Cuba in December: what to expect, what’s on and where to stay

May 19, 2026
Warm evening light falling across the Malecón seafront in Havana, Cuba, with classic cars and colonial buildings
Havana in December: warm evenings, low humidity, and the city dressed for the holiday season. The peak of the island’s best travel window. December Guide
The Honest Briefing

December is Cuba’s most popular travel month, and for most people the weather is the reason. The wet season is done, the humidity has dropped, and daytime temperatures across the island sit in that 26–29°C range where you can walk all day without wilting. Havana is at its most photogenic. The sea is still warm enough to swim comfortably. The evenings are cool enough to make you want to stay out late.

But December is also the month when Cuba is most expensive, most crowded, and — during the Christmas and New Year stretch — most difficult to book. The travellers who have the best December in Cuba are the ones who knew what was coming and planned around it. This guide covers all of it: the weather in real terms, the events worth knowing about, the booking realities, and how to navigate the different windows within December itself.

🌡26–29°Cdaytime high
🌧58mmavg. rainfall
🌊26°Csea temperature
👥Peak seasonbook 6–8 weeks ahead
🎄Dec 24–Jan 1hardest week to book
Section 01 · Weather

What the Weather Is Actually Like in December

December sits at the beginning of Cuba’s dry season, which runs through to April. By the time you arrive, the heavy tropical rains of October and November are genuinely finished. You’ll see occasional overcast days, and in the northern coastal areas a stiff breeze off the Atlantic can make evenings feel sharper than the thermometer suggests — pack a light layer for after dark. But sustained rain? That’s rare.

Havana sits at around 26°C during the day and drops to 18–20°C at night. Further east, Santiago de Cuba stays a couple of degrees warmer and more humid throughout. Head to Viñales in the highlands of Pinar del Río and you’ll find cooler nights — occasionally as low as 14°C — which makes it the one place in Cuba where a proper jacket earns its place in your bag in December.

Cuba — December Weather Overview
Havana baseline · Actual conditions will vary by region
◆ Excellent Month
🌡
29°C
Daily High
🌙
19°C
Night Low
🌊
26°C
Sea Temp
☀️
7.8h
Daily Sun
Weather ★★★★★
Crowds ★★★★★
Value ★★★★★
Overall ★★★★

The 58mm of average rainfall for December is spread thin. In practical terms that means you might see one or two proper rainy afternoons across a two-week trip, not a week of grey skies. Humidity, which made August and September genuinely uncomfortable, is down to manageable levels — roughly 70–74% on average in Havana versus 82–85% in the heart of the wet season.

One weather wrinkle specific to December: cold fronts (known as “nortes”) blowing down from North America. These are not dramatic events, but they do occasionally arrive and drop temperatures by 5–8°C for 24–48 hours, bring cloud cover, and chop up the northern coastline. If you’re planning diving, boat trips, or northern beach days, stay flexible in your schedule and check forecasts a few days ahead rather than locking everything in from home.

🌬
About “Nortes” Cold Fronts in December

Cuba gets an average of 2–4 cold front events in December, typically lasting 24–48 hours each. During a norte, coastal and northern areas feel significantly cooler and windier, and sea conditions deteriorate for water activities. They clear quickly and are followed by some of the clearest, most stunning weather days of the month. Budget extra flexibility into itineraries involving boat trips, diving, or northern beach days.

Section 02 · Timing Within December

Early, Middle, or Late December: Which Window Is Actually Better

December isn’t a single experience. It has three distinct phases and they behave differently in terms of crowds, prices, and what the country feels like on the ground.

December 1–14
Early December — The Sweet Spot
Peak season has technically begun but the full holiday wave hasn’t arrived. Casas and boutique hotels are busy but bookable with reasonable notice. Prices are elevated above shoulder season but haven’t hit the Christmas premium. Havana feels energised without feeling overrun. This is the window experienced Cuba travellers often target deliberately — all the weather benefits of December with slightly more breathing room than the second half of the month delivers.
Best Value
December 15–23
Mid-December — Busy but Manageable
International arrivals increase significantly, particularly from Canada, Europe, and the US. Old Havana starts to feel genuinely crowded during peak hours. Accommodation is fully booked in the best properties — you need to have sorted this weeks out. That said, the energy is good. The city gets festive decorations, musicians seem to play harder, and paladares that are worth queuing for start having the queues. If you booked ahead, this is a tremendous time to be in Cuba.
Book Early
December 24 – January 1
Christmas & New Year — Peak of Peak
The most in-demand, most expensive, and most memorable window if you’re prepared for it. Noche Buena (Christmas Eve) is Cuba’s biggest family night of the year — the streets are quieter as everyone is at home, then erupt later with music. New Year’s Eve in Havana is legitimately spectacular: the Malecón fills with tens of thousands of people, bands play until dawn, and the city doesn’t really sleep. Accommodation at quality properties can be booked solid 8–10 weeks out. If you’re planning this window, you needed to have started looking in October.
Max Lead Time

New Year’s Eve on the Malecón is one of those rare travel experiences that actually lives up to the version of itself you imagined. Havana doesn’t do anything halfway when it decides to celebrate, and that night the whole city decides to celebrate at the same time.

Section 03 · Events & Festivals

What’s Actually On in Cuba in December

December has more going on than most months on the Cuban cultural calendar. Some of it is organised and ticketed; most of it is simply what happens when a country that runs on music and community spirit hits the holiday season.

🎬
Festival Internacional del Nuevo Cine Latinoamericano
Early December · Havana
One of Latin America’s most important film festivals, running since 1979. Screenings happen at multiple Havana cinemas including the Chaplin and Yara theatres. Cuban films, shorts, and documentary work alongside international Latin American submissions. Access is generally open and tickets are affordable. A genuinely excellent event if you’re in Havana in the first two weeks of December — and most people visiting Cuba at this time have no idea it’s happening.
🎺
Jazz Plaza Festival
Mid-December · Havana & Matanzas
Cuba’s premier jazz event and one of the most respected in the Caribbean. Cuban musicians share stages with international guests at venues including the Teatro Amadeo Roldán and Jazz Club La Zorra y el Cuervo. The combination of Cuban jazz traditions with a serious international programme makes this worth timing your trip around. Street performances and impromptu sessions spill out of the official venues into neighbourhood bars throughout the week.
🕯
Noche Buena — Cuban Christmas Eve
December 24 · Nationwide
Cuba celebrates Christmas primarily on the night of the 24th. Families gather for the big meal — roast pork (lechón asado) cooked in the street on improvised spits, rice, black beans, yuca. This is a family night rather than a tourist event, which means much of Havana goes quiet earlier than you’d expect. The experience of walking through residential neighbourhoods while the smell of lechón drifts from every doorway is one of Cuba’s most unexpected and memorable December moments.
🎆
New Year’s Eve — Malecón
December 31 · Havana
The Malecón seafront becomes the focal point for one of the Caribbean’s biggest New Year celebrations. No single ticketed event — it’s a city-wide street party stretching the entire 8km of the Malecón and into the streets of Centro Habana and Old Havana. Music stages, rum, dancing, and a midnight countdown that the whole city feels. Arrive by 10pm to get a position with views of the water. Leave your valuables at the casa — it gets wonderfully chaotic.
🎨
Havana Biennial (alternating years)
December (odd years) · Havana
In alternating years, Havana’s biennial contemporary art exhibition brings international artists and installations to galleries, public spaces, and unconventional venues across the city. When it falls in December, it adds a genuine cultural layer to an already rich month. Works appear in unexpected locations — courtyards, rooftops, warehouses — making wandering the city feel like a treasure hunt. Check the current year’s schedule before planning around it.
🥁
Santiago Festivals & Parrandas (Remedios)
Late December · Santiago & Remedios
The town of Remedios in Villa Clara province hosts Las Parrandas de Remedios on December 24 — one of Cuba’s oldest and loudest festivals, with competing neighbourhood floats, fireworks, and music that starts at midnight and runs until dawn. It’s not a tourist event in the polished sense; it’s a Cuban community celebration that tourists are warmly welcome to join. Santiago meanwhile runs its own year-end celebrations with Afro-Cuban music and dance that extends into January.
🎺
Jazz Plaza Is Worth Timing Your Trip Around

If you have flexibility on your December dates, aligning your Havana stay with Jazz Plaza is genuinely worth it. The official programme is excellent, but the informal spillover — musicians who’ve just played a set heading to nearby bars and continuing — is where you find some of the most memorable music Cuba produces. La Zorra y el Cuervo jazz club on La Rampa becomes the unofficial hub. Get there early; it fills completely.

Evening street scene in Old Havana with warm lights and musicians performing outside a colonial building
December evenings in Havana: the temperature drops just enough to make the streets comfortable all night, which means the music doesn’t stop.
Section 05 · Destinations

Where to Go in Cuba in December: City by City

December’s good weather is consistent across the island, which means choosing where to go is less about avoiding bad conditions and more about what you actually want from the trip. Here’s how the main destinations stack up specifically in December.

🌊
Cienfuegos
Las Villas · Underrated Pick
$26–40 per day
Genuinely lovely in December and far less mobbed than Havana or Trinidad. The bay is beautiful, the Malecón walkable, and the city has enough restaurants and music to occupy several days. An ideal base if you want December conditions without December crowds.
🎺
Santiago de Cuba
Cuba’s 2nd City · Festive
$28–45 per day
Stays warmer than Havana through December and celebrates the season with its own rhythm and energy. The Afro-Cuban music scene is at its most active. Good option if you want eastern Cuba’s character and fewer international tourists than the west gets at Christmas.
🐟
Cayo Coco / Varadero
Beach Resort Areas
$120–280+ per night
The all-inclusive resort strip reaches its annual peak in December. Sea conditions and beach weather are excellent. For those wanting a beach-focused holiday rather than a cultural one — and who’ve already done Cuba independently — the cays offer genuinely beautiful Caribbean beach product in December.
Section 06 · Accommodation

Where to Stay in December: What the Options Look Like at Peak Season

Interior of a beautifully restored colonial hotel room in Havana with high ceilings and tiled floors

Accommodation in December operates under different rules than the rest of the year. Supply doesn’t change. Demand increases dramatically. The practical result: the properties that are genuinely worth staying in — well-run casas, boutique hotels, the better state hotels — fill up first and stay full. Waiting until November to book a December trip to Havana is a gamble. Waiting until mid-December to book Christmas week is closer to foolishness.

The good news is that Cuba’s accommodation scene is broad enough that something decent is always available if you’re flexible on location and type. The challenge is finding something decent in the neighbourhood you actually want, at a price that doesn’t make the trip unviable.

🏠
Budget
Casa Particular
$20–40/night
Best value in any season. December rates run $5–10 higher than May at comparable properties. Book via CasaParticular.com or direct email. Your host is your best local resource — this matters more in December when everything is busier.
🏛
Mid-Range
Boutique Hotel / Premium Casa
$55–130/night
Restored colonial mansions and independently-run boutique hotels. December demand means the best ones are gone months before Christmas. If you want a specific property, contact them directly well in advance — platform availability often lags behind actual availability.
Luxury
Premium Hotel
$150–350/night
Hotel Nacional, Gran Hotel Manzana, Iberostar Parque Central — these run full occupancy through December at their highest rack rates of the year. If you’re booking peak Christmas week at this tier, expect premium pricing and plan 8–10 weeks out at minimum.
⚠️
December 24–31: Book 8–10 Weeks Out, No Exceptions

Christmas Eve through New Year’s Day is the single hardest accommodation window of the Cuban travel year. Quality properties in Havana, Trinidad, and Viñales are often fully committed by late October for the Christmas–New Year stretch. If you’re planning a trip over this period, booking accommodation before you book your flights is not overcautious — it’s the correct order of operations. The flight you can change; the good casa you cannot recreate.

Section 07 · Activities

What to Actually Do in Cuba in December

December’s dry-season conditions mean that almost everything Cuba offers is accessible. Outdoor activities, water sports, hiking, and beach days all reach their best conditions of the year. The only caveat is the norte cold fronts — they occasionally close a window for a day or two on northern-facing coastal activities, but they pass quickly.

Water and Outdoor Activities

Scuba diving in December is some of the best Cuba produces all year. Visibility in the water is consistently excellent as the storms that churn up sediment during the wet season have passed. Water temperatures at 26°C mean a 3mm wetsuit is plenty for most divers. The south-coast sites — Jardines de la Reina and the waters around Playa Girón — are less affected by nortes than the northern coastline, making them particularly reliable through December.

Hiking conditions in December are as good as they get anywhere on the island. The Viñales valley, the Escambray mountains above Trinidad, and the Sierra Maestra in the east are all dry, clear, and cool enough to make serious hiking genuinely enjoyable rather than a feat of endurance. The trails that are genuinely challenging in July — where humidity turns a moderate walk into a soaking slog — become accessible and pleasant in December.

Food and Nightlife

December is when Cuba’s food scene feels most alive. Paladares that have been quietly excellent all year get busy, and new ones that opened in the second half of the year have found their feet by December. The holiday atmosphere pushes people out of their apartments and into restaurants and music venues in a way that makes the social life of any Cuban city feel richer than the off-season version.

If you’re spending Christmas Eve in Cuba, try to get an invitation to eat with a Cuban family — a host family, a new friend, anyone who can extend that kind of hospitality. The lechón asado experience — roast pork slow-cooked in the street for hours — is something no restaurant can replicate. Alternatively, some paladares offer special Noche Buena menus worth booking in advance, and they tend to be very good.

Traditional Cuban food spread with black beans, rice, roast pork and yuca on a wooden table
Cuban food in December often has an extra dimension — Noche Buena lechón, Christmas-season rum punches, and paladares cooking at their best for a full dining room.
Section 08 · Budget & Costs

What a December Cuba Trip Actually Costs

Cuba in December costs more than Cuba in June. There’s no getting around it. How much more depends heavily on which window you’re travelling in and how far ahead you booked.

Cost CategoryMay–Oct (Low)Dec 1–14Dec 15–23Dec 24–Jan 1
Basic Casa Particular$12–20/night$18–28/night$22–35/night$30–50/night
Mid-Range Casa / Boutique$28–55/night$40–70/night$50–90/night$65–130/night
Street food / local lunch$2–5$2–5$3–6$3–7
Paladar dinner (mid-range)$12–20$14–22$14–25$18–35
Viazul bus (Havana–Trinidad)$15–17$15–17$15–17$15–17
Typical day budget (per person)$35–50$50–65$55–75$65–100+

Transport between cities is one cost that doesn’t spike significantly in December. Viazul buses run at the same prices year-round. The increase hits accommodation and food hardest, particularly anything near the main tourist squares in Havana, Trinidad, and Viñales.

💵
Bring 30% More Cash Than You Think You Need in December

The standard Cuba advice to carry extra cash applies to every season — but in December, the premium opportunities for extra spending multiply. A concert you didn’t know about. A day trip you decide to add. A Noche Buena meal at a paladar with a special menu that costs more than you budgeted. Cuba in peak season is generous with its unexpected costs. Be equally generous with your buffer, and you’ll thank yourself somewhere around December 27th.

Section 09 · Packing

What to Pack for Cuba in December

December packing for Cuba is slightly more layered than the rest of the year — literally. The daytime heat means you’re dressing for summer; the cool evenings and occasional norte fronts mean you need something for after 9pm.

ItemEssential?Notes
Light cotton/linen clothingEssentialDaytime temperatures are summer; natural fibres breathe far better than synthetics in Cuba’s heat
Light jacket or cardiganEssentialDecember evenings and norte fronts drop to 17–19°C in Havana. You will want a layer by 10pm and during cold fronts
Walking shoes / trainersEssentialHavana and Trinidad are walking cities on uneven cobblestones. Sandals will do you for beaches; not for sightseeing
High-SPF sunscreenEssentialCuba’s UV index is high even in December. Bring enough from home — quality sunscreen is expensive and inconsistently available in Cuba
Insect repellentUsefulMosquitoes reduce significantly in dry season but don’t disappear entirely, especially in Viñales and rural areas
One smart-casual outfitUsefulFor the better Havana paladares and any Jazz Plaza events you attend. Cuba is relaxed but a step up from beachwear is appropriate at certain venues
Cash (in Euros, CAD, or GBP)EssentialCuba is cash only. Change to CUP at official Cadeca booths. Euros and Canadian dollars attract the best rates. US dollars incur a 10% exchange penalty
Unlocked phone / mobile dataUsefulCubacel SIM cards are available at the airport and ETECSA offices. Data is slow but functional for maps and messaging. WhatsApp is your primary communication tool in Cuba
Power bankEssentialPower cuts are a live issue across Cuba. A charged power bank is genuinely useful rather than merely convenient
Waterproof layer / compact umbrellaSituationalRare in December but not impossible. A compact packable rain layer takes no space and avoids being caught in a surprise afternoon shower
Section 10 · How to Plan

8 Things to Sort Before You Leave for Cuba in December

  1. Book your accommodation before you book your flights. In peak December, the best properties go first. Once you’ve committed to a flight, your accommodation options narrow to what’s left. Reverse the order — find and confirm accommodation, then match your flights to it. This feels slightly backwards to how most people plan trips. For Cuba in December it’s the correct approach.
  2. Get your e-visa processed at least 4 weeks out. Cuba switched to a mandatory digital e-visa system from January 2026. Processing takes days under normal conditions, but December generates a surge in applications and timelines can stretch. Leaving it to the last week before departure is a risk you don’t need to take. Also confirm that your travel insurance is in place — Cuba requires it at the border.
  3. Plan your route before you go, not once you arrive. Viazul bus seats on popular routes (Havana–Viñales, Havana–Trinidad, Trinidad–Cienfuegos) fill up in December. Buses that had empty seats in September run full through Christmas. If your itinerary involves inter-city bus travel, check availability and book seats ahead.
  4. Research restaurant reservations for Christmas Eve. Most paladares that offer Noche Buena menus take reservations in advance and fill completely. If eating at a specific restaurant on December 24th matters to you, contact them directly 2–3 weeks before. For the rest of December, walk-ins work most of the time — Christmas Eve is different.
  5. Download offline maps before you land. Maps.me and Google Maps offline work for Cuban cities when you download the areas before departure. Cuba’s mobile data is functional enough for messaging but unreliable for real-time navigation when you’re moving through an unfamiliar neighbourhood.
  6. Arrange airport transfer in advance. José Martí International airport is a chaotic arrival experience in December. The official taxis are overpriced and the unlicensed ones worse in a different way. Ask your casa host to arrange a trusted driver for the airport pickup — most can, and knowing someone is holding a sign with your name removes one layer of December arrival stress.
  7. Check event dates before you finalise your Havana days. Jazz Plaza, the Film Festival, and the Havana Biennial (in odd years) all have specific dates within December that don’t always fall in the same week each year. If any of them matter to your trip, confirm the exact dates and anchor your Havana stay accordingly before you lock in flights.
  8. Know your OFAC category if you’re travelling from the US. Independent US travellers typically use “Support for the Cuban People” as their travel category, which requires staying at private accommodation and engaging meaningfully with Cuban businesses and individuals. Understanding what this means practically before you travel is simpler than explaining it at the airport. The e-visa process will prompt you for the relevant information.
Section 11 · FAQ

Common Questions About Cuba in December

Is December really the best time to visit Cuba?
Q
For most travellers, yes — if you can deal with the crowd and cost premium. The weather is consistently excellent, the events calendar is full, and the island has an energy in December that the quieter months don’t match. The one group who might do better elsewhere in the calendar: budget travellers who need to stretch every dollar. For them, March or November offer most of December’s weather benefits with significantly less competition for accommodation and lower prices across the board. See the full month-by-month breakdown for the complete picture.
Does Cuba actually celebrate Christmas?
Q
Yes — though the way Cuba celebrates is specific to its own culture and history. Christmas was suppressed by the government for several decades after the revolution and wasn’t reinstated as an official public holiday until 1997 (in advance of Pope John Paul II’s 1998 visit). The result is a Christmas culture that’s entirely Cuban rather than imported. The main event is Noche Buena — Christmas Eve — centred around family, food, and music rather than gift-giving. Decorations appear in Havana but it’s not the retail-saturated Christmas that European or North American travellers are used to. It’s considerably more interesting.
Will it be too hot in December?
Q
No — December is one of Cuba’s most comfortable months specifically because the oppressive wet-season heat and humidity have passed. Daytime temperatures of 26–29°C in Havana feel warm rather than crushing, and the evenings are genuinely pleasant. People who’ve visited Cuba in July or August and found it too hot will find December a very different experience. The only region that stays noticeably warmer through December is Santiago de Cuba in the far east, which rarely drops below 20°C even at night.
How far ahead do I really need to book for Christmas week?
Q
8–10 weeks minimum for quality properties. This is not an exaggeration for the purpose of sounding urgent. Casa particular hosts who’ve been in the business for years take bookings by WhatsApp and fill their Christmas weeks with repeat visitors and direct referrals from other hosts long before platforms catch up. If you’re booking Christmas week (December 23–January 1) via a platform and seeing availability in late November, it’s the rooms that repeat visitors have already decided not to take. Book in mid-October if you want genuine choice.
Is New Year’s Eve in Havana actually worth it?
Q
It’s one of the genuinely great New Year’s Eve experiences in the world, and most people who do it say they didn’t fully believe that before they arrived. The Malecón at midnight combines Cuban music, rum, the Havana skyline, and a city of two million people who know how to celebrate at a density and energy level that’s difficult to describe accurately. The downsides are real — it’s crowded, pickpocketing risk increases, and if you’re not a crowds person, it can feel overwhelming. But as New Year’s Eves go, it’s the real thing.
What are the free things to do in Havana in December?
Q
The free things that make Havana extraordinary are available year-round and December doesn’t change them. Walking Old Havana and Centro Habana, the Malecón at sunset, neighbourhood street music, the Fusterlandia mosaic neighbourhood, watching dominoes in Parque Central, and the views from anywhere high enough to see the city at golden hour. See the full free Havana guide for the complete list. In December, the outdoor evening energy of the city also becomes its own free attraction — the streets are simply more alive.
Section 12 · Final Take

Is December the Right Time to Go to Cuba?

For most people asking this question, the honest answer is yes. The weather is Cuba at its best. The events calendar adds things to do beyond the standard itinerary. The island has an energy through December that carries across every city and every type of trip. These are not small things.

The qualification is always the same: you have to earn December in Cuba by doing the planning work that the month demands. Book early. Carry more cash than you think you need. Build flexibility into the days around Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve. Understand that the best casa in the neighbourhood you want won’t be waiting for you if you leave it to a month before departure.

Do all of that and December delivers something that’s hard to get anywhere else in the Caribbean at this time of year: a real country going about its real life, dressed in its best weather, wrapped in the kind of music and warmth that makes people book return trips before they’ve even landed back home.

December in Cuba is complicated to organise and simple to love. Sort out the logistics before you go, and from the moment you land, the work is done. What’s left is just Cuba being Cuba — which, in its best conditions, is about as good as travel gets.


Published on hotelhavanaerror.com | Last updated: May 2026

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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