Viazul Bus Cuba: The Complete Guide for Budget Travelers
Viazul is how independent travelers move between Cuban cities for $10–51. It’s air-conditioned, reliable enough, and runs to almost every destination worth visiting. Here’s everything you need to know before you board.
Viazul Bus Cuba: The Complete Guide for Budget Travelers
How to travel Cuba by bus — routes, prices, booking, and what to actually expect on board.
Most tourists in Cuba either fly between cities or pay $60–120 for a private transfer. Viazul exists for everyone who looked at those prices and thought: there has to be another way. There is. The Viazul bus network connects Havana to Trinidad, Viñales, Santiago, Varadero, Cienfuegos, and a dozen other destinations at prices that haven’t fundamentally changed in years — and in 2026, it remains the backbone of budget independent travel across the island.
Viazul isn’t glamorous. The buses run cold enough to store vaccines, the stops are functional at best, and the schedules don’t always bend to suit your plans. But the buses are genuinely air-conditioned, the luggage goes in the hold, the drivers are professional, and the views of the Cuban countryside rolling past the window are as good as anything you’ll see. For the difference in price between Viazul and a private taxi, you can fund two extra nights in a casa particular.
This guide covers everything: every major route with current prices and realistic journey times, how and where to buy tickets before they sell out, what to bring for long hauls, and an honest comparison with the alternatives. Read it once before you build your Cuba itinerary and you’ll plan your inter-city legs in minutes rather than hours of second-guessing.
What Viazul Is — and Who It’s Actually For
Viazul is Cuba’s state-run intercity bus service for tourists and foreigners. It operates air-conditioned coaches on fixed routes between Cuba’s major cities and tourist destinations, and it charges hard currency — meaning USD or its equivalent, not the local Cuban peso. That’s the deal: you pay the tourist price, you get a reserved seat, your bag goes in the hold, and the bus departs on schedule more often than not.
The service is specifically aimed at foreign visitors rather than Cuban nationals, who have their own separate Astro bus network that costs a fraction of the price but requires a Cuban ID to access. As a tourist, Viazul is your lane. The pricing reflects that — $25 from Havana to Trinidad isn’t cheap by Cuban standards, but it’s significantly cheaper than every private transfer option and significantly more comfortable than any hitchhiking arrangement.
The buses themselves are modern coaches — typically Yutong or King Long models imported from China — with reclining seats, overhead luggage racks, and an air conditioning system that Cuban drivers seem to dial to approximately absolute zero regardless of the outside temperature. They are clean. They do not have onboard toilets (stops are scheduled roughly every 2–3 hours at service stations). They do not have wifi. They do not sell food or drinks. These are facts worth knowing before a 6-hour run to Trinidad.
In practical terms, Viazul works best for travelers who have a bit of schedule flexibility, who are traveling alone or in pairs rather than large groups, and whose budget for inter-city transport is limited. For most independent budget travelers, it’s the default for any route over 100 km. The full cost implications for your trip budget are covered in the Cuba on $50 a day budget breakdown.
Every Major Route: Prices, Journey Times, and Frequency
Viazul prices are set by the state and don’t vary by season or how far in advance you book — a Havana–Trinidad ticket costs $25 whether you buy it three weeks out or the morning before departure (assuming seats remain). What does vary is availability: the popular routes fill up fast in high season (December–March and July–August), and some routes only run once or twice a day, which means missing the bus can cost you a full day. Book ahead on any route where you have a fixed onward plan.
| Route | Price (USD) | Journey Time | Daily Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Havana → Varadero | $10 | ~3 hrs | 4× daily | Most frequent route; easy day-trip option |
| Havana → Viñales | $12 | ~3.5 hrs | 2× daily | Early departure recommended; afternoon sold out often |
| Havana → Santa Clara | $18 | ~3.5 hrs | 3× daily | Good gateway for Che Guevara mausoleum |
| Havana → Cienfuegos | $20 | ~4.5 hrs | 2× daily | Often combined with Trinidad leg on multi-day routes |
| Havana → Trinidad | $25 | ~5.5–6 hrs | 2× daily | Most popular budget route; book 2–3 days ahead in season |
| Havana → Camagüey | $33 | ~7.5–8 hrs | 2× daily | Usually en route to Santiago; not a common standalone stop |
| Havana → Holguín | $44 | ~11 hrs | 2× daily | Gateway for Guardalavaca beach area and Baracoa connection |
| Havana → Santiago de Cuba | $51 | ~13–14 hrs | 2× daily | Overnight option available; take the neck pillow |
| Trinidad → Santiago de Cuba | $33 | ~7 hrs | 1× daily | Limited frequency — book early, no flexibility on this one |
| Santiago → Baracoa | $15 | ~5 hrs | 1× daily | Mountain road (La Farola) — dramatic scenery, worth the trip |
| Varadero → Trinidad | $20 | ~6 hrs | 1× daily | Useful for resort-to-colonial-town transfers |
The prices above are accurate for early 2026, but Cuba’s transport pricing has shifted with the currency reform and ongoing economic adjustments. The figures here are a planning baseline — verify current prices when you arrive at the Viazul terminal or check viazul.com. The relative pricing (which routes cost more than others) stays consistent even if the absolute numbers shift slightly.
The Routes That Actually Matter for Most Travelers
Realistically, most independent travelers to Cuba use Viazul for a handful of key legs. The Havana–Trinidad route is the most popular — Trinidad is Cuba’s best-preserved colonial town and a logical next stop after two or three days in the capital. The Havana–Viñales run is second — Viñales is where you go for the tobacco farms, the mogote limestone hills, and the horseback riding that the valley is famous for. The Havana–Varadero route is the third — short, frequent, and useful for a beach add-on at either end of your trip.
The Havana–Santiago route is for serious Cuba travelers doing an end-to-end trip. Thirteen hours overnight is a commitment, but Santiago is a completely different city from Havana — more Caribbean in feel, hotter, louder, with its own distinct music scene and cultural history. Combine it with a one-way return flight (domestic flights on Cubana connect Santiago to Havana in 1.5 hours for around $90–120) and you get the classic Cuba loop without doubling back by bus.
The most efficient Cuba route for independent travelers with 10–14 days is: Havana (3 nights) → Viñales (2 nights, sidetrip) → back to Havana → Trinidad (3 nights) → Santiago (2 nights) → fly back to Havana. Total Viazul cost for the inter-city legs: around $100 per person. The full planning picture for a Havana-based itinerary is in our first-timer’s guide to Havana.
How to Book Viazul Tickets — Online and In Person
Viazul tickets can theoretically be purchased through the official website at viazul.com using a Visa or Mastercard. In practice, the site has a long history of intermittent functionality — payment pages fail, confirmations don’t arrive, and the booking interface sometimes simply errors out mid-process. If you have the patience to work through it and you’re booking from a reliable internet connection before you arrive in Cuba, it’s worth trying. When it works, online booking is convenient and the confirmation email serves as your ticket.
The more reliable method is to book in person at the Viazul terminal on arrival in each city. Walk in, approach the ticket window, state your destination and preferred date and time, pay in cash (USD or the CUP equivalent at the informal rate the cashier will quote), and receive a paper ticket. This works consistently across all terminals. The downside: if you show up the day before a popular departure in high season, seats may already be sold. The upside: you can confirm timing with your actual plans rather than committing weeks in advance.
How Far Ahead to Book by Route
On the day you arrive in each city, walk to the Viazul terminal and book your onward ticket for the date you plan to leave. You’ll know your actual plans by then, the terminal is open daily from early morning, and you avoid both the website frustrations and the risk of selling out. If you’re in a casa particular, your host almost always knows a runner who can buy tickets on your behalf for a small fee (typically $2–5) — useful if the terminal is far from where you’re staying.
Handling the cash side of ticket purchases is covered in detail in our guide to getting cash in Cuba without losing your mind. The short version: bring USD or EUR in cash from home, exchange at a CADECA office or bank (not at the airport), and keep enough small bills for transit purchases.
What the Bus is Actually Like — The Honest Version
The first thing everyone tells you about Viazul, and the first thing you’ll notice: the air conditioning is aggressive to the point of comedy. Cuban bus drivers have a cultural belief, apparently universal and deeply held, that tourists need to be transported at temperatures approaching those of a deep freezer. Bring a layer. Not a light layer — a proper jacket, or at minimum a long-sleeved top and something to cover your legs. People who board a Viazul bus for a five-hour ride in shorts and a t-shirt spend the last two hours quietly miserable. Don’t be those people.
Seats, Luggage, and What’s Actually Included
Seats are assigned when you buy your ticket — the agent at the window usually lets you choose from available options, so asking for a window seat is worth doing. The coaches have 2+2 seating (two seats per side of the aisle), reclining backrests, and overhead racks. There’s no blanket, no pillow, no food service, and no entertainment. Some coaches have a small monitor at the front that plays Cuban music videos or sometimes a film.
Luggage goes in the hold underneath the bus — you hand it over to the driver or assistant before boarding and collect it at your destination. The weight limit is technically around 20 kg for hold luggage and 5 kg carry-on, though enforcement is relaxed. Cyclists taking bikes should know that Viazul will carry bicycles as hold luggage for an additional fee (check at the terminal), but if you’re planning a full cycling route across Cuba, you’ll be managing this transport yourself for most of the distance.
Stops and the Food Situation
On routes over three hours, Viazul makes one or two stops at service stations (typically Servi-Cupet gas station complexes with a small shop attached). These stops last 20–30 minutes. The shops stock water, soft drinks, sometimes beer, chips, cookies, and occasionally sandwiches or pizza slices of variable quality. The bathrooms at these stops are functional. This is your food and water window for the journey — do not rely on finding anything better.
The practical preparation: board with water (buy a 1.5L bottle at a Havana shop before you leave — the terminal rarely has cheap options), snacks for the journey, and your jacket. If you’re doing the Havana–Santiago overnight, add a neck pillow and an eye mask. The overnight bus is a legitimate strategy — you sleep through 13 hours of travel and wake up in Santiago without losing a full day.
“Everyone warned me about the cold on the bus. I brought a light cardigan. By hour three on the Trinidad run I was wearing my entire carry-on bag as a blanket. Pack the actual jacket.”
Punctuality and What to Expect
Viazul’s on-time record is better than its reputation. Most departures leave within 15–20 minutes of schedule, and many run on time. Delays of an hour or more do happen — mechanical issues, road incidents, or the bus needing to pick up passengers from a second terminal — but they’re not the norm. The bigger variable is journey time, which can stretch significantly if the road conditions are poor (a particular issue after rain on some routes) or if there are unexpected stops.
As practical advice: don’t book anything critical for the same evening you’re taking a long Viazul leg. Your $25 paladar booking in Trinidad doesn’t need to be on the night you arrive after a 6-hour bus ride that ran late. Give yourself an arrival buffer of at least a few hours before any fixed commitment.

Trinidad is one of Cuba’s great colonial towns and the natural first destination for anyone building a route away from Havana. Getting there independently on Viazul costs $25 and takes 6 hours. Our full guide to Trinidad Cuba covers what to do once you’re there, where to stay, and how long to allocate.
Viazul vs. Taxi Colectivo vs. Private Transfer vs. Domestic Flight
Viazul isn’t the only way to get between Cuban cities — it’s just the cheapest scheduled option available to tourists. The other main choices are taxi colectivos (shared taxis that run fixed routes), private taxis, and domestic flights. Each has a distinct use case, and the right answer depends on group size, time pressure, budget, and how much you value flexibility.
| Option | Havana → Trinidad (example) | Journey Time | Flexibility | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viazul | $25/person | ~5.5–6 hrs | Fixed schedule | Solo travelers, pairs, budget priority |
| Taxi Colectivo | $20–25/person | ~4–4.5 hrs | Departs when full | Similar cost, faster, fills up at terminals |
| Private Taxi (shared) | $20–25/person (4 passengers) | ~4 hrs | Departs on your schedule | Groups of 3–4; split cost equals or beats Viazul |
| Private Taxi (solo) | $80–120 whole car | ~4 hrs | Fully flexible, door-to-door | Solo travelers who value time over money |
| Domestic Flight | N/A (no HAV–TRI) | N/A | Limited routes | Havana–Santiago only; ~$90–120 on Cubana |
Taxi Colectivo: Often the Better Call
The taxi colectivo is Cuba’s most underrated transport option and one that a lot of first-timers don’t know exists. These are shared taxis — usually old American cars or more modern Ladas — that run fixed routes between cities, departing from designated ranks near the main Viazul terminals when they have 4 passengers. The prices per person are similar to Viazul (sometimes slightly less, sometimes slightly more), the journey is faster because there are no official stops, and the experience is considerably more Cuban.
The practical advantage: no advance booking required. You show up at the taxi rank near the terminal, tell the driver or dispatcher your destination, pay the agreed fare per seat, and wait until the car fills. On a busy route like Havana–Trinidad, a colectivo fills up in 15–40 minutes most of the time. On slower routes, you might wait an hour or more. There’s no luggage hold (your bag goes in the trunk or on your lap), but for the price and speed, it’s the choice most experienced Cuba travelers default to for medium-distance routes.
When to Take a Private Taxi Instead
For groups of three or four people, a private taxi often costs the same or less per person than Viazul and arrives several hours faster. A private car from Havana to Trinidad for four people, split four ways, comes to around $20–25 per person — the same as Viazul, faster, and door-to-door. The calculation shifts at two people or fewer unless your time has high value.
Private taxis are also the right answer for any route Viazul doesn’t serve directly — some destinations have no Viazul coverage at all, or only indirect routes with long layovers. Your casa particular host is the best starting point for organizing a private transfer; they typically know reliable drivers and can negotiate a fair rate on your behalf.
For solo travelers specifically, navigating Cuba independently by Viazul and colectivo is completely manageable and part of what makes the trip rewarding — the insights on logistics in our solo travel in Cuba guide are worth reading before your first long-haul bus day.
Viazul Terminal Locations in Key Cities
Havana — Terminal de Ómnibus Nacionales
The main Viazul terminal in Havana is on Calle 26 y Zoológico in Nuevo Vedado — a residential neighborhood about 3 km from the heart of Vedado and 5–6 km from Old Havana. It’s not walkable from most tourist accommodation, so budget $5–8 for a taxi. The terminal opens from around 6am, the ticket windows are clearly marked, and there’s a waiting area with seating inside. Arrive 30–45 minutes before your scheduled departure to check your bag and board without rushing. The terminal also has public bathrooms, a small café, and a peso food window with basic snacks.
Some Havana–Varadero buses also have a pickup stop at the Havana airport (Terminal 3), which is useful if you’re connecting from an international flight directly to Varadero without needing to go into the city. Ask at the ticket window when you book if this stop applies to your departure.
Trinidad — Terminal de Ómnibus
Trinidad’s Viazul terminal is at the edge of town on Piro Guinart, about a 10–15 minute walk from the colonial center or a quick bicitaxi ride. It’s a modest operation — small waiting room, one ticket window, limited hours — but all buses to and from Havana and the continuation to Santiago pass through here. If you’re planning to continue from Trinidad toward eastern Cuba, buy your onward ticket on your first day in town.
Viñales — Town Center Stop
Viñales doesn’t have a full Viazul terminal in the conventional sense — the bus stops on the main street in the village center, near the central park. Tickets are sold at a small office nearby. Your casa particular host in Viñales will know exactly where this is and can often help you buy your return ticket to Havana on the day you arrive.
Santiago de Cuba — Terminal de Ómnibus Nacionales
Santiago’s terminal is on Avenida de los Libertadores, a bit outside the historic center — taxi from central Santiago costs around $5. The Santiago terminal is larger and busier than most provincial ones and handles both the Havana-bound buses and the connection to Baracoa. If you’re doing the Santiago–Baracoa leg (highly recommended — the route over La Farola mountain road is one of Cuba’s most dramatic drives), buy the Baracoa ticket here.
Terminal taxi trips are a well-known overcharge opportunity in Cuba. Drivers near bus terminals quote tourist prices aggressively. The fix: walk one block away from the terminal entrance and flag a taxi on the street, or ask your casa host to arrange a pickup (they know honest drivers and the going rate). From central Havana to the Viazul terminal, the honest rate is $5–7. Anyone asking $15+ near the terminal is banking on you not knowing better.
🎒 What to Pack for Every Viazul Journey
- A proper jacket or warm layer — the AC is genuinely arctic
- 1.5L water bottle filled before you board
- Snacks for the full journey (nothing sold on board)
- Neck pillow for anything over 5 hours
- Eye mask for overnight runs
- Your ticket printed or screenshot on your phone
- Cash in USD (CUP also accepted at most terminals)
- Offline map downloaded before departure
- Phone charger and power bank (no USB ports on buses)
- Casa particular address and phone in your next destination
- Small day pack for carry-on (hold bags stay in the luggage hold)
- Headphones and something downloaded offline — no wifi on board
Frequently Asked Questions
One last honest thought
Viazul is not the romantic way to travel Cuba. The long-haul routes are tiring, the service stations are bleak, and the air conditioning is medically inexplicable. But it works, it costs what it says it costs, and it connects the parts of Cuba that are actually worth connecting at a price that doesn’t eat your accommodation budget for the week.
The travelers who get the most out of Cuba’s bus system are the ones who treat it as part of the trip rather than a nuisance between the interesting parts. Six hours to Trinidad on a bus that goes through the cattle fields and sugarcane of Matanzas province, past roadside rum stands and horse-drawn carts, tells you more about Cuba than the first three museum visits in Havana put together. Take the window seat. Bring the jacket. Buy a sandwich at the service station.
Sort your first onward ticket on your first day in Havana. Everything after that falls into a satisfying rhythm of buses, casas, and cities that feel completely different from each other. That rhythm is what Cuba is for.