Simple camping cabins surrounded by tropical forest in a natural setting
Cuba Accommodation · Campismo · Complete 2026 Guide

Campsites and Campismo in Cuba: What They Actually Are

When Cubans say “campismo” they don’t mean a tent in a field. They mean a state-run bungalow resort in nature — used almost entirely by Cuban families and almost entirely unknown to international visitors. Here’s everything, including whether you can actually stay at one.

🌿 Nature · Budget · Authentic Cuba 🗓 Updated May 2026 ⏱ 15-minute read 🏕 All campismo types covered

The word “campismo” in Cuba is a translation trap. Most international travelers hear it and picture a tent, a sleeping bag, and a fire — the western outdoor camping tradition. What Cubans mean by campismo is completely different: a state-run network of bungalow and cabin complexes in natural settings, primarily designed for Cuban families to take affordable domestic holidays in the countryside, mountains, or by the coast.

These campismos are one of Cuba’s most interesting accommodation secrets. They’re cheap (very), they’re in locations that put you in the middle of natural Cuba rather than tourist Cuba, they’re busy with Cuban families on weekends, and they’re almost entirely invisible in international travel guides. Most foreign visitors to Cuba don’t know they exist. A small number of adventurous independent travelers have figured out how to access them. Whether you can book one depends on factors this guide explains in detail.

This article covers the full picture: what campismo actually is (and the spectrum from basic to relatively comfortable), where the most interesting locations are, how international visitors can or can’t access them, how they compare to casas particulares and state hotels on every relevant dimension, and the related question of whether conventional outdoor camping — tent in nature — is actually possible in Cuba at all. The answer to that last one is more complicated than you’d expect.

80+
Campismo installations across Cuba — one in almost every province
$3–15
Nightly rate for Cubans — a fraction of any tourist accommodation price
95%
Of campismo capacity serves Cuban domestic tourists — not international visitors
1970s
When the campismo network was established as a domestic tourism benefit for Cuban workers
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What Campismo Actually Is — and How It Got Here

The context that explains why this accommodation type exists and who it’s really for

Campismo Popular is the state organization that operates Cuba’s domestic nature resort network. It was established in the 1970s under the revolutionary government’s social program, which provided Cuban workers with access to subsidized vacation accommodation in natural settings — a way of ensuring that beach holidays and mountain getaways were available to the working class rather than only the pre-revolutionary wealthy. The model was inspired partly by Soviet youth camp and workers’ resort traditions, partly by Cuba’s own pre-revolutionary beach club culture, and adapted to the specific geography of an island with extraordinary natural diversity.

A campismo installation typically consists of a collection of simple concrete or wooden bungalows — usually four to eight beds per unit, basic furniture, a fan, a bathroom — arranged in a natural setting. There’s usually a shared dining hall (comedor) serving three meals, a small bar, possibly a pool, and in some cases beach access or river swimming. The quality ranges from “genuinely basic but functional” to “pleasantly rustic” depending on the installation, its age, and how recently it’s been maintained.

The defining characteristic is the clientele. Cuban families — teachers, factory workers, farmers with a week off — fill these places on weekends and during peak season (August, the Cuban school holiday month). The atmosphere is family vacation: kids running between the bungalows, parents playing dominoes at folding tables, teenagers in the pool, older couples in hammocks. It’s a slice of Cuban domestic life that almost no international visitor ever sees, which is precisely what makes it interesting.

Simple wooden cabin bungalows surrounded by lush tropical forest in a nature reserve
The campismo model — basic bungalows in natural settings — was designed for Cuban workers’ domestic holidays, not international tourism. Photo: Unsplash

What Campismo Is Not

Campismo is not wild camping or tent camping in any western sense. You sleep in a bungalow, not a tent. You eat in a shared dining hall, not from a camp stove. The closest western equivalent is a basic holiday camp or a French camping municipal — the concept of a self-contained budget resort in nature, not a backpacker wilderness experience. The name is linguistically misleading if you approach it with outdoor-camping expectations.

It’s also not glamping. The Cuba glamping guide covers the eco-cabin and nature-stay end of the market, where the product is intentionally premium. Campismo is the opposite — resolutely unpretentious, priced for Cuban wages, and making no claims about design or luxury. That’s a feature, not a bug, once you understand what you’re choosing.

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The Different Types of Campismo in Cuba

The spectrum from coastal beach campismos to mountain and river installations

Cuba’s 80+ campismo installations are not a uniform product. The range in location, quality, and character is significant — the difference between a beach campismo in Holguín with direct Atlantic access and a mountain campismo in the Sierra Maestra is about as wide as the difference between two accommodation types can be while sharing the same category label. Here’s the spectrum.

Simple beach bungalows on a secluded Caribbean beach with turquoise water and palm trees
Beach Campismos (Costeros)
Cubans: $5–12/night · Foreigners: ~$15–30
Coastal Mostly Cubans

The coastal campismos are the most popular within the Cuban domestic tourism system — beach access at minimal cost is exactly what the network was designed to deliver. These installations sit on or near beaches that in most Caribbean countries would have international resort development. In Cuba they have concrete bungalows and a state bar instead.

The beaches themselves are the genuine draw. Campismo Playa Blanca in Holguín, Campismo El Cocodrilo in Isla de la Juventud, and several installations along the north coast of Pinar del Río sit on stretches of Caribbean coast that see almost no international tourists. The water is the same water. The sand is the same sand. The bungalow you sleep in is basic. The trade-off is obvious and, for the right traveler, clearly worth making.

These installations are the ones most likely to be fully booked during August and the week of the Cuban national holidays in late July. They’re also the most likely to have some form of international visitor access — the coastal locations are better connected and the staff are more likely to have experience with foreign guests.

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Best for: Travelers who want off-the-beaten-track beach access, authentic Cuban holiday atmosphere, and don’t need comfort infrastructure. The beaches here are often genuinely spectacular. The bungalows are not.
Forest cabin surrounded by tropical mountain trees with mist and ferns
Mountain and Forest Campismos (De Montaña)
Cubans: $3–8/night · Foreigners: ~$12–20
Mountain Mostly Cubans

The mountain campismos are the most physically striking in terms of setting. Several sit inside or adjacent to Cuba’s national parks — in the Sierra Maestra, the Sierra del Escambray near Trinidad, the mountains of eastern Cuba near Baracoa — and the landscapes around them are the same landscapes serious hikers come to Cuba to access. Having accommodation inside these areas rather than driving in daily from a town base is a meaningful advantage.

The Topes de Collantes area in the Escambray mountains has campismo-adjacent facilities that serve visitors doing the hiking trails there. The Sierra Maestra installations provide the most remote mountain accommodation available in Cuba and are used by climbers attempting Pico Turquino, Cuba’s highest peak. For these specific hiking and climbing uses, the mountain campismo network is genuinely the right accommodation category.

Temperature is a factor at altitude — mountain campismos can be significantly cooler than the coast, which is welcome in summer and occasionally cold in winter evenings. The Topes de Collantes hiking guide and the Cuba hiking guide both cover the mountain area context in detail.

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Best for: Hikers, trekkers, and travelers who want nature immersion rather than comfort. These installations are the practical base for serious Cuban mountain activities. Expect basic facilities and spectacular surroundings.
Tropical river with green banks and clear water in a lush Cuban nature reserve
River and Inland Campismos
Cubans: $3–10/night · Variable foreigner access
River / Inland Cuban Family Focus

Several campismo installations are set on or near Cuba’s inland rivers and natural freshwater swimming spots. These tend to be the most authentically domestic in feel — coastal campismos attract some foreign backpackers who’ve heard about them; mountain campismos attract serious hikers; the river installations see almost exclusively Cuban guests. These are genuinely immersive in the Cuban family vacation experience in a way that even the coastal ones aren’t quite.

The swimming holes and river pools accessible from these installations are often genuinely beautiful — clear fresh water, jungle banks, no tourist infrastructure at all. For travelers interested in kayaking in Cuba or freshwater activities, these locations are worth knowing about even if accessing the accommodation itself proves difficult.

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Best for: Travelers with Spanish, personal contacts in Cuba, or a willingness to figure it out on the ground. These are the hardest category for foreigners to access and the most rewarding for the few who manage it.

“The campismo at the end of the forest road, where a Cuban family’s two grandchildren are chasing chickens between the bungalows and someone’s playing a guitar on their porch — that’s a version of Cuba that basically doesn’t exist in any travel guide. Which is exactly why it’s worth knowing about.”

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The Best Campismo Locations in Cuba

The installations most worth knowing — by province and setting

Naming specific campismos with confident quality assessments is harder than reviewing hotels — the network is managed by Cuban state operators, online information is sparse, and quality varies year-by-year depending on maintenance budgets. What follows are the locations and regions where the campismo experience is most valuable, rather than specific property endorsements.

Pinar del Río — Los Pinos Campismo

The Pinar del Río province, which contains the Viñales valley, also has several campismo installations in the surrounding pine forests and karst areas. The scenery is exceptional — the same mogote landscape that makes Viñales so striking extends throughout the province — and some installations have access to swimming holes and forest trails that aren’t on any tourist map. These are the campismo installations most logical for travelers already visiting Viñales, as a low-cost extension of the region. The Viñales complete guide covers the broader region that these campismos sit within.

Sierra Maestra — Campismo Alto del Naranjo and Area

The Sierra Maestra campismos are the starting point for Pico Turquino ascents and access points for the mountain trail network. The Cuban mountaineering community uses these as base camps for multi-day traverses. The setting — cloud forest at altitude, views across the Caribbean toward Jamaica on clear days — is remarkable. Access requires transport from Santiago de Cuba (roughly two hours) or from Bayamo. These are the most serious-outdoor-activity oriented of all the campismo locations and genuinely worth the logistical effort for hikers.

Holguín Province — Coastal Installations

Holguín province’s north coast has some of Cuba’s least visited beaches — the Guardalavaca area gets some resort tourism but the campismo installations scattered east of there sit on beaches that see almost no international visitors. The Playa Blanca installation is frequently cited in Cuban travel forums as one of the best coastal campismos in terms of setting. The province is also reachable by domestic flight from Havana, which changes the logistics significantly.

Escambray Mountains — Topes de Collantes Area

The Sierra del Escambray range between Trinidad and Santa Clara has campismo infrastructure supporting access to the Topes de Collantes national park. This is the one area where campismo and more developed tourist infrastructure overlap — the Topes de Collantes resort complex (a genuine hotel, not a campismo) provides the main accommodation, but campismo-style bungalows exist within and adjacent to the park. The hiking in this area is some of the best in Cuba — waterfalls, coffee plant ecology, cloud forest trails — and this is the most accessible “serious nature” zone from Trinidad.

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Cuba’s eco-tourism network is broader than campismo alone

The campismo system is one part of a wider nature accommodation landscape in Cuba that includes eco-lodges, agrotourismo farm stays, and the Cubanacán mountain hotel network. The Cuba eco-tourism guide covers the full picture. The Cuba farm stay guide is relevant for anyone interested in rural immersion alongside the campismo concept.

Cuban family relaxing outside simple bungalow cabins at a nature resort
Weekend campismo stays are a Cuban family tradition — multi-generational groups sharing adjacent bungalows is entirely typical. Photo: Unsplash
Tropical forest path through dense trees leading to a camping area in Cuba
Many mountain campismos are located within national park boundaries — the surrounding forest is part of what you’re paying for. Photo: Unsplash
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Can International Tourists Actually Stay at Cuban Campismos?

The honest answer — and the cases where it’s worked

This is the core question and the answer is “technically yes, practically difficult, with variable success depending on location, the specific installation, and whether you have Cuban contacts who can navigate the system.” Let’s break that down.

The Official Position

Campismo Popular installations are officially designated for Cuban domestic tourism. The pricing structure is in CUP at rates that reflect Cuban wages — $3–12 per night at exchange rates that make no sense for international visitors to benefit from. The booking system operates through Cuban workplaces and local Communist Party organizations that allocate vacation slots to workers. None of this is designed for international tourists, and there’s no foreign-facing booking platform, no English-language interface, and often no telephone contact number accessible from outside Cuba.

Officially, foreigners can access campismo installations when capacity allows, at a higher rate (typically $15–30/night in USD or equivalent CUP) that reflects the tourist price tier rather than the subsidized domestic rate. In practice, whether a specific campismo will accommodate a foreign visitor depends on: whether the installation director is comfortable with the paperwork (some are, many aren’t), whether there’s availability (campismos run full in August regardless), and whether you have a Cuban contact who can make the booking through local channels.

How It’s Actually Been Done

The travelers who’ve successfully stayed at Cuban campismos as international visitors have generally used one of three approaches:

  • Through a Cuban contact: A Cuban friend, the host of a casa particular you’ve stayed with, or a trusted local guide books the campismo on your behalf through local channels. This works at a meaningful proportion of campismos and is the most reliable method.
  • Showing up in person: Some installations — particularly coastal ones that see occasional foreign backpackers — will simply accept foreign visitors who arrive and ask. This works better during low season when the installation isn’t full. During August and national holidays, campismos run at 100% capacity and there’s genuinely no room.
  • Through organized eco-tourism packages: Several Cuban travel agencies now offer nature-focused packages that include campismo-style accommodation as part of a broader itinerary. This routes around the direct booking problem by using an agency’s existing relationship with the campismo network.
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The registration complication

Cuba requires all foreign visitors to be registered at their accommodation each night — this is part of the immigration control system, and failures to register can create complications at departure. Most campismos are not set up to process foreign visitor registration paperwork. This is one reason many installations don’t accept foreign visitors even when they technically could: the administrative burden of the registration system outweighs the benefit of one or two extra paying guests. The Cuba first-timer tips guide covers the registration system in the broader accommodation context.

Wild Camping in Cuba: Is It Possible, Legal, Worth Doing?

The full picture on camping outside the campismo system

If campismo is not wild camping, the obvious question is: can you actually pitch a tent and camp in nature in Cuba? The answer involves several layers.

The Legal Situation

Wild camping — setting up a tent on public or state-owned land without authorization — is technically illegal in Cuba. The prohibition covers beaches, forests, national parks, and agricultural land. This isn’t aggressively enforced in the way a private land trespass would be elsewhere, but it’s also not ignored: travelers who’ve tried wild camping in Cuba report interactions with local police or military (who patrol coastal and border areas), requests to move on, and occasional paperwork complications if the interaction escalates. The registration requirement for foreign visitors makes sleeping anywhere unofficial a genuine administrative problem if it’s discovered.

In practice, some cycling-across-Cuba travelers and dedicated backpackers have wild camped in rural Cuba without incident, particularly in the interior where patrols are less frequent. The Cuba camping guide covers the legal and practical details at length. The cycling Cuba guide also addresses the sleeping-rough question from the perspective of long-distance cyclists, for whom overnight options between towns are the main logistical challenge.

Practical Alternatives to Wild Camping

For travelers who want the nature-immersion experience without the legal complications:

  • Campismo through local contacts — as described above, the most reliable route to nature accommodation
  • Casas particulares in rural locations — many hosts in villages near national parks have gardens or outdoor spaces; asking to pitch a tent in the garden is a different conversation from wild camping and sometimes works at very low cost
  • Eco-lodge network — the growing eco-lodge sector in Cuba operates in national park-adjacent settings with proper authorization; the Cuba eco-lodges guide covers the available properties
  • Agrotourismo farm stays — authorized rural accommodation on working farms, often in genuinely beautiful settings
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The unique places to stay option

Cuba has a growing category of accommodation that sits outside the standard hotel/casa dichotomy — converted colonial houses, organic farms, artist residences, and nature properties that offer a different kind of rural stay. The unique Cuba accommodation guide covers these. For travelers specifically seeking nature immersion, this category often delivers more of what campismo promises but can’t always provide to foreigners.

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Booking Campismo: The Logistics for International Visitors

The realistic options — none of them simple, all of them navigable with the right approach

Option 1: Through a Cuban Travel Agency

Several Cuban state travel agencies (Cubamar, Viajes Horizontes) and some independent Cuban tour operators now offer packages that include campismo-style accommodation in their nature-tourism offerings. This is the most legally secure route for international visitors — the agency handles the registration paperwork, the booking system, and the transportation. It costs more than a direct campismo booking would, but compared to any other form of Cuban accommodation it’s still inexpensive.

Option 2: Through Your Casa Particular Host

If you’re staying in a rural cuba particular near a campismo installation, your host may be willing and able to contact the campismo director on your behalf and arrange a night or two. This works best in small towns with a local relationship network — a casa host in a village adjacent to a campismo has a different kind of access than a stranger walking up to the front desk. This is the method that produces the most authentic campismo experience because the booking happens through exactly the channels the system was designed for.

The guide to finding casas without a platform explains how to build this kind of local network connection — which is also how to end up meeting the kind of casa host who can make campismo happen.

Option 3: Direct Arrival at the Installation

Show up, explain you’re a foreign visitor, ask if they have space and whether they can accommodate you. Bring cash (USD is usually acceptable; have CUP as backup). Be prepared for “no” as the likely answer at busy times. Be persistent politely if it’s off-season. This is unreliable as a primary strategy but works often enough during low season (May–June, October–November) at installations that see the occasional foreign visitor.

What to Bring for a Campismo Stay

  • Mosquito repellent — outdoor settings, often near water, usually no screens on windows
  • Your own towel — not always provided
  • A light blanket or sleeping liner — bungalows may have minimal bedding
  • Cash only — no card payment at any campismo installation
  • Water bottle — tap water quality varies; bring a filter or bottled water
  • Torch/headlamp — lighting in bungalows and paths between units is basic
  • Your passport for registration
  • Basic Spanish — the likelihood of English-speaking staff is low
  • Snacks for the first day — the comedor serves meals at set times; if you arrive late, you may miss dinner

The general Cuba packing guide covers the island-wide basics; add the campismo-specific items above to that list.

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Cash in Cuba is never optional — at campismo it’s the only option

No campismo installation accepts card payment. Bring USD or CUP. The foreigner rate is usually quoted in USD ($15–30/night depending on the installation). For meals at the comedor, prices are in CUP at rates that make them extremely cheap even at tourist exchange rates. The Cuba cash guide covers the exchange and ATM situation — worth reading before venturing outside the main tourist infrastructure where the assumption that you’ll find an ATM doesn’t hold.

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Campismo vs Other Cuba Accommodation: Honest Comparison

Where campismo fits in the accommodation spectrum and when it’s the right choice
FactorCampismoCasa ParticularState HotelEco-Lodge
Price (foreigners)$15–30/night$20–55/night$50–150/night$40–120/night
Nature immersionExcellentVariableLowExcellent
Cuban authenticityVery highHighLowMedium
Comfort levelBasicGoodModerateGood
Booking ease (foreigners)Very hardEasyEasyModerate
Food qualityBasic comedor mealsCasa breakfast, local paladaresHotel restaurant, variableUsually good, included
Location diversityBeach, mountain, river, forestMainly cities and townsCities and resortsNational parks, rural
Social experienceWith Cuban familiesWith Cuban host familyInternational tourism bubbleSmall group, international

The comparison makes clear that campismo occupies a specific and unusual position: maximum nature immersion and cultural authenticity at very low cost, but with the highest booking difficulty for foreigners and the lowest comfort floor. For travelers who are specifically seeking the former and can tolerate the latter, campismo is genuinely irreplaceable. For everyone else, the casa vs hotel comparison covers the more accessible options in detail.

The budget calculation is also worth making explicitly. If you can access a campismo at $15–20/night including basic meals, you’re spending significantly less than a casa particular — more than the cheapest casas but less than most. The $50/day Cuba budget works even better when campismo replaces a few of the more expensive accommodation nights. The 10-day Cuba budget itinerary built around casas could theoretically run lower with a campismo segment in a rural area.

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The backpacker Cuba angle

Campismo fits most naturally into the itinerary of a traveler doing Cuba slowly — cycling across the island, hiking multi-day trails, or deliberately choosing the slow-road version of the trip. The backpacking Cuba guide covers the broader independent budget travel context that campismo sits within. The solo Cuba travel guide covers the dynamics of navigating informal accommodation systems alone — which is what campismo access often requires.

📋 Campismo Preparation Checklist

  • Spanish communication ready — basic phrases at minimum
  • Cash in USD and CUP — card not accepted anywhere
  • Cuban contact or casa host identified to help book
  • Mosquito repellent packed
  • Headlamp or torch for bungalow paths at night
  • Own towel and light sleeping liner
  • Water filter or bottled water supply
  • Snacks for arrival day in case comedor is closed
  • Passport for registration paperwork
  • Travel insurance covering remote accommodation confirmed
  • Backup accommodation option identified if campismo rejects foreigners
  • Return transport arranged from campismo location

Frequently Asked Questions

What we get asked most about camping and campismo in Cuba
Is campismo the same as camping?
No. Cuban campismo is a bungalow/cabin accommodation system in natural settings, not tent camping. You sleep in a basic concrete or wooden bungalow with a bed and bathroom, eat in a shared dining hall, and the “camping” element is the natural surroundings rather than any tent or outdoor sleeping component. The word is a linguistic false friend for English speakers. Actual tent camping (wild camping) is a separate question and is technically illegal in Cuba without authorization.
Can foreigners stay at Cuban campismos?
Yes, with caveats. The system was designed for Cuban domestic tourism and the booking infrastructure doesn’t accommodate international visitors directly. Foreigners can access campismos through Cuban travel agencies that package them, through Cuban contacts who book on their behalf, or occasionally by arriving directly during low season. Success varies by location and time of year. The registration paperwork requirement is the main practical barrier — many campismo installations aren’t set up to process foreign visitor registration, which is legally required for all foreign accommodation nights in Cuba.
How much does campismo cost for foreigners?
When foreigners can access campismo installations, the typical rate is $15–30/night USD depending on the installation and whether meals are included. This is substantially more than Cuban residents pay ($3–12/night in CUP at subsidized rates) but still significantly less than most other accommodation options in Cuba. Meals at the comedor add another $3–5/day. The total daily cost including accommodation and meals can be under $35, which is genuinely cheap by any Cuba comparison.
What’s the best campismo for an international visitor who wants to try it?
The coastal campismos in Holguín province and some Pinar del Río installations are the most reported successes for foreign visitors. The Topes de Collantes area in the Escambray is another reasonable target because the entire area sees more organized tourism and the campismo-adjacent facilities there are used to foreign hikers. Start by identifying which national park or natural area you specifically want to access, then research which campismo serves that area, then find a Cuban contact or local agency who can broker the booking.
Is wild camping possible in Cuba?
Technically illegal. Practically, some travelers have done it without incident — particularly cyclists crossing the island’s interior, where overnight options between towns are limited and rural police presence is lower. The risk is both the legal issue (unauthorized camping) and the registration requirement (foreign visitors must register each night at licensed accommodation). The Cuba camping guide covers this in detail including the documented experiences of travelers who have wild camped and what happened. The safer alternative is to use campismo, eco-lodge, or rural casas rather than unsanctioned tent camping.
Is campismo suitable for families with children?
Yes — it’s primarily used by Cuban families with children and the atmosphere is very family-friendly. The open outdoor space, beach or river swimming at coastal installations, and communal vibe of the installations are naturally good for kids. The basic amenities (simple meals, shared spaces, outdoor setting) suit children better than adults who want comfort. The Cuba with kids guide covers the broader family accommodation question.
Are there any campismo installations accessible without going through official channels?
A few coastal installations in areas that see backpacker traffic have become known for accepting foreign walk-ins without prior booking — particularly in Holguín and some areas of eastern Cuba. These aren’t documented reliably in any single source because the situation changes year-by-year depending on management changes, policy shifts, and capacity. The most reliable intelligence comes from recent traveler reports in Cuba backpacker forums and communities, or from Cuban contacts who know the current status. What was possible two years ago may not be now, and vice versa.
How does campismo compare to glamping in Cuba?
Completely different products at opposite ends of the nature accommodation spectrum. Glamping in Cuba — the eco-cabins and premium nature stays covered in the Cuba glamping guide — is designed for international tourists, has proper booking infrastructure, provides a comfortable curated experience, and costs $60–150/night. Campismo is designed for Cuban workers, has almost no foreign booking infrastructure, provides basic functional accommodation, and costs $15–30 for foreigners. Both are set in natural Cuba. Everything else about them is different.

The honest summary before you decide whether to try it

Campismo is genuinely interesting as an accommodation concept — the only system in Cuba that puts you in the middle of natural landscapes specifically designed for families to enjoy them, at prices that reflect what Cubans earn rather than what foreigners expect to pay. The obstacles to foreign access are real but not insurmountable, particularly with the right local help or through a Cuban travel agency that includes it in nature tourism packages.

For most independent travelers, the casa particular network is the more practical and more flexible option — it has all of campismo’s cultural authenticity advantages and none of the booking complexity. But for travelers specifically targeting Cuba’s nature areas — the Sierra Maestra, the Escambray, the remote coastal provinces — campismo access is worth pursuing because the location range that campismo covers is genuinely different from what casas offer. A casa in Trinidad is great. A mountain campismo at the base of Pico Turquino, where you’re surrounded by Cuban climbers planning the next morning’s summit attempt, is a different Cuba entirely.

Sort the visa and tourist card before flying. Bring cash. Learn a few key Spanish phrases. And if a Cuban you meet in a Viñales patio says “my cousin runs a campismo near the coast in Pinar del Río, you can stay there” — say yes.

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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