airport hotels are inexpensive enough that the extra night often still comes out cheaper overall.

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Manchester & Regional UK Airports

If you’re based outside London, don’t assume Heathrow is your best starting point. Manchester has decent transatlantic connections via multiple airlines, and in many cases the Manchester-Madrid or Manchester-Amsterdam fare on a budget carrier undercuts the equivalent from Heathrow enough to justify it. Birmingham and Edinburgh also have reasonable options to the main European hubs. Always price your full journey from your home airport before assuming London is cheaper — it often isn’t once you factor in getting to Heathrow.

Classic American cars on a street in Havana Cuba
After 11–14 hours of travel from the UK, arriving in Havana still manages to feel like landing somewhere genuinely different. The classic cars lining the streets outside the terminal are the first confirmation you’ve made it.
🇨🇦

Getting to Cuba from Canada

The easiest access of the three

Canadians have historically been Cuba’s largest tourist market, and the flight network reflects that. Direct flights to Cuba operate from Toronto (YYZ), Montreal (YUL), Ottawa (YOW), Calgary (YYC), Edmonton (YEG), and Vancouver (YVR). The Toronto and Montreal routes have the most frequency and generally the most competitive pricing. If you’re in western Canada, Calgary and Edmonton have direct services that save a transcontinental connection, though prices are usually a little higher.

Canada also benefits from a robust charter market — Air Transat and Sunwing in particular. Charter fares bundled with hotels to resort destinations like Varadero, Cayo Coco, and Holguín can be extremely cheap, sometimes under C$600 all-in for a week. If you’re happy at a beach resort rather than in Havana, the Canadian charter market genuinely represents exceptional value. For those wanting to explore independently, scheduled service to Havana is the right choice — but it’s worth knowing the charter option exists, because the resort package market sometimes also opens up cheap seats to Havana when you dig into the bookings.

🛫 Toronto (YYZ) Havana (HAV)
Best Value + Frequency
C$320–C$550 RT
✈️ Airlines: Air Canada, Air Transat, Sunwing
⏱ Flight time: ~3h 30min
📅 Service: Daily

The Toronto-Havana route is the busiest Canada-Cuba corridor. Air Canada operates scheduled service with reliable frequency; Air Transat competes on price and often wins; Sunwing focuses more on resort routes but also serves Havana. Setting up price alerts on Google Flights for this route in the six-to-eight weeks before travel frequently surfaces fares under C$400 return in low and shoulder seasons (April–June, September–October). WestJet has also served this route historically — check their current status when booking.

🛫 Montreal (YUL) Havana (HAV)
Second Best Option
C$340–C$580 RT
✈️ Airlines: Air Transat, Air Canada
⏱ Flight time: ~3h 45min
📅 Service: Several per week

Air Transat is particularly strong on the Montreal-Cuba routes, historically offering some of the lowest scheduled fares in the Canadian market. French-speaking travelers also appreciate that Cuba’s service industry has some French language presence, especially in Havana. Montreal fares are comparable to Toronto — worth checking both if you have flexibility on departure city. The slight price premium is occasionally offset by Air Transat promotional fares that run independently of what Air Canada is doing.

🛫 Calgary (YYC) / Edmonton (YEG) Havana (HAV)
Western Canada Direct
C$450–C$700 RT
✈️ Airlines: WestJet, Air Transat, Sunwing
⏱ Flight time: ~6h
📅 Service: Several per week (seasonal)

Western Canadian routes are more seasonal than the Ontario-Quebec services, with frequency peaking in winter. WestJet has a strong presence out of Calgary. Fares are higher than the eastern routes — the flight is longer and the market is smaller — but they’re still meaningfully cheaper than positioning to Toronto to catch the cheaper flights east, once you factor in the cost and time of that connection. Confirm current schedules when booking; these routes have fluctuated more than the Toronto and Montreal services in recent years.

🛫 Toronto / Montreal Varadero / Holguín / Cayo Coco (Resort Routes)
Package Value
C$280–C$480 RT + hotel
✈️ Airlines: Sunwing, Air Transat, WestJet Vacations
⏱ Flight time: 3–4h
📅 Service: Weekly charters

This isn’t an independent-trip route, but the numbers are worth understanding. Sunwing and Air Transat package deals — round-trip flight plus 7 nights all-inclusive — to Varadero or Cayo Coco can come in under C$700 per person in low season. If your goal is beach, sun, and Cuban rum rather than walking Old Havana, this is one of the best beach holiday deals available from Canada to anywhere. The trade-off is you’re in a resort bubble, not in real Cuba. But it’s real Cuba flights, real Cuban sand, and genuinely competitive pricing.

ℹ️
Canadian Travelers: You Have the Most Flexibility

No OFAC license required. Canadian cards and some international Mastercards work at Cuban ATMs (though reliability varies and fees are significant — budget $5–10 per withdrawal). You can use Canadian dollars, US dollars, and Euros on the ground. Cuba’s tourist infrastructure was historically built partly around Canadian visitors, which means you’ll find genuinely good value, friendly service, and fewer administrative complications than US travelers face. The only extra paperwork you need is your tourist card — the pink version — which most airlines sell at check-in or you can buy in advance online for a few dollars less.

Person browsing flights on a laptop with a passport and travel documents on the desk
Canadian travelers have the widest range of flight options and the fewest complications — but a bit of research before booking still makes a real difference to the final price.
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How to Actually Find the Cheapest Flights to Cuba

Booking strategy that works

Cuba flight pricing follows patterns. Knowing them means you’re rarely paying top dollar unless you’re booking last-minute in December. Here’s what consistently makes a difference.

  1. 1
    Book 8–12 weeks out for peak season, 4–6 weeks for shoulder. Cuba’s peak is November through February and the first half of March. During those months, fares to Havana from all three countries rise noticeably, and accommodation tightens simultaneously. If you’re traveling at Christmas or New Year’s — and you should, the city is extraordinary then — book flights at least three months in advance. In shoulder months (April–June, September–October), fares tend to stay stable much closer to departure, and 4–6 weeks is often fine.
  2. 2
    Set Google Flights price tracking alerts and actually act when they fire. Google Flights’ “Track prices” feature sends an email when fares on your route drop. This is not passive optimization — you need to be ready to book within a day or two when a sale price appears, because Cuba routes have limited inventory at any given price tier. Sign up, set your alert, keep your credit card close. The alerts are free and the savings are real.
  3. 3
    Fly midweek, particularly Tuesday and Wednesday departures. The weekend-vs-weekday price difference on Cuba routes isn’t always massive, but it’s consistent. Tuesday and Wednesday departures are typically the cheapest across all three countries. Saturday departures — when most package holidays begin — are almost always the most expensive. A Friday-to-Friday or Tuesday-to-Tuesday trip construction often saves $30–70 compared to a Saturday-to-Saturday one.
  4. 4
    US travelers: seriously consider a positioning flight to Miami or Fort Lauderdale. If you’re based in a city without direct Cuba service — or where direct service is expensive — often the cheapest total journey is a budget domestic flight to South Florida the night before, an airport or hotel overnight, and then the Miami or FLL-Havana leg on American or Spirit. Run the comparison before defaulting to your home city’s non-stop. The gap can be $100–200.
  5. 5
    UK travelers: use Skyscanner’s “Everywhere” and “Flexible dates” tools. Skyscanner is particularly useful for UK-Cuba routing because it surfaces indirect routes that Google Flights sometimes misses. The “Everywhere” feature from your home airport occasionally flags routing combinations via European hubs that are significantly cheaper than the standard Iberia or Air France options. Set the destination to Cuba and the dates to a flexible month range before fixing your travel window.
  6. 6
    Canadian travelers: check Flighthub and Travelocity alongside the airline direct sites. The Canadian OTA market has slightly different inventory relationships than the global tools. Air Transat fares in particular sometimes show differently on their own site versus aggregators. Check both before booking. For resort packages, Sunwing and Air Transat’s own websites often have bundle deals not shown on third-party sites.
  7. 7
    Use the airline directly to book once you’ve found the price on a comparison tool. Aggregator sites are great for price discovery. But book on the airline’s own website or app. This matters especially for Cuba — if anything goes wrong (delay, cancellation, schedule change), you want a direct relationship with the airline. Booking through an OTA adds an intermediary to every conversation and can make rebooking dramatically harder.
  8. 8
    Avoid Christmas week and Spring Break like your budget depends on it — because it does. December 20 to January 5 is the single most expensive window for Cuba flights from all three countries. Prices can be 60–100% higher than the same route a week earlier or later. US Spring Break (mid-March) creates a secondary spike on US routes. If you have any schedule flexibility, the first two weeks of December or the last week of January are genuinely better deals while still offering excellent weather.

The people who pay the least to get to Cuba aren’t the ones who got lucky. They’re the ones who set the price alert three months out, booked on a Tuesday when it fired, and weren’t flying on a Saturday in December. That’s basically the whole strategy.

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Hidden Flight Costs Most Travelers Don’t Factor In

True cost of getting there

The advertised fare is not the full cost of getting to Cuba. This is true of most air travel, but Cuba adds a few specific items worth knowing about before you finalize your budget.

The Tourist Card (e-Visa): $20–50

Cuba moved from the paper Tourist Card (tarjeta del turista) to a digital e-Visa system from January 2026. Most nationalities need one. You apply online before travel. Cost varies by nationality and where you purchase — buying directly through the Cuban government portal is typically cheapest, while buying through airlines or third-party services adds a processing fee. US travelers traveling under the “Support for the Cuban People” OFAC category declare this at time of application. Don’t leave this to the last minute; apply at least two weeks before departure.

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Tourist Card: Pink vs Green — Which Do You Need?

Pink tourist card (Tarjeta del Turista Rosa): for flights arriving in Cuba from anywhere outside the US or Canada. Green tourist card: for flights routed through the United States or Canada. Most UK travelers get pink; most US and Canadian travelers get green. Your airline or the Cuban consulate can confirm which applies to your specific routing. Getting this wrong at the airport is stressful — sort it early.

Travel Insurance: $50–$120

Cuba requires proof of travel insurance with medical coverage at the border — it’s not a recommendation, it’s an entry requirement. Immigration officers check. Some airlines include basic coverage with tickets; most don’t. If your current travel insurance policy doesn’t cover Cuba specifically (worth checking — some US policies exclude Cuba), you’ll need a Cuba-eligible policy. Budget $50–120 depending on trip length and coverage level. World Nomads, True Traveller (for UK), and Allianz all have Cuba-compatible options.

Baggage Fees: Varies Significantly

Budget carriers on US-Cuba routes — Spirit in particular — have baggage fees that can add $50–100 to a round-trip if you’re not careful. Spirit’s headline fares include carry-on luggage only, and their checked bag fees are among the highest in the US market. On a short Cuba trip, the carry-on-only approach is genuinely viable — Cuba’s laundry situation for travelers is a separate conversation — but factor baggage costs into any price comparison between American (which typically includes one checked bag on Cuba routes) and Spirit or similar low-cost carriers.

Airport Departure Tax: Included Since ~2015

Cuba’s departure tax is now generally included in the ticket price rather than collected at the airport separately. Confirm this when you book — most major carriers have it incorporated — but if you’re on a very budget charter ticket, it’s worth checking the fare conditions. The tax itself isn’t large (typically $25–30 equivalent) but showing up without it covered has caught travelers off guard.

Currency Exchange Losses: Plan for 3–8%

Whatever currency you’re bringing, you’ll exchange to Cuban pesos (CUP) at either the airport CADECA, a city exchange bureau, or your bank on arrival. Airport rates are typically worse than city rates. Exchange fees and spreads erode your cash — budget 3–5% as a realistic cost of currency conversion. On a $600 cash budget, that’s $18–30 lost to exchange friction. It’s not a cost you can avoid, but knowing it exists prevents unpleasant surprises when your $600 in cash produces fewer pesos than the calculator suggested.

Pre-Trip CostUS TravelersUK TravelersCanadian Travelers
Return flight (typical)$150–$400£380–£600C$320–C$550
Cuba e-Visa / tourist card$20–$50£20–£40C$25–C$45
Travel insurance (required)$50–$120£35–£90C$45–C$100
Checked baggage (if applicable)$0–$100£0–£50C$0–C$60
Exchange rate friction$15–$30£12–£25C$15–C$30
True total pre-Cuba cost$235–$700£447–£805C$405–C$785
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What Happens When You Land at Havana Airport

Arrivals process, transport, first steps

José Martí International Airport (HAV) is a functional but not luxurious airport. Terminal 3 handles the majority of international arrivals including all the US and Canadian routes; Terminal 2 handles some charter arrivals. You’ll clear immigration, collect your bags, and head through customs. The queue at immigration can be slow — 30–60 minutes is common on a busy afternoon arrival — so don’t rush to change your plans around it. Bring snacks.

Immigration: What to Expect

Immigration officers will check your tourist card (e-Visa), your passport, and potentially ask about your accommodation details for the first night. Have your casa particular address or hotel name ready — you should have booked somewhere before arrival, and both immigration and your taxi driver will want to know where you’re going. US travelers may be asked about the purpose of their visit; answer honestly that you’re an independent traveler supporting the Cuban private sector. It’s not an interrogation, but it’s a real question — be prepared for it.

Money: Exchange Before You Leave the Airport

There are CADECA exchange bureaus in the arrivals hall. The airport rate is slightly worse than the city rate, but not dramatically so — and arriving in central Havana without any local pesos is a problem. Exchange enough for your taxi and first day: $50–80 USD equivalent is a sensible starting amount. You can exchange more in the city at better rates later.

Getting from the Airport to Havana City Centre

The airport is about 25–30 minutes from central Havana (longer in traffic). Your main options:

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State Taxi (Official Yellow Cabs)

Fixed-rate government taxis from the official taxi rank outside arrivals. The fixed rate to central Havana (Vedado, Old Havana, Miramar) is typically 25–30 CUC equivalent. Ask for the meter or confirm the price before getting in. These are reliable, air-conditioned, and the least-hassle option after a long flight. Your casa particular host will often arrange a pick-up if you ask in advance — sometimes at a slightly lower rate and with the added benefit of someone holding a sign with your name, which after 14 hours of travel from the UK is a genuinely welcome sight.

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Private Taxi (Negotiate at the Exit)

As you exit customs, drivers will approach offering private taxis. These can be cheaper than the official rank — $15–20 is achievable — but require negotiation and some confidence. The classic cars you’ve seen in photos are sometimes among these vehicles, which adds atmosphere but not necessarily comfort. If you’re comfortable negotiating and have enough local currency, this works fine. If you’re exhausted from a long flight, just take the official cab.

There’s no cheap public bus option from the airport that works practically for tourists with luggage. The taxi is the only realistic airport transfer. Budget it into your trip as a fixed cost — $20–30 each way — rather than trying to optimize it.

Havana Cuba street with colorful buildings and classic American cars
Old Havana’s streets are quieter in the early morning — a good argument for landing in the evening and getting your first proper walk in before the city wakes up.
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All Routes at a Glance: Full Comparison

Side-by-side
OriginBest RouteAirlinesFlight TimePrice Range RTCheapest SeasonKey Note
🇺🇸 MiamiMIA → HAV directAmerican, Spirit45 min$150–$300May–OctCheapest US option overall
🇺🇸 New YorkJFK/EWR → HAV directJetBlue, AA, United~3h 30m$250–$450Apr–Jun, Sep–OctJetBlue often cheapest
🇺🇸 Tampa / FLLTPA/FLL → HAV directAA, Southwest, JetBlue~1h$180–$350May–OctSouthwest has no-fee flexibility
🇬🇧 LondonLHR → MAD → HAVIberia~12h total£380–£580Apr–Jun, Sep–OctSingle-ticket baggage protection
🇬🇧 London altLHR → CDG → HAVAir France~13h total£400–£620Apr–JunCompare vs Iberia both ways
🇬🇧 London alt 2LHR → CUN → HAVMixed carriers~16h total£320–£520Apr–OctSplit booking risk — build in overnight
🇨🇦 TorontoYYZ → HAV directAir Canada, Air Transat~3h 30mC$320–C$550Apr–Jun, Sep–OctMost frequent Canada option
🇨🇦 MontrealYUL → HAV directAir Transat, Air Canada~3h 45mC$340–C$580Apr–JunAir Transat often has promo fares
🇨🇦 Calgary / EdmontonYYC/YEG → HAV directWestJet, Sunwing~6hC$450–C$700Nov–Mar (seasonal service)Less frequency — confirm schedule

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers
Can US citizens legally fly to Cuba in 2026?
Yes. US citizens can travel to Cuba under one of 12 OFAC-authorized categories. The most commonly used by independent travelers is “Support for the Cuban People,” which essentially means staying in casas particulares, eating at private restaurants, and spending money in the private sector rather than at state-run enterprises. You don’t need advance government approval — you self-certify when booking. Keep a basic record of your itinerary showing you met the category standard. The key restriction isn’t the travel itself; it’s that US financial instruments (debit and credit cards) don’t work in Cuba. Bring cash.
What’s the cheapest month to fly to Cuba from the UK?
April, May, and early June consistently produce the lowest UK-Cuba fares. The northern hemisphere summer (July–August) sees a moderate uptick because it’s school holiday season and demand for long-haul travel rises generally. September and October are also good value with excellent weather in Cuba. The worst months for fares are December through mid-January (peak season + Christmas premium) and March (Spring Break spillover). If you’re flexible, May is the sweet spot — shoulder-season pricing, good weather in Cuba, and a quieter Havana before the summer heat arrives fully.
Are there direct flights from the UK to Cuba?
No scheduled year-round direct service operates between the UK and Cuba as of 2026. TUI has offered seasonal charter service from Gatwick and Manchester to Cuban resort airports (Varadero, Holguín) during the winter, but these are primarily sold as part of package holidays. For an independent trip to Havana, you’ll connect through Madrid (Iberia), Paris CDG (Air France), Amsterdam (KLM), or Cancún. Madrid via Iberia is the most consistently practical option in terms of frequency, connection timing, and price.
Do I need travel insurance to enter Cuba?
Yes — it’s an entry requirement, not just a recommendation. Cuban immigration checks for proof of medical travel insurance with adequate coverage. Some airlines include basic coverage in their Cuba fares; most don’t. You need to verify your existing travel insurance explicitly covers Cuba (some US and European policies exclude it). If yours doesn’t, purchase Cuba-eligible coverage before you travel. World Nomads, True Traveller (UK), and Allianz Global Assistance all have products that cover Cuba. Budget $50–120 depending on trip length.
What’s the best way to get to Cuba from Canada on a budget?
For independent travelers: Toronto (YYZ) or Montreal (YUL) to Havana (HAV) with Air Transat or Air Canada, booked 6–10 weeks out, departing Tuesday or Wednesday. Set Google Flights price alerts and watch Air Transat’s promotional fare page. For resort travelers: Sunwing and Air Transat vacation packages to Varadero or Cayo Coco can be extraordinary value — sometimes under C$700 all-in for a week including hotel. Confirm whether you want Havana or a resort before booking, because the routes and airlines are different.
Which airport in Cuba should I fly into?
For most independent travelers: Havana (HAV), José Martí International. It puts you in Cuba’s most interesting and historically rich city, and all other destinations — Viñales, Trinidad, Cienfuegos, Santiago — are accessible from there by bus or taxi. Resort travelers often fly directly to Varadero (VRA), Holguín (HOG), or Cayo Coco (CCC) via charter, which skips Havana entirely. If you’re doing both Havana and a beach stop, flying in and out of Havana is still the most practical strategy — position yourself there first, then travel to your beach destination by domestic transport.
How far in advance should I book flights to Cuba?
For peak season (November–February): 10–14 weeks. Prices and accommodation both tighten at the same time, and you want your flight sorted before you start negotiating casas. For shoulder season (April–June, September–October): 4–8 weeks is typically fine. Low season (July–August) offers more flexibility but Cuba’s heat and humidity in those months is worth thinking about — not a reason to avoid it, but a reason to know what you’re signing up for. The short answer: earlier is almost never worse. The best prices appear 8–12 weeks out, not the week before departure.
Can I use a VPN to book Cuban flights from restricted locations?
This question comes up often and deserves a direct answer. US-based travelers are permitted to book flights to Cuba on US airline websites directly — there’s no restriction on purchasing the flight itself. The issue is in Cuba: US debit and credit cards used to pay for things in Cuba don’t work. Using a VPN to circumvent airline booking restrictions would be a separate legal and terms-of-service question; it’s not necessary for legal travel under OFAC categories, and most reputable Cuba travel advisors recommend booking normally and transparently.
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The Bottom Line

Getting to Cuba costs what it costs — and it’s not as cheap as Southeast Asia or Central America. But with the right approach, it’s also not as expensive as it first appears. The people paying top dollar to get to Havana are generally the ones searching last-minute in December, flying from non-hub US cities on a Saturday, or defaulting to the first Skyscanner result without shopping around. The difference between an expensive Cuba trip and a reasonably priced one often starts before you land — in the booking habits, the timing, and the five minutes spent comparing routes.

US travelers face the most logistical complexity — the cash requirement alone requires real planning — but have the world’s shortest flight to Havana on their side if they’re in the right city. UK travelers connect through reliable European hubs and benefit from having financial instruments that actually work in Cuba. Canadians, honestly, drew the best card: direct flights, competitive charter options, and a historically warm relationship with the island that shows up in the service, the familiarity, and the sheer number of routes available. Wherever you’re coming from, the math is workable.

Cuba is worth the getting there. Book smart, bring your cash (or pack your British Mastercard), and go.


About the author
Shahidur Rahaman
Shahidur Rahaman is a travel blogger and enthusiast based in the vibrant city of Havana, Cuba. Captivated by the world's hidden corners and colorful cultures, he writes with a passion for authentic experiences and meaningful connections made on the road. When he's not planning his next adventure, Shahidur calls the lively streets of Havana home — a city that fuels his love for storytelling every single day.

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