Getting Around Cuba: Taxis, Buses, Bicitaxis and Classic Cars Explained
Cuba’s transport system is unlike anything else you’ll encounter on a Caribbean trip. Here’s what everything costs, which options are actually reliable, and how to get between cities without paying tourist prices for the whole journey.
Cuba’s transport system has a logic to it once you understand what’s actually available — but arriving with expectations shaped by other Caribbean destinations will confuse you quickly. There’s no Uber. The bus network is partially functional and runs on its own schedule. The cars look like they’re from a different century because, structurally, they are. And “taxi” can mean six different things depending on which city you’re in and which person you’re asking.
What Cuba does have: a reliable intercity bus service that serves every major tourist destination, a system of shared taxis (colectivos) that are often faster and barely more expensive than the bus, a fleet of private tourist taxis that will take you anywhere you want to go for a negotiated price, bicitaxis for short hops within neighbourhoods, and the classic American cars that are simultaneously the most photographed and least understood part of Cuba’s transport ecosystem. This guide explains all of them — costs, reliability, which situations each is right for, and the specific information that makes the difference between a smooth journey and a frustrating one.
Cuba’s Transport Landscape — What You’re Working With
Cuba’s transport network divides into two distinct systems that frequently overlap: the system Cubans use (local buses, shared taxis, horse-drawn carts in smaller towns, cycling) and the system tourists use (Viazul intercity buses, private tourist taxis, classic car tours, rented cars). Understanding which system serves your specific need at any given moment is the key to not spending three times what you need to on getting from A to B.
The most important thing to know upfront: there is no app-based ride-hailing in Cuba. Uber, Bolt, Grab — none of these exist. The closest equivalent is the Cuba Taxi app for state metered taxis in Havana, which works intermittently on Android only. For everything else, you’re negotiating in person, asking your casa host to call someone, standing at a colectivo departure point, or walking to the Viazul terminal. Once you’re comfortable with that, Cuba’s transport system is actually quite functional and often genuinely interesting to navigate.
American travellers face the usual Cuba logistics: US bank cards don’t work in taxis, at bus terminals, or anywhere else in Cuba. All transport costs — bus tickets, taxi fares, car rental — must be paid in cash. Additionally, some GPS navigation apps require roaming data that US carriers either don’t provide in Cuba or charge at prohibitive rates. Download Maps.me with the Cuba offline map before you leave the US and use it without any data connection. It’s the most reliable navigation tool available to travellers without Cuban SIM cards.
The Classic American Cars: What They Are and How They Work
The 1950s American cars are real, they’re everywhere, and they serve a genuine function in Cuba’s transport ecosystem rather than existing solely for tourist photography. The reason they’re on the road is specific: when the US embargo ended the import of American vehicles in 1960, Cuba couldn’t legally import replacement cars from the US. Cubans kept maintaining what they had — with Soviet-era replacement engines, handmade parts, and an improvised mechanical ingenuity that produces running vehicles that look like they belong in a different era because, structurally, they do.
The same cars operate in two completely different modes. As tourist transport — convertible tours of Havana, airport transfers, Old Havana sightseeing circuits — they’re privately owned, tourist-priced ($35–60 per hour for a convertible tour), and the experience is exactly what it looks like: genuinely spectacular. Rolling through Havana’s colonial streets in an open 1956 Buick with the driver narrating the history of the buildings you’re passing is one of the more enjoyable things the city offers, and the cost is reasonable for what it is.
The same cars — in less polished condition — also operate as local “almendrones,” functioning as unofficial shared taxis on fixed routes through the city. These charge in Cuban pesos (not tourist prices) and follow routes rather than going door-to-door. You get in at a set point, declare your destination, and get out when you arrive. The fare is a fraction of a tourist taxi. The catch for visitors: you need to know the routes and speak enough Spanish to declare your stop. Most first-time Cuba visitors don’t use almendrones and don’t need to — but they’re available, they’re authentic, and they’re how much of Havana actually moves.
Booking a convertible tour from your casa host or hotel concierge gives you a reliable car and a reliable driver for whatever duration you want. Negotiating directly with drivers waiting in tourist areas is also fine — agree the price explicitly before you get in, confirm whether the quoted rate is per person or for the whole car, and you’ll have no problems.
If you’re going to book a classic car for one journey, make it the ride from Havana’s José Martí Airport into the city — a 20–30 minute drive through the outskirts and into the colonial centre in a 1950s American convertible is an arrival experience that sets the tone for a Cuba trip better than any airport transfer shuttle. Costs $25–35 for the whole car regardless of passenger count. Your casa host can arrange it in advance. Do it once and you’ll understand why Cuba’s tourism industry has been selling this image for 60 years.
Taxis in Cuba: Tourist Taxis, Metered Taxis, and Private Cars
In Cuba, “taxi” can mean a yellow metered state cab, a private car operating as a tourist taxi, a classic American car, or a private vehicle whose owner saw you standing at the kerb and offered you a lift. These are not the same product at the same price. Understanding the difference saves significant money across a multi-day trip.
Tourist taxis in Havana fall into two categories: the yellow-and-black Taxímetro state cabs that run on meters (more reliable pricing, less flexible routing), and the private cars — often more modern sedans — that work on negotiated prices. Both serve tourists effectively; the difference is in how you engage with them.
State Taxímetros start from roughly 1 CUP per fraction of a kilometre on the meter, which sounds cheap but the tourist rate conversion makes it comparable to a few US dollars per short journey. The advantage is that you don’t negotiate — the meter runs and you pay what it shows. For first-time visitors who are nervous about negotiation or concerned about overcharging, metered taxis remove that friction entirely.
Private tourist taxis are negotiated before departure. The standard approach: state your destination, hear a price, counter with something 20–30% lower, and settle somewhere between the two. In Havana, a cross-city fare (say, Old Havana to Vedado) should be $5–8 for the whole car. Old Havana to Miramar: $10–12. Always confirm the price is per car (not per person) and is in the currency you’re handing over. Most confusion in Cuban taxi transactions comes from ambiguity on currency rather than deliberate overcharging.
Your casa host is a reliable source of trusted taxi drivers. Many hosts have a regular driver they call — someone they’ve known for years whose prices are fair and whose car is reliable. This informal recommendation network is worth using, particularly for longer journeys or for airport runs where reliability matters.
Viazul Intercity Buses: The Independent Traveller’s Backbone
Viazul is Cuba’s purpose-built tourist bus service, and it is the single most important piece of transport infrastructure for independent travellers moving between cities. It serves every major tourist destination — Havana, Trinidad, Viñales, Varadero, Santiago de Cuba, Cienfuegos, and more — with air-conditioned, punctual (most of the time) buses that are significantly more comfortable than anything else at comparable price points.
Viazul buses are comfortable, air-conditioned, and run to published schedules that are more reliable than most people expect. The fleet is relatively modern by Cuban standards. Seats have reasonable legroom. There is no catering service, but buses make one stop on most longer routes at a truck stop where you can buy drinks and snacks. Bring water regardless.
Booking is done at viazul.com, which accepts international credit cards. Do this before you arrive in Cuba — using the website on Cuban internet is slow and unreliable, and popular routes (Havana–Trinidad, Havana–Viñales) sell out weeks ahead in December through March. Print your confirmation and bring it to the terminal. There is no digital ticket acceptance system — you need the paper confirmation or you’ll need to reprint at the terminal desk, which adds time and uncertainty.
The Viazul terminal in Havana (Terminal de Ómnibus, near the Vedado zoo) is straightforward to get to by taxi — $5–8 from central Havana. Arrive at least 30 minutes before departure for luggage check-in (bags go in the hold beneath the bus; the ticket price includes standard luggage). The terminal has a waiting room, a small café, and toilets.
One important thing Viazul doesn’t cover: transport within cities. It gets you from city to city, then leaves you at the terminal to find local transport. Plan how you’re getting from the Viazul terminal to your accommodation before you arrive — your casa host can arrange a pickup, or take a taxi from the terminal queue.
Bicitaxis and Cocotaxis: Short-Hop Urban Transport
Bicitaxis are pedal-powered trishaws — a bicycle with a covered carriage built onto the front or back, carrying one or two passengers through the city streets. They operate in Old Havana, Centro Habana, and most other Cuban city centres, and they’re one of the more pleasant ways to cover short distances in the heat. The driver pedals; you sit and watch the city pass. Fares are negotiated before you get in and are extremely cheap by any international standard — typically $1–3 for a short urban hop of 5–15 minutes.
Bicitaxis work best for short hops in Old Havana where traffic and narrow streets make them competitive with cars on time. They’re not for long distances or hot afternoon crossings of the city — a bicitaxi across central Havana in August midday heat is a lot to ask of anyone. For moving between nearby plazas, getting from a restaurant to your accommodation after a long dinner, or exploring without committing to a taxi — they’re useful and characterful.
Cocotaxis — the small yellow fiberglass three-wheelers that look like oversized coconuts on wheels — are a Havana-specific phenomenon. They’re faster than bicitaxis and more overtly a tourist product: the drivers cluster near the main hotels and tourist sights, and their pricing is aimed at tourist wallets rather than local ones. A cocotaxi across Old Havana might cost $3–5 compared to a bicitaxi’s $1–2 for the same distance. They’re fun for one ride; you don’t need more than that.
Both bicitaxi and cocotaxi drivers will offer informal city tours for negotiated flat rates — $10–15 for an hour of narrated cycling through Old Havana is common and usually worth it once. You see the city at walking pace from a moving vehicle, the driver knows where to go, and you cover more ground than you would on foot in the same time without the heat of a fast walk.
Colectivos: Shared Taxis Between Cities — Often the Best Option
A colectivo is a shared private car — typically 4–5 passengers — that runs between specific city pairs, departing from designated points (usually near the Viazul terminal or a main plaza) when the car is full. The driver charges per seat, not per car. The fare per person is usually comparable to or slightly more expensive than the Viazul bus seat for the same route, but the journey is typically 30–60 minutes faster because private cars don’t make the same rest stops and can take more direct routes.
For Havana to Viñales, a colectivo seat costs around $15–20 and takes 2.5–3 hours compared to Viazul’s 3.5 hours and $12 seat. The calculation varies by route, but the time saving often justifies the slight premium — particularly for the Havana–Trinidad run, where the Viazul takes 6 hours and a colectivo can do it in under 5.
The other advantage is flexibility. Colectivos can often drop passengers at a specific address rather than a bus terminal, which saves a taxi fare at each end. Ask your casa host to arrange a colectivo seat the day before departure — they know the drivers on the routes you’re likely to take and can get you a reserved seat rather than having to show up early and hope there’s space.
The experience is also, frankly, more interesting than the bus. You’re in a car with 3–4 other people — often a mix of Cubans and other travellers — for several hours. The conversations that happen in those cars are part of what makes independent Cuba travel different from the resort format.
“The colectivo to Viñales departed 20 minutes late because the driver needed to stop at his sister’s house in Centro Habana. We arrived on time anyway because he drove the mountain road at speeds the Viazul schedule doesn’t account for. Cuba transport in a sentence.”
Renting a Car in Cuba: When It’s Worth It and What to Expect
Car rental in Cuba is available, functional, and often the right choice for travellers covering multiple destinations with luggage — particularly those visiting places that Viazul doesn’t serve directly or at convenient times. It’s also more complicated, more expensive, and more logistically demanding than car rental anywhere else you’ve probably driven.
Cuba’s car rental market is dominated by state-run companies — Cubacar, Rex, and Havanautos — with limited availability and prices that are high relative to the vehicle quality you receive. A basic hatchback starts at $35–45 per day before insurance; the insurance itself (mandatory for rental in Cuba) adds $15–25 per day depending on coverage level. Budget $60–90 per day realistically for a basic rental with proper insurance.
The availability problem is real and often underestimated. Cuba’s rental car fleet is small and demand in peak season (November–March) exceeds supply. Cars are frequently unavailable at the airport on the day you want them, or the car reserved is “unavailable” and a different (often larger and more expensive) vehicle is offered instead. Book well in advance through the company’s website, confirm in writing, and arrive at the rental desk with all documents in order. Even then, plan for 45–90 minutes at the rental desk — it’s rarely quick.
On the road, Cuba driving is actually relatively straightforward once you accept the specific quirks: potholes that appear without warning, cattle on rural roads at night, and the occasional horse-drawn cart materialising out of darkness on an unlit highway. Speed is not the game — getting there in one piece is. Fuel stations (CUPET and CIMEX) exist on main routes but become scarce in remote areas; fill up whenever the gauge drops below half.
The genuine argument for renting: if you’re covering three or more destinations, have luggage, or want to go to places like Baracoa, Topes de Collantes, or remote coastlines that buses don’t serve well — a car transforms what’s possible. The argument against: for a Havana–Viñales–Trinidad circuit, Viazul plus colectivos is cheaper, involves less stress, and doesn’t require navigating Cuban roads at night.
Cuba Transport Comparison: Every Mode Side by Side
| Transport Mode | Best Use Case | Typical Cost | Reliability | Book Ahead? | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viazul Bus | Intercity: Havana–Trinidad, Havana–Viñales | $10–50 by route | High | Yes — online before arrival | Best intercity value |
| Colectivo | Same as Viazul routes but faster | $15–35/seat | Good | Via casa host, day before | Best intercity experience |
| Tourist Taxi (private car) | Within-city transport, short intercity | $3–15 in cities | High | No — hail or via host | Main city transport |
| Classic Car (tourist tour) | Airport transfer, sightseeing tour | $25–60/hour | High | Via host or tour operator | Do it once — worth it |
| Almendrón (shared classic car) | Fixed city routes — local option | 10–25 CUP | Variable | No — join at departure point | For adventurous locals-style travel |
| Bicitaxi | Short hops in Old Havana, sightseeing | $1–3 | Good | No — flag down | Excellent for short urban trips |
| Cocotaxi | Short tourist hops, one fun ride | $3–5 | Good | No — cluster at tourist sites | Tourist novelty, fine once |
| Rental Car | Multi-city, remote areas, families with luggage | $60–90/day all-in | Variable availability | Yes — 2–3 months ahead | Only if genuinely needed |
| State Taxímetro | Havana city trips — metered, no negotiation | $3–10 | Good | App (Android) or hail | Good for those who prefer no negotiation |
Practical Transport Tips That Actually Make a Difference
Cuba transport runs on a combination of formal infrastructure (Viazul) and informal relationship networks (casa hosts knowing drivers, drivers knowing other drivers). The travellers who move around Cuba most efficiently are not the ones who plan most rigidly — they’re the ones who plug into the local network at each stop and let that network route them to the next place.
🚗 Transport Checklist — Cuba 2026
- Book Viazul tickets at viazul.com before you travel — not from Cuba
- Print Viazul confirmations — no digital ticket acceptance at terminals
- Ask your casa host to arrange colectivos the day before you need them
- For rental cars, book 2–3 months ahead for Nov–March travel
- Bring all cash you’ll need — no cards work in taxis, buses, or rental agencies
- Download Maps.me offline before arrival — works without any data
- Negotiate taxi prices before getting in, confirm currency and per-car vs per-person
- Book the airport classic car in advance through your casa host
- For long routes, confirm departure times the evening before (Viazul schedules can shift)
- Carry small denomination CUP for bicitaxi and local transport
- For intercity by taxi (private transfer), negotiate with your host for their driver
- Travel insurance that covers transport disruption is sensible but not for cancelled buses
Getting Around Cuba FAQ
Transport is part of the Cuba experience — not just the logistics around it
The strangest thing about Cuba’s transport system — from the perspective of someone who travels on it for the first time — is that some of the most memorable parts of a Cuba trip happen in transit. The colectivo driver who narrates every town you pass through. The other passengers on the Viazul bus to Trinidad who between them speak five languages and are going there for five completely different reasons. The classic car breaking gently to a halt at a traffic light while the driver drums on the steering wheel to whatever’s on the radio. None of this is inconvenient. All of it is Cuba.
For the logistical foundations — entry requirements, accommodation, cash — the Cuba travel tips guide and the cash guide cover everything you need sorted before any journey starts.