Person using a smartphone in a sunny outdoor public space with colourful surroundings
Cuba Travel Guide Β· 2026

Internet in Cuba 2026: How to Stay Connected as a Tourist

The honest breakdown β€” WiFi cards, ETECSA SIMs, eSIMs, hotel connectivity, VPNs, and exactly what to download before you land.

πŸ“Ά All options covered πŸ—“ Updated May 2026 ⏱ 14-min read πŸ“ Applies across Cuba

Before anything else, the honest version: Cuba’s internet is slow, expensive by local standards, patchy in coverage, and tied entirely to a state monopoly. It is not broken in a way that ruins a trip β€” plenty of people spend a week in Cuba perfectly happy and connected enough. But if you arrive expecting the same casual tap-and-connect experience you have at home, you’re going to have a bad first hour at the airport.

The good news is that this is a completely solvable problem once you understand how the system actually works. There are three or four real options depending on your budget, how much data you need, and whether you’re happy with slow-but-functional versus faster-but-more-expensive. This guide goes through all of them without the usual optimistic vagueness about “a few different choices available.” These are the specifics, priced and tested as of 2026.

ETECSA Cuba’s only telecom provider β€” state monopoly, no competitors
1–5 Mbps Typical download speed on a good day β€” streaming not realistic
$1–2 Cost per hour via Nauta WiFi card β€” purchased with physical cash
$25–35 Tourist SIM card starting cost at ETECSA office or airport
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Understanding ETECSA β€” Cuba’s Telecom Monopoly

Everything goes through one company. Here’s what that means for you.

ETECSA β€” Empresa de Telecomunicaciones de Cuba S.A. β€” is the beginning and end of Cuban internet. There is no other provider. No competing networks, no alternative SIM cards you can buy at a corner store, no workaround that bypasses the state system. Every WiFi hotspot, every mobile data connection, every home internet line in the country runs through ETECSA.

This matters because it explains why the internet in Cuba behaves the way it does. ETECSA isn’t competing for your business, so there’s no market pressure to improve speeds or bring prices down. The pricing structure is set by the government, the infrastructure investment happens at whatever pace the government decides, and the service quality reflects decades of infrastructure underinvestment combined with US sanctions that restrict access to international networking equipment.

Since 2018, ETECSA has expanded 3G and then 4G mobile data coverage across major cities. By 2026, Havana, Santiago de Cuba, Trinidad, Varadero, and ViΓ±ales town all have reasonable 4G LTE coverage in central areas. Coverage drops off significantly outside town centres, along highways, and in rural areas. The eastern provinces have improved but remain spottier than the west.

The practical upshot: internet in Cuba works. It’s just slower, more expensive relative to local wages, and more inconvenient than anywhere else you’re likely to have traveled. Once you accept that and plan accordingly β€” which this guide helps you do β€” it stops being a problem and starts being a minor logistical fact of the trip.

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The 2026 situation vs. previous years

Mobile data availability has improved significantly since 2020. Cuba now has functional 4G LTE in major tourist areas, and ETECSA tourist SIM packages have become easier to buy at the airport. The WiFi hotspot system (Nauta cards) still operates the same way it has for a decade, but SIM-based data is now the faster and more convenient option for most visitors. The old advice to “stock up on Nauta cards at the airport” is less critical than it used to be β€” but still relevant as a backup.

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WiFi Hotspots β€” The Nauta Card System

The original Cuban internet experience, still widely used

Cuba’s WiFi hotspot network is the oldest and most geographically distributed internet option for tourists. It works like this: ETECSA operates a network of WiFi hotspots at parks, plazas, hotel lobbies, and major public spaces throughout the country. To connect, you need a Nauta card β€” a small scratch card with a username and password printed under a foil strip. You scratch it, connect to the hotspot network, enter your credentials, and you’re online for however many hours the card covers.

People sitting in a public plaza using smartphones and laptops near a WiFi hotspot area
Public WiFi zones in Cuban plazas and parks β€” the scene is immediately obvious from the clusters of people on phones. Photo: Unsplash

Where to Buy Nauta Cards

Nauta cards are sold at ETECSA offices (the most reliable source), at the arrival halls of Havana and other international airports, at some hotel reception desks (with a markup), and sometimes from vendors at the parks and plazas where hotspots are located. The official ETECSA price in 2026 is approximately $1–2 USD equivalent per hour card. Hotel resale prices can be double. Unofficial sellers at parks occasionally offer them but may sell expired or already-used cards.

The reliable approach: Buy a stack of cards at an ETECSA office on your first or second day. The main ETECSA office in Havana (Obispo Street, Old Havana, plus the Vedado branch on Calle 17) usually has stock. Bring cash β€” payment is in Cuban pesos or sometimes USD/EUR depending on the location and cashier discretion. Buy more than you think you need. Cards are valid until used, not date-stamped, so unused hours carry over.

Where Hotspots Are Actually Located

WiFi hotspots are more numerous than most guides suggest. In Havana alone there are over 800 registered access points. The most reliable ones: Parque Central, Parque Fe del Valle (Vedado), Plaza de la RevoluciΓ³n area, the MalecΓ³n near Vedado, major hotel lobbies (even if you’re not staying there β€” you can often buy a connection card at the desk and sit in the lobby), and the main pedestrian streets in most cities.

The give-away that a spot has WiFi: clusters of people staring at phones. Cubans know exactly where all the hotspots are and congregate accordingly. Find a group of teenagers or young adults in a park looking at screens and you’ve found a hotspot.

Speed and Reliability

Public hotspot speeds range from barely functional (under 1 Mbps, happens when too many people share the access point) to adequate (3–5 Mbps when traffic is low). Early morning before 9am is almost always the fastest β€” fewer concurrent users on any given hotspot. After 5pm when people finish work, popular hotspot locations get congested.

WhatsApp messages and emails load fine at almost any speed. Instagram posts upload slowly but will get there. Video calls are generally not practical on hotspot connections during peak hours. Streaming is not realistic. This is the baseline expectation to set.

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Pro move: ETECSA app saves time

Download the ETECSA Nauta app before you arrive (available on Android; iOS availability is inconsistent). The app lets you top up your Nauta account digitally rather than requiring physical cards, check your remaining balance, and connect to hotspots without manually entering credentials each time. You still need to fund the account with cash at an ETECSA office initially, but after that, the app reduces the friction considerably.

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ETECSA SIM Cards for Tourists β€” The Better Option

Mobile data is now the fastest connection available in Cuba
A hand holding a smartphone showing a signal strength indicator and mobile data connection
A Cuban SIM card with active mobile data is now the fastest connection option for tourists in major cities. Photo: Unsplash

If you need more than occasional WhatsApp messages and map checks, a local ETECSA SIM card is significantly better than relying on hotspots. Mobile data (3G/4G) connects through your SIM rather than requiring you to find and physically sit near a hotspot. It works anywhere you have cellular coverage, which in 2026 includes most urban tourist areas across Cuba.

Getting a Tourist SIM Card

Tourist SIM cards are available at two primary points of entry:

  • JosΓ© MartΓ­ International Airport, Havana (Terminal 3): There is an ETECSA desk in the arrivals hall. This is the most convenient purchase point if you want to be connected immediately. Expect a queue. Bring your passport β€” foreign tourists must present ID to purchase.
  • ETECSA offices in major cities: The Obispo Street office in Old Havana and the Vedado branch are the most tourist-friendly. Staff at these locations deal with foreigners regularly and some speak basic English. Other cities have ETECSA offices but tourist SIM transactions can be slower.

Cost and Data Packages (2026)

Tourist SIM packages change periodically. As of mid-2026, the standard options are approximately:

PackageDataValidityApprox. CostBest For
Basic Tourist1 GB30 days$25–30 USDShort stays, light users
Standard Tourist3 GB30 days$35–45 USD1–2 week trips, moderate use
Heavy User6 GB30 days$55–65 USDDigital workers, extended stays
Top-up cardsVariesVaries$5–15 USDAdding data when you run low

All prices are approximate and paid in cash (USD, EUR, or Cuban pesos at the prevailing rate). US credit and debit cards do not work at ETECSA offices. Non-US international cards may work at some locations but don’t count on it. Come with cash.

Coverage and Speed on Mobile Data

In Havana, Varadero, Trinidad, ViΓ±ales town, and Santiago de Cuba, 4G LTE coverage is generally solid in central areas. Speeds typically range from 5–15 Mbps download on a good connection β€” substantially faster than hotspot speeds. This is fast enough for WhatsApp calls, loading maps, checking email, and basic browsing. Video streaming at any quality is still slow.

Outside urban centres, coverage drops to 3G or disappears entirely. If you’re spending time in rural areas β€” hiking the Sierra Maestra, visiting remote tobacco farms in ViΓ±ales, traveling by road between cities β€” plan for long stretches with no signal.

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Check your phone is unlocked before you travel

A Cuban ETECSA SIM will not work in a locked phone. If your phone is locked to your home carrier, you cannot use a local SIM. Check with your carrier before you leave β€” unlocking is free in most countries once your contract term is over. If your phone can’t be unlocked in time, the eSIM or hotspot route is your only option.

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eSIM Options for Cuba β€” What Actually Works

The no-physical-SIM alternative β€” but read the fine print

eSIM providers have expanded their Cuba coverage since 2023, and several now offer packages that connect to the ETECSA network without requiring you to physically acquire a local SIM. This is particularly useful if your phone is locked, if you want to set things up before you arrive, or if your trip is short and the hassle of an ETECSA office visit doesn’t feel worth it.

Providers That Currently Offer Cuba eSIM (2026)

ProviderNetworkDataPrice RangeVerdict
AiraloETECSA 4G1–5 GB$18–45Reliable
HolaflyETECSA 4GUnlimited*$19–39 (7–30 days)Popular
NomadETECSA 3G/4G1–3 GB$12–35Variable
Maya MobileETECSAVarious$15–50Variable

*Holafly’s “unlimited” applies throttled speeds after a daily threshold β€” typically 500MB–1GB at full speed per day.

eSIM Advantages and Limitations

The main advantage of an eSIM provider like Airalo or Holafly is convenience β€” you buy it online, install it before you leave home, and arrive in Cuba with data already active. No ETECSA office queue, no passport required, no cash transaction at the counter. For a short trip of 3–5 days, this is often the cleanest option.

The limitation is cost. An eSIM package for Cuba typically costs 20–40% more than the equivalent ETECSA tourist SIM. You’re paying for convenience. If you’re staying a week or more, the ETECSA SIM purchased locally is better value. If you’re there for a long weekend and don’t want to deal with logistics, the eSIM premium is probably worth it.

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Install eSIM before landing β€” you cannot download it in Cuba

eSIMs require an internet connection to activate and install. You cannot download an eSIM once you’re in Cuba without another data connection. Buy the eSIM, install the profile, and set it as your active data SIM while you still have wifi access at home or at your departure airport. This takes about 5 minutes and means you step off the plane already connected.

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Hotel WiFi & Casa Particular Connectivity

What to actually expect in your room
Hotel room with a laptop on the desk showing someone working β€” hotel wifi situation
Hotel WiFi in Cuba ranges from surprisingly functional to basically absent. The property tier matters. Photo: Unsplash
Casa particular colonial room in Havana with warm decor β€” internet situation varies by host
Casa particulares vary enormously on WiFi β€” some hosts have excellent home internet, others have nothing at all. Photo: Unsplash

International Hotel Chains (Kempinski, Iberostar, Royalton, MeliΓ‘)

The top-tier international hotels in Havana β€” the Kempinski, Iberostar Grand Packard, Grand Aston, Royalton Habana β€” all have in-room WiFi that’s included in the room rate. The speed is generally the best available in Cuba at any given property, though “best available” still means 5–10 Mbps on a good connection rather than anything approaching what you’d expect at a European hotel of equivalent standard. These properties typically have their own VSAT or international fibre connections, bypassing the local ETECSA bottlenecks somewhat.

If you’re working remotely and need internet that actually functions, the lobby of a Kempinski or Packard during off-peak hours (early morning, or after 10pm) is often the fastest connection you’ll find anywhere in Havana. Buying a coffee and parking yourself in the lobby for a work session is a legitimate strategy, even if you’re not a guest.

Mid-Range and State-Run Hotels

Mid-range and state-operated Cuban hotels (the Habana Libre, Bristol, various CubanacΓ‘n properties) have WiFi, but the quality is substantially more variable. Some rooms have in-room coverage; in others, signal only reaches the lobby or common areas. The service is typically sold as a separate add-on (WiFi cards purchased at reception) rather than included. Speeds are slower and reliability is lower than the international chains. If you’re considering a mid-range hotel partly for the WiFi, that’s not a reliable reason β€” check individual property reviews and ask specifically about connectivity before booking.

Casa Particular WiFi β€” The Real Situation

This is where expectations most frequently diverge from reality. Many casas particulares list WiFi as an amenity on booking platforms, and technically they’re not lying β€” but the quality ranges from “actually functional and fast by Cuban standards” to “a phone outside with a WiFi card you share with three other guests.” The difference between a casa with Nauta Hogar home internet (Cuba’s residential internet service, reasonably reliable) and one that just puts out a phone with a WiFi card is significant.

How to check before booking: message the host directly and ask specifically whether the WiFi is ETECSA Nauta Hogar installed in the house, or whether it’s a shared card system. A host who immediately answers “yes, we have Nauta Hogar with [speed]” is usually reliable. A vague “yes we have internet” deserves a follow-up question.

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VPNs in Cuba β€” Do They Work?

The practical situation, not the theory

Technically, Cuba restricts VPN usage and some VPN protocols are actively blocked by ETECSA’s network infrastructure. In practice, many VPNs work in Cuba β€” just not all of them, and not always consistently. This is the honest answer to a question that a lot of guides either overstate (“VPNs are completely illegal, never use one”) or understate (“just use any VPN, works fine”).

The most reliable VPNs for Cuba are the ones that use obfuscation protocols designed to make VPN traffic look like regular HTTPS traffic. ExpressVPN’s Lightway protocol, NordVPN’s obfuscated servers, and Windscribe have all been reported working in Cuba by travelers in 2025–2026. Standard OpenVPN or WireGuard connections are more likely to be detected and blocked.

Why You Might Want a VPN in Cuba

  • Access to streaming services blocked on Cuban networks (Netflix, YouTube, Spotify)
  • Secure connection on public hotspot networks β€” these are not encrypted, and traffic can potentially be monitored
  • Some corporate VPNs for remote work require a VPN connection
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Set up and test your VPN before you arrive

If you want to use a VPN in Cuba, download and configure it before you leave. VPN company websites are themselves sometimes blocked in Cuba, meaning you can’t download or update a VPN app once you’re in the country. Test that your VPN works at home, enable the obfuscation/stealth settings, and keep the app updated before departure. This is one item where “I’ll sort it when I arrive” genuinely doesn’t work.

“The Cuban internet experience is a negotiation β€” between what you want to do online and what the network will let you do, between the speeds you need and the speeds available, between your normal habits and an environment that asks you to slow down and be present. Most people leave Cuba grateful for the forced detox, even if they’d never have chosen it voluntarily.”

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What to Download Before You Land

The offline toolkit that makes Cuba manageable

This section matters as much as anything else in this guide. Some of the most useful tools in Cuba are ones that work offline β€” and you cannot download them once you’re there, because downloading requires a functional internet connection. Build this offline toolkit before you board your flight.

Offline Maps β€” Non-Negotiable

Maps.me is the best offline map option for Cuba. Download the Cuba map (under Settings β†’ Download maps β†’ Cuba) before you leave home. The map is detailed enough to navigate Cuban city streets, shows points of interest, and works completely without any data connection. Google Maps has Cuba coverage but requires downloading the offline region specifically and is larger in file size.

When you first land in Cuba, your phone will attempt to locate you on whatever map app is open. With Maps.me downloaded offline, this works immediately using GPS alone β€” no data needed. Without an offline map, you are navigating by memory and asking strangers for directions, which is a functional approach but slower.

WhatsApp β€” The Primary Communication Tool in Cuba

WhatsApp is how Cuban businesses, casas particulares, paladares, and guides communicate with each other and with tourists. If you’ve made reservations for anything in Cuba, they were probably confirmed over WhatsApp. If your flight is delayed and you need to tell your casa host, you do it via WhatsApp. It’s the closest thing Cuba has to a universal communication app, and it works at minimal data speeds that make it functional even on the slowest hotspot connection.

Make sure WhatsApp is installed before you arrive and that your contacts for Cuban casas, restaurants, or tour operators are saved. Consider enabling the backup chat feature before departure so your conversation history is preserved.

Other Apps Worth Pre-Loading

  • Google Translate β€” Download the Spanish language pack for offline use. The camera translation feature (point camera at a sign or menu and it translates live) works offline if the language pack is downloaded. Extremely useful in restaurants, on bus schedules, and in ETECSA offices.
  • XE Currency β€” Exchange rate calculator that stores the last retrieved rates for offline use. Useful when working out how much your Cuban pesos are worth in USD or your home currency.
  • Spotify or podcast app β€” Download playlists and podcasts before you go. Your listening habits will shift entirely to offline content once you’re in Cuba.
  • Your navigation and booking confirmations β€” Screenshot everything. Hotel booking, visa confirmation, flight details, insurance policy number. Store them in your camera roll as images rather than relying on email apps that need a connection to load attachments.
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Power Cuts and Their Effect on Connectivity

The variable nobody else mentions

Cuba has a serious power infrastructure problem. Rolling blackouts β€” locally called apagones β€” have become a regular feature of Cuban daily life since 2021, driven by fuel shortages and aging generation infrastructure. In 2026, the frequency and duration varies by season, region, and the current fuel situation.

Power cuts affect internet in two compounding ways. First, the obvious: your devices need charging and if the power is out, you can’t charge them. A portable battery bank (minimum 20,000 mAh) is one of the most practically useful things you can bring to Cuba. Second, less obviously: the ETECSA infrastructure itself sometimes loses power, taking local hotspots and mobile tower boosters offline. If you’re in an area experiencing a blackout and your mobile data suddenly stops working, the tower covering your area may have lost power rather than there being a problem with your SIM.

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How to manage around outages
  • Keep devices charged whenever you have power β€” don’t wait until 20%
  • Carry a large capacity power bank (20,000 mAh easily lasts 2–3 days of heavy use)
  • Download what you need when you have connectivity β€” don’t assume you’ll have it later
  • Ask your casa host what time the power is typically restored if you experience a cut β€” locals usually know the schedule for their neighbourhood
  • International hotels have generators and maintain connectivity through outages β€” worth knowing if you need to make an important call or do time-sensitive work
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Practical Tips for Staying Connected Day-to-Day

The operational habits that make Cuban internet work for you

Beyond the big choices (SIM vs. eSIM vs. hotspots), the day-to-day experience of internet in Cuba comes down to habits and expectations. These are the adjustments that travelers who manage well tend to make.

Use Your Data for High-Value Tasks, Not Habit-Scrolling

Data is limited and relatively expensive in Cuba. The mental shift that helps most travelers is treating mobile data the way you’d treat roaming data in an expensive country β€” as a resource to use purposefully rather than habitually. Use data for: navigation when Maps.me offline fails, confirming reservations over WhatsApp, looking up something specific you need to know in the moment. Avoid: background app syncing, automatic photo uploads to cloud services, video autoplay in browsers. Turn off background data for apps you’re not actively using.

Sync Intensively When You Have Good WiFi

When you land in a hotel, casa, or hotspot with decent connectivity, use that window actively. Download what you’ll need for the next few hours, send pending messages, back up photos to cloud storage, check email. Don’t just passively browse during good connectivity β€” use it to prepare for when connectivity is poor again.

WhatsApp Voice Notes Are Better Than Calls

Cuba’s data speeds make live phone calls unreliable. WhatsApp voice notes (push-to-talk audio messages) transmit more reliably than live calls because they send as a compressed file rather than requiring a sustained real-time data connection. If you’re trying to communicate complex information with a guide, hotel, or restaurant, voice notes are often the most practical format.

Airplane Mode + GPS Still Works for Maps

One thing many travelers don’t realise: GPS works completely independently of mobile data. Your phone’s GPS chip receives satellite signals regardless of whether you have a data connection or even a SIM. With Maps.me downloaded offline, you can navigate Cuba in airplane mode indefinitely β€” tracking your real-time position on the offline map with zero data usage. This saves your data for things that actually require it.

πŸ“± Cuba Internet Pre-Departure Checklist

Maps.me downloaded with Cuba offline map
WhatsApp installed and contacts saved
Google Translate β€” Spanish pack downloaded offline
All booking confirmations screenshotted to camera roll
VPN installed and obfuscation mode tested (if using)
eSIM purchased and installed (if using that route)
Phone confirmed unlocked if planning to buy local SIM
Sufficient cash budgeted for SIM or Nauta cards
Portable battery bank packed (20,000 mAh recommended)
Music/podcasts downloaded for offline listening
Background data turned off for non-essential apps
Streaming service downloads (Netflix, Spotify) for flight
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Full Comparison: All Internet Options at a Glance

Pick the right approach for your trip type
OptionSpeedCostSetupCoverageBest For
Nauta WiFi Cards1–5 Mbps$1–2/hourEasyHotspot locations onlyLight users, budget travelers
ETECSA Tourist SIM5–15 Mbps$25–65 upfrontModerateUrban areas with 4GWeek+ stays, moderate users
eSIM (Airalo/Holafly)5–15 Mbps$18–45Easy (pre-trip)Urban areas with 4GShort stays, convenience-first
5-Star Hotel WiFi5–10 MbpsIncluded in roomAutomaticIn-hotel onlyLuxury stays, remote workers
Mid-Range Hotel WiFi1–5 Mbps$2–5/day extraVariesLobby or room (varies)Occasional checking only
Casa Particular WiFi2–10 MbpsUsually includedVery variableIn-house onlyAsk specifically before booking
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Frequently Asked Questions

What people actually search before they land
Can I use my normal phone plan (roaming) in Cuba?
Technically yes β€” some carriers do offer Cuba roaming. The reality is that it’s expensive (often $5–10/day plus per-MB charges) and the service goes through ETECSA regardless, so the speeds are the same. For any trip longer than a couple of days, a local SIM or eSIM is considerably better value. Check with your carrier before you travel to understand what they actually offer for Cuba β€” US carriers typically have no Cuba roaming arrangements at all due to sanctions.
Do US citizens have problems buying SIM cards or WiFi cards in Cuba?
No β€” ETECSA sells SIM cards and Nauta cards to tourists of all nationalities including Americans. You’ll need your passport for a SIM purchase but there’s no nationality restriction. The US sanctions restrict what US companies can provide to Cuba, not what American individuals can buy while in Cuba. Spending money at ETECSA (a state company) is in a legal grey area under OFAC rules, but this isn’t something that gets enforced against individual travelers buying a SIM for navigation purposes.
Can I make WhatsApp or FaceTime video calls in Cuba?
WhatsApp audio calls work intermittently β€” on a good ETECSA 4G connection in Havana, short calls of 5–10 minutes often go through. WhatsApp video calls are hit-or-miss. FaceTime requires speeds and stability that Cuban networks rarely provide consistently. Zoom calls are largely impractical except at the best-connected hotel lobbies during off-peak hours. The most reliable form of real-time communication in Cuba is WhatsApp voice notes (audio messages sent asynchronously) or old-fashioned text messages over WhatsApp.
What’s the fastest internet available to tourists in Cuba?
The fastest consistently available connection for tourists in 2026 is at the top international hotels β€” the Kempinski, Iberostar Packard, and Grand Aston β€” during off-peak hours (early morning or late evening). These properties have direct satellite or fibre connections separate from the general ETECSA network. A well-connected ETECSA 4G SIM in central Havana during off-peak hours is the second fastest option. No tourist-accessible internet in Cuba provides speeds that make video streaming consistently practical.
Do Nauta cards expire if I don’t use all the hours?
The Nauta card credits themselves don’t expire if loaded into a Nauta account β€” but the account does need to be topped up periodically (at least one transaction every 30 days to keep it active). The physical scratch cards have a long shelf life and can be purchased in advance without issue. If you buy cards you don’t use, the credits remain valid as long as you maintain account activity. This is another argument for using the Nauta app β€” easier to manage your balance across a trip.
Is Instagram or Facebook blocked in Cuba?
Instagram and Facebook are not blocked in Cuba for regular access β€” you can open both with an ETECSA connection. The experience is slow (uploads take significantly longer than you’re used to, video loading is inconsistent) but neither platform is filtered or restricted the way they are in some other countries. YouTube works but streaming quality is poor. Google services (Search, Gmail, Maps with data) all work normally. The limitation is speed, not censorship, for most major international platforms.
Can I work remotely from Cuba?
Short answer: it’s doable, but it’s not comfortable. Asynchronous remote work (email, Slack messages, document writing, code reviews) works fine with Cuban internet. Real-time collaborative work (video meetings, live pair programming, shared screen sessions) is unreliable to impractical. If your remote work requires regular video calls or real-time collaboration tools, Cuba is a difficult base β€” you’ll spend significant mental energy managing connectivity rather than working. If your work is primarily writing, design work done locally, or email-based, Cuba is more manageable than its reputation suggests, especially from a well-connected hotel lobby in early morning hours.

The Honest Takeaway

Cuba’s internet is slow, expensive by the standards you’re used to, and dependent on a single state provider that has no competitive pressure to improve. None of that ruins a trip. The travelers who struggle with Cuban connectivity are the ones who arrived expecting something the country doesn’t have. The ones who manage well downloaded their offline maps, set up WhatsApp, got a local SIM or eSIM, and adjusted their expectations to match the reality.

The adjustment is smaller than you’d expect. A week in Cuba with limited internet access turns out, for most people, to be something between tolerable and genuinely welcome. The city and its people are compelling enough that looking at your phone feels like the lesser option most of the time anyway.

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 β€” a city that fuels his love for storytelling every single day.

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