Pristine white sand and clear turquoise water on a Cuban northern cay — the setting shared by Cayo Coco and Cayo Santa María
Cuba Beach Destinations · 2026

Cayo Coco vs Cayo Santa María: Which Cuban Cay Is the Better Choice?

Both are stunning. Both have world-class beaches. Both are all-inclusive resort territory. But they’re not the same trip — the differences in scale, access, beach character, hotel quality, and atmosphere matter enough to change which one is right for you.

🏝️ Two cayo destinations compared 🗓 Updated May 2026 ⏱ 15-minute read ⚖️ Direct verdict included

Cuba has dozens of offshore cays but two have emerged as the primary resort destinations: Cayo Coco and its adjacent Cayo Guillermo in the Jardines del Rey archipelago off the north coast, and Cayo Santa María in the Villa Clara province further east. Both are connected to the mainland by causeways, both are dominated by all-inclusive resorts, both have the kind of white sand and clear turquoise water that photographs almost unrealistically well. And yet the experience of being in each place is genuinely different in ways that matter when you’re spending a week there.

This guide makes the comparison honest and specific: beach quality by location and type, the actual hotel lineup on each cay, the activities available, how you get there, and — most importantly — a direct verdict on who should choose which. If you’re comparing these two on a browser tab right now, by the time you reach the bottom of this article you’ll know which one to book.

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The Two Cayos: A Quick Geographic and Character Overview

Where they are, how they’re different at a fundamental level

Cayo Coco and Cayo Guillermo sit in the Jardines del Rey (Gardens of the King) archipelago, approximately 500km east of Havana along Cuba’s north coast. Connected to the mainland of Ciego de Ávila province by a 27-kilometre causeway across the shallow Bahía de los Perros lagoon, Cayo Coco is Cuba’s largest cay at 370 square kilometres. It’s the senior resort destination of the two in this comparison — more developed, more hotels, more infrastructure, more recognisable in the international all-inclusive market.

Cayo Santa María sits in the Cayerías del Norte archipelago off the coast of Villa Clara province, roughly 150km east of Varadero and 350km from Havana. It’s connected to the mainland by a 48-kilometre causeway — Cuba’s longest, passing over shallow lagoon water that turns extraordinary colours at sunset. Cayo Santa María is smaller than Cayo Coco in terms of developed resort area and came later to the resort market, but it has built a strong reputation in the last decade and the quality of its beaches is genuinely competitive with anything Cuba has to offer.

370 km²
Cayo Coco’s size — Cuba’s largest offshore cay
48 km
Length of the Cayo Santa María causeway — Cuba’s longest
20+
All-inclusive hotels across both Cayo Coco and Cayo Guillermo combined
2 hrs
Flight time from Havana to the nearest Cayo Coco airport (Jardines del Rey)
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Related comparison
Cayo Coco vs Cayo Guillermo: Which Cuban Island Should You Pick?
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Another key comparison
Varadero vs Cayo Coco: Which Cuban Beach Destination Should You Actually Book?
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Cayo Coco: The Larger, More Established Resort Destination

What it is, what it delivers, and where it falls short
Aerial view of Cayo Coco Cuba showing the white sand beaches and turquoise water of the Jardines del Rey archipelago Cayo Coco — Jardines del Rey Established resort
Cayo Coco
📍 Ciego de Ávila province — 500km east of Havana
370 km² island 27km causeway 20km+ beach Highly developed International airport

Cayo Coco is Cuba’s premier resort cay by scale and infrastructure. It has more hotels than anywhere else in the Cuban cayo system, a dedicated international airport (Jardines del Rey Airport, CCC), and the kind of fully developed resort peninsula that puts it closest to international Caribbean resort territory. The beach across the cay’s various resort zones is consistently excellent — white-powdered sand, reef-protected turquoise water, shallow enough for calm swimming even when there’s northern trade wind activity. The reef starts within easy swimming distance of several resort beaches, making it the strongest cayo for on-foot snorkeling access. Wildlife is a genuine distinguishing feature: flamingos nest on the lagoon side of the cay, and iguana populations are visible throughout the resort areas. The tourism infrastructure is the most mature of any Cuban cayo — which means better reliability on everything from watersports availability to excursion organisation to restaurant variety within the all-inclusive format.

What Cayo Coco Does Well
  • International airport — direct flights from UK, Canada, Germany
  • Most hotel variety and competition at the quality end
  • Best reef access for snorkeling and diving directly from beaches
  • Most established watersports infrastructure
  • Flamingo colony on the lagoon side — genuinely worth seeing
  • Cayo Guillermo (adjacent) adds a quieter, smaller alternative
Where Cayo Coco Falls Short
  • More developed and more crowded than Cayo Santa María
  • Causeway access means no sea views on the drive in from mainland
  • Further from Havana — day trips to the capital are not practical
  • Resort density reduces sense of isolation
  • Trade winds affect northern-facing beaches in Jan/Feb
Flamingos wading in the shallow lagoon waters on the protected side of Cayo Coco Cuba
The flamingo colony on Cayo Coco’s lagoon side is one of the few genuinely wild features of an otherwise fully developed resort environment. Photo: Unsplash
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Cayo Coco’s best activity
Scuba Diving in Cuba: Top Dive Sites, Best Operators and What to Expect
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Cayo Santa María: The Quieter, More Recently Developed Alternative

What makes it distinct — and why some travellers prefer it specifically
Remote beach on Cayo Santa María Cuba with calm clear turquoise water and white sand and no crowds Cayo Santa María Less developed, calmer
Cayo Santa María
📍 Villa Clara province — 350km east of Havana, 150km east of Varadero
13 km beach 48km causeway Calmer water Less developed Flamingo & wildlife

Cayo Santa María is the overlooked gem of Cuba’s cayo resort system. It’s smaller in developed resort area, quieter in atmosphere, and the 48-kilometre causeway approach — passing over a shallow lagoon system that changes colour from pale green to deep blue as you drive — is one of the more striking arrivals in Cuban resort travel. The beach at Cayo Santa María’s main resort zone is consistently praised by visitors as some of the finest in Cuba: very fine white sand, extraordinarily clear shallow water, and a reef close to shore that provides snorkeling directly from the beach without an excursion. The resort development here is denser than Cayo Coco in terms of hotel-per-kilometre-of-beach, but the overall scale of the cay is smaller, which means the atmosphere is calmer and less industrial in feeling. The key logistical difference: no dedicated international airport on Cayo Santa María itself. Most international visitors fly into Varadero or Havana and transfer by road (2–4 hours). This adds complexity but filters for travellers willing to commit to a journey, which in turn affects the kind of visitor the cay attracts.

What Cayo Santa María Does Well
  • Beach quality consistently rivals anything in the Caribbean
  • Calmer, less crowded atmosphere than Cayo Coco
  • 48km causeway drive is one of Cuba’s most spectacular approaches
  • Reef close to shore — snorkeling directly from the beach
  • Lower resort density gives more sense of genuine isolation
  • Somewhat lower prices than equivalent Cayo Coco resorts
Where Cayo Santa María Falls Short
  • No dedicated international airport — ground transfer required from Varadero or Havana
  • Less hotel variety than Cayo Coco
  • Fewer excursion options from the cay itself
  • Internet connectivity more limited than Cayo Coco
  • Access logistics are more complex for point-to-point international travellers
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Cayo Santa María’s closest rival
Cayo Santa María vs Varadero: Which Should You Book?
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Beach-by-Beach: What the Water and Sand Are Actually Like

The honest comparison on the single most important factor

Both cays have legitimately excellent beaches — this is not a competition where one is good and one is mediocre. The comparison is between different types of excellence, and the right choice depends on what you specifically want from a beach.

🏝️ Cayo Coco Beaches
Longer total beach length across all resort zones — 20km+ compared to 13km at Cayo Santa María
Pilar Beach (on adjacent Cayo Guillermo) is frequently cited as one of Cuba’s best — fine white powder, extraordinary water colour
Trade wind exposure more variable — northern beaches can be choppy in Jan/Feb
Reef visible and accessible directly from shore at several points — best snorkeling access of any Cuban resort cay
Some beaches receive more boat traffic from watersports operations
Flamingo sightings at lagoon-side locations add wildlife dimension
BEACHES
🏖️ Cayo Santa María Beaches
More consistently calm water — southern exposure protects from northern trade winds
Very fine white sand on the main resort zone beach — genuinely exceptional grain quality
Crystal clarity is outstanding — reported visibility often 15+ metres from shore
Less beach traffic density per linear metre — more space per guest at most times
Reef close to shore on main beach zone — snorkeling without an excursion
Beach width and profile more consistent across all resort zones
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Beach Verdict: Cayo Santa María’s consistency vs Cayo Coco’s variety

If forced to pick a single beach winner: Cayo Santa María’s main beach is more consistently excellent than any individual Cayo Coco beach — the clarity, the sand quality, and the calmness combine into something close to perfection. But Cayo Coco wins on total length, variety of beach experience, and the extraordinary Pilar Beach on Cayo Guillermo. For pure beach-lying: Cayo Santa María. For beach variety and exploration: Cayo Coco.

Crystal clear shallow water and white sand on a northern Cuban cay with the turquoise deepening toward the reef
Cayo Coco’s beach approach — the white sand, the reef just offshore, and the colours that justify every photograph. Photo: Unsplash
Aerial view of Cayo Santa María beach showing the extraordinary transparency of the water above the reef
Cayo Santa María seen from above — the water clarity that repeatedly surprises visitors who were expecting good beach conditions but not quite this. Photo: Unsplash
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Make the most of both reefs
Snorkeling in Cuba: Best Spots, Gear Advice and When to Go
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Cuba’s full beach ranking
15 Best Beaches in Cuba for 2026, Ranked by Locals
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Hotels on Each Cay: What’s Available and What’s Worth It

The all-inclusive hotel lineup — who operates where and at what quality tier

Both cays are all-inclusive territory. There are no independent casas or non-all-inclusive hotels worth mentioning on either destination — you’re choosing between all-inclusive brands, not between accommodation types. The hotel lineup differs significantly between the two.

Cayo Coco — Hotel Lineup

Cayo Coco has the most concentrated luxury resort offering in Cuba. The major brands operating here include Meliá (with its Gran Meliá Cayo Coco at the premium tier and Meliá Jardines del Rey at mid-tier), Iberostar (including their Grand category property), Barceló, Pullman, and several Cuban state-branded properties. The Gran Meliá Cayo Coco is consistently cited as one of the best all-inclusive hotels in Cuba — the all-suite format, the high staff-to-guest ratio, and the beach access combine into a premium product that justifies its price in a way that not all Cuban luxury all-inclusives do.

Cayo Santa María — Hotel Lineup

Cayo Santa María’s hotels are primarily operated by Iberostar, Meliá, and Royal Hideaway. The Royal Hideaway Cayo Santa María (adults-only, boutique scale) is the most distinctive property on the cay and has established a reputation for service quality that exceeds many larger resorts. Iberostar’s Cayo Santa María property is a solid mid-tier all-inclusive. The cay has fewer total hotels than Cayo Coco, which means less variety but also less resort density. If the Royal Hideaway is within budget, Cayo Santa María becomes a more compelling choice for couples specifically.

Brand/PropertyLocationTierBest ForVerdict
Gran Meliá Cayo CocoCayo CocoPremium all-suiteLuxury couples, honeymoonersTop Cuba resort
Iberostar Grand Cayo CocoCayo CocoAdults luxuryAdult couples, quality beachStrong pick
Meliá Jardines del ReyCayo CocoMid-range AIFamilies, good valueSolid mid-tier
Royal Hideaway CSMCayo Santa MaríaAdults boutique luxuryCouples, honeymoonsBest on CSM
Iberostar Cayo Santa MaríaCayo Santa MaríaMid-range AIFamilies, beach focusGood option
Meliá Las Dunas CSMCayo Santa MaríaMid-range AIFamilies, large groupsStandard AI
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Full Meliá Cuba review
Meliá Hotels Cuba: Which Properties Are Actually Worth the Price?
Iberostar operates on both cays
Iberostar Cuba Resorts: Honest Review of Their Best Properties
The premium Cuba resort context
5-Star Resorts in Cuba: The Most Indulgent Stays on the Island
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Activities: What You Can Do Beyond Lying on the Beach

Watersports, excursions, and what the two cays offer off the sun lounger

Both cays operate on the all-inclusive format, where the resort is the default universe and anything outside it requires a conscious decision. Understanding what activities each cay offers independently of the resort infrastructure helps you choose based on what you actually want to do.

Activities at Cayo Coco

  • Snorkeling and diving — Cayo Coco has the strongest reef diving infrastructure of any Cuban cayo. The Coco Sur dive site and several others are accessible from on-site operators at most major resorts. Cayo Guillermo (adjacent, 10 minutes) adds additional site variety.
  • Deep-sea fishing — Ernest Hemingway fished the Jardines del Rey waters and the marlín and bonito fishing remains excellent. Several operators run half-day fishing charters from the marina.
  • Kitesurfing and windsurfing — the northern trade winds that affect beach swimming in Jan/Feb are actually ideal for kitesurfers. Cayo Guillermo has become one of Cuba’s better kitesurfing locations.
  • Flamingo nature walks — guided tours to the flamingo colony on the lagoon side, not available on Cayo Santa María.
  • Catamaran excursions — full-day sailing trips around the archipelago with snorkeling stops and open bar. Standard resort excursion, extremely popular.

Activities at Cayo Santa María

  • Snorkeling directly from the beach — the reef’s proximity at several beach locations means mask and fins from the resort equipment desk gets you onto coral without an organised excursion.
  • Diving — fewer dive sites than Cayo Coco’s mature dive market, but the wall dives accessible from here are excellent when conditions are right.
  • The causeway drive — the 48km approach over the lagoon changes colour throughout the day and is worth doing deliberately as a sunset or sunrise outing rather than just a functional transfer.
  • Santa Clara day trip — Santa Clara (Che Guevara’s revolutionary base and burial site) is 75km from the causeway entrance and a natural day excursion from Cayo Santa María resorts.
  • Kayaking through the lagoon — the shallow lagoon behind the cay is ideal for kayaking with good wildlife sightings, offered by resort operators.
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Cayo Coco has excellent fishing
Fishing in Cuba: Where to Go and What You Can Realistically Catch
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Lagoon kayaking at both cays
Kayaking in Cuba: Where to Paddle and Who Offers the Best Tours
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Getting There: The Access Logistics That Might Decide for You

Flights, transfers, and the practical reality of reaching each cay

The access situation is the most significant practical difference between the two cays, and for international travellers booking a package, it may be the decisive factor.

Getting to Cayo Coco

Cayo Coco has its own international airport: Jardines del Rey Airport (CCC), which handles direct charter and scheduled flights from the UK (TUI, Jet2 from multiple UK airports), Canada (Air Transat, Sunwing from Toronto, Montreal), Germany (Condor), and several other European origins. If you’re flying from these markets, you can land directly on the cay or adjacent to it, get transferred the 10–15 minutes to your resort, and never see the Cuban mainland unless you choose to on an excursion. For point-to-point resort travellers, this simplicity is a genuine advantage — no 4-hour road transfer, no connecting flight from Havana, no additional logistics.

Getting to Cayo Santa María

Cayo Santa María has no international airport of its own. International visitors fly into Varadero (VRA, 2.5–3 hours by road), Havana (HAV, 4–5 hours by road), or occasionally Santa Clara (SNU, 1.5 hours by road) and then transfer by bus or private car to the cay via the 48km causeway. This is the main logistics disadvantage of Cayo Santa María — the journey is longer. The trade-off is that the 48km causeway drive itself, across the shallow lagoon, is genuinely one of the more striking approaches in Caribbean resort travel. It’s not just logistics; it’s an experience in itself. But it does add 2–5 hours to your travel day depending on which airport you use.

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The Airport Decision in Practical Terms

If you’re flying from the UK on a TUI or Jet2 charter, check whether they fly to Cayo Coco (CCC) or Varadero (VRA) on your travel dates. Many UK Caribbean packages to Cayo Santa María route via Varadero with a 3-hour included transfer — this works fine and is standard, but it’s worth knowing when comparing the two destinations. From Canada, direct flights to Cayo Coco are very well served; Cayo Santa María generally requires a Varadero connection. From the US, both require the standard Havana routing and subsequent domestic flight or road transfer.

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Book flights first — especially for Cayo Coco
How to Book Flights to Cuba: Which Airlines Fly There and When
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Ground transfers explained
Getting Around Cuba: Taxis, Buses, Bicitaxis and Classic Cars Explained
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The Direct Verdict: Who Should Book Which Cay

A traveller-type-by-traveller-type recommendation

“Cayo Coco is Cuba’s most complete resort destination. Cayo Santa María is Cuba’s most beautiful beach. The right answer depends entirely on what matters more to you — and whether your flight options decide before you do.”

Choose Cayo Coco if:
  • Direct flights from your country go to CCC — it’s worth avoiding the transfer
  • You want the widest range of hotels and activities
  • You’re a family with children who will use multiple resort amenities
  • Diving and watersports variety is a priority
  • You want the premium Gran Meliá or Iberostar Grand experience
  • You plan excursions — the cay has more day-trip options
  • You want to see flamingos in their natural habitat
  • You’re combining with a separate trip to Havana (but note the distance)
Choose Cayo Santa María if:
  • Pure beach quality is your primary criterion
  • You want calmer water and less trade wind exposure
  • A couple-focused, honeymoon, or romantic trip is the purpose
  • You’re flying into Varadero and don’t mind the 3-hour transfer
  • The Royal Hideaway’s adults-only boutique format appeals specifically
  • Quieter, less resort-dense atmosphere matters to you
  • The extraordinary causeway approach experience sounds worthwhile
  • You want to combine with a Santa Clara day trip

🏝️ Cayo Booking Checklist — Both Destinations

  • Check which airport your charter flies to before comparing destinations
  • Book 3–4 months ahead for November–March travel — both cays book out
  • Confirm adults-only vs family at your specific hotel before booking
  • Cuba e-Visa required before departure — mandatory since January 2026
  • Travel insurance with Cuba coverage required at the border
  • Bring cash — resort extras and independent activities are cash-only
  • Pack snorkeling equipment — resort kit is adequate but your own is better
  • Light jacket for Jan/Feb evenings — cay temperatures drop after dark
  • Confirm what excursions are available/included at your specific resort
  • For Cayo Santa María: confirm road transfer time from your arrival airport
  • For Cayo Coco: check whether you want Cayo Coco or Cayo Guillermo specifically
  • Sun protection factor 50+ — Caribbean sun, shallow water reflection
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Required for both destinations
Best Travel Insurance for Cuba: What Actually Covers You There
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Book timing matters here
Cuba in January: The Most Popular Month and Why It Sells Out Fast
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The bigger format question
All-Inclusive vs Independent Travel in Cuba: Pros, Cons and Costs Compared

FAQ: Cayo Coco vs Cayo Santa María

The questions that come up most
Which has better water — Cayo Coco or Cayo Santa María?
Both have exceptionally clear water by any Caribbean standard. Cayo Santa María’s main beach zone is slightly more consistently calm — the southern exposure of several beach areas means the northern trade winds don’t rough up the surface as frequently. Cayo Coco’s beaches can be choppier in January and February when the trade winds are most active. For swimming specifically: Cayo Santa María edges it on consistency. For snorkeling access and reef variety: Cayo Coco is stronger. For sheer water colour spectacle: it’s genuinely a draw — both produce the turquoise-to-deep-blue gradient that makes Caribbean beach photos look unrealistic.
Can I combine a visit to both cays on one trip?
In theory yes, but it’s rarely worth the logistics. Cayo Coco and Cayo Santa María are approximately 200km apart by road. Moving between them means a 3–4 hour drive back to the mainland, transfer to the other causeway, and check-in at a new resort. For a 7-day trip, splitting between two cays means you spend 2 days in transit and have 2–3 days at each. Most travellers who want multiple Cuban experiences are better served by combining one cay with Havana or Trinidad — the cultural contrast justifies the effort more than a second, similar beach destination does.
Which is cheaper?
Cayo Santa María is generally 10–20% cheaper for comparable accommodation quality compared to Cayo Coco. The premium properties on Cayo Coco (Gran Meliá, Iberostar Grand) have no true equivalent at Cayo Santa María — they’re in a different quality tier. At the mid-range all-inclusive level, similar specifications cost slightly less at Cayo Santa María partly because of the less convenient airport access and slightly lower international demand. The flight premium for direct-to-Cayo-Coco flights can offset this accommodation saving depending on where you’re flying from.
Which is better for families with young children?
Cayo Coco for most families. More hotel variety means more family-specific features (kids clubs, play areas, shallow pool sections, babysitting services). The calmer lagoon-side areas work for young children who find full ocean access daunting. Cayo Santa María is excellent but has fewer hotels and therefore less variety in children’s facilities — fine for families who just want beach and pool, but Cayo Coco outcompetes on family programming.
Which is better for a honeymoon?
Cayo Santa María, specifically because of the Royal Hideaway. The adults-only boutique format, the beach quality at that specific property, and the lower overall resort density create an atmosphere that the larger Cayo Coco resorts can’t quite replicate. The Gran Meliá Cayo Coco is the only Cayo Coco property that competes for honeymoon suitability — at the Gran Meliá price point, either cay is a valid choice, but below that price tier, Cayo Santa María’s relative quietness wins for romantic atmosphere.
What time of year is best for both cays?
November through March is the dry season and the best time for both, with December through February the peak. January and February are the busiest and most expensive months. April and May offer near-identical beach conditions at 20–30% lower prices and significantly less crowding. The wet season (June–October) brings occasional rain and lower prices — July/August are busy with Cuban domestic tourists and some European families; September and October are the quietest and cheapest months with manageable rather than constant rain. Hurricane risk is September–October but Cuba’s hurricane probability varies year to year.

The bottom line on Cuba’s two best cays

Cayo Coco wins on airport access, hotel variety, diving infrastructure, and the premium tier of accommodation. Cayo Santa María wins on beach consistency, atmosphere, couple-focused suitability, and the extraordinary causeway approach. Neither is a wrong answer. The practical question — which airport do your flights go to — resolves the debate for a significant number of travellers before the beach comparison even starts.

For everything you need before booking either destination — entry requirements, insurance, what to pack, and how to get there — the Cuba travel tips guide and the e-Visa guide cover the complete pre-trip picture.

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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