Cuba Beach Resorts Ranked: Which All-Inclusive Is Actually Worth Booking?
Varadero, Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco, Holguín — Cuba has four distinct resort zones and the quality gap between them is real. Here’s the honest ranking with scores, verdicts, and who should stay where.
Cuba Beach Resorts Ranked: Which All-Inclusive Is Actually Worth Booking?
Varadero, Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco, Holguín — honest rankings with scores and verdicts.
Cuba’s all-inclusive resort sector is bigger and more varied than most travelers expect. The country has four geographically distinct beach resort zones — the Varadero peninsula east of Havana, the northern cayes (Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco, and Cayo Guillermo), and the Holguín coast in the southeast — and the experience at each is genuinely different. The best properties at the cayes are operating at a standard that competes with anything in the Caribbean. The worst properties in Varadero are the kind of package-holiday resort that exists everywhere and is worth avoiding.
This guide ranks eight of Cuba’s best-known all-inclusive properties across four zones with honest scoring across five categories: beach quality, food, rooms and facilities, value for money, and what the experience is actually like to stay there. It also covers which resort zone is right for which kind of traveler — because choosing the right zone matters more than choosing the right specific property within it.
All pricing in this guide is per couple per night on all-inclusive basis for the shoulder season (April–May or October). Peak season (December–January) typically runs 20–40% higher.
Why All-Inclusive Actually Makes Sense in Cuba
Cuba’s all-inclusive model works for reasons that don’t apply in most other all-inclusive destinations. The primary one: Cuba’s cash-only economy means that budgeting for an independent beach holiday requires bringing and managing large amounts of foreign currency. At an all-inclusive, once you’ve paid for the package, the only cash you need on site is tips. The financial logistics simplify considerably.
The second reason: the best Cuban beach resorts genuinely earn their all-inclusive premium. The food at the top-tier Iberostar and Meliá properties — particularly at the cayes where fresh seafood supply chains are better than inland — is significantly above what you’d get at equivalent price points in, say, Cancún or Punta Cana. The Cuban ingredient quality is there; the resort operators at the top end know how to use it.
At Cuba’s best cayo resorts, the water is clear enough to see the bottom at four metres. The beach stretches empty in both directions. The seafood at dinner came in that morning. This is what the best end of Cuba’s all-inclusive market delivers.
Varadero: The Big Name That Needs Context
Varadero occupies a 20km peninsula east of Havana on the north coast of Matanzas province. It is Cuba’s original mass-tourism resort zone, has been receiving package tourists since the 1990s, and now has over 60 hotels — everything from $60/night state-run three-star properties to the Meliá Las Américas and the Meliá Varadero operating at genuine five-star standard. The beach itself is extraordinary: wide, white, warm, and stretching the length of the peninsula.
The issue with Varadero is that its density creates a vibe that’s closer to Cancún’s hotel zone than to an undiscovered Caribbean beach. Walking the main strip, you’re in a developed tourist infrastructure that has all the amenities and none of the texture of real Cuba. If you want to experience any of the country beyond the pool, Varadero is an hour and a half from Havana by transfer — doable for a day trip but not ideal for cultural immersion.
That said, the best Varadero properties are genuinely excellent, the beach is one of Cuba’s finest stretches, and for travelers who want a pure beach holiday with reliable infrastructure, good organization, and easy departure logistics (the resort zone is 30 minutes from Varadero airport), it remains a strong choice.
The Meliá Varadero sits right on the best stretch of the peninsula beach and operates at a genuine five-star standard. Rooms are large, well-maintained, and stylishly designed — significantly above the state-hotel competition in Varadero. The breakfast spread is excellent. The à la carte dinner options outperform most all-inclusive competitors in the country. Beach is impeccable.
The main limitation is Varadero’s general strip atmosphere — you feel you’re in a resort zone rather than in Cuba. The property itself can’t fix this; it’s a geographical reality. But within Varadero, this is the right place to stay.
The Laguna Azul is the best family option in Varadero — a large four-star property with excellent kids’ club facilities, a water park section, and the beach access that makes or breaks a resort stay. Food is buffet-heavy but the spread is generous and the quality is consistent. Rooms are solid if not remarkable — the private or swim-up room categories are worth the upgrade.
For families with children under twelve, this ticks all the boxes: reliable entertainment infrastructure, shallow beach access for young swimmers, and a price point that doesn’t require a second mortgage. Childless couples staying here during high season may find the energy more than they bargained for.
The Northern Cayes: Cuba’s Best Beach Zone
Cuba’s northern cayes — the string of small islands and barrier cays connected to the mainland by long causeways across shallow coastal waters — are where the country’s most extraordinary beaches actually are. Cayo Santa María (connected to Villa Clara province), Cayo Coco and Cayo Guillermo (connected to Ciego de Ávila) are the main resort cayes. They share the characteristic that makes them special: access only by causeway or air, very low development density, protected marine environment, and water clarity that routinely drops jaws.
The trade-off is isolation. There are no towns on the cayes, no restaurants off-resort, no option for a local meal or a walk through a Cuban neighbourhood. What you have is the resort, the beach, and one of the most beautiful marine environments in the Caribbean. For many people, this is exactly what a beach week should be. For those who want Cuba’s culture alongside its beaches, it’s worth building in days elsewhere.
The Ensenachos is the best all-inclusive resort in Cuba by most objective measures, and it isn’t particularly close. Adults-only, on the best beach on the cayo, with food that genuinely earns its five-star designation: the fresh seafood at the à la carte restaurants here is exceptional — lobster at a price that still feels implausible, grilled the morning it was caught, in a setting of extraordinary natural beauty.
The beach — Playa Ensenachos — has water so clear it refracts light across the sand at three metres depth. The reef snorkeling accessible directly from the beach is the best available at any Cuban resort, with living coral and fish visible within 50 metres of the shoreline. The spa is at genuine luxury standard. The resort is large but the adults-only policy keeps the energy right.
The only honest criticisms: the causeway drive from the mainland (48km, roughly 45 minutes) is the route to the airport, which makes transfers longer. And the isolation — extraordinary for beach focus, limiting for those wanting to mix culture with sand.
The Meliá Buenavista is the Ensenachos’s closest competitor on Cayo Santa María and a strong choice for travelers who want the same extraordinarily beautiful beach environment with slightly more design-conscious rooms. The Buenavista’s accommodation is more recently renovated and the interior aesthetics are sharper. Beach access is excellent, food is competitive, and the overall property feels slightly more intimate than the Ensenachos despite having a comparable size.
It accepts families (unlike the Ensenachos) but attracts primarily couples and older travelers. A very good choice for anyone who wants the cayo experience with newer rooms.
Cayo Coco has more flamingos (genuinely, there are large flocks visible from the causeway) and slightly less premium pricing than Cayo Santa María. The Iberostar Mojito is the most reliable four-star family option on the island: beach is excellent — the same cayo quality just at a slightly less exclusive stretch — food is solid, and the kids’ facilities are among the best on the northern cayes. A genuinely good value choice.
Holguín Coast: Cuba’s Undiscovered Resort Zone
The Holguín coast in southeastern Cuba — including Guardalavaca beach, Playa Pesquero, and Playa Esmeralda — is Cuba’s least internationally promoted resort zone and, in some respects, its most interesting. The beaches are excellent, the development is lower density than Varadero, and the price points are generally the most attractive in the country. The Holguín coast also has genuine cultural attractions nearby — Santiago de Cuba, the birthplace of Fidel Castro at Birán, and the indigenous Taíno archaeological sites at Chorro de Maíta — that are absent from the cayo environment.
The Iberostar Pesquero is one of the largest resorts in Cuba and consistently delivers a five-star experience at prices that are genuinely below equivalent standards elsewhere in the country. The beach at Pesquero is beautiful — clear water, fine sand, lower density of tourists than Varadero. The food is at a strong level across both buffet and à la carte options, helped by the fresh catch that comes in daily. Rooms are large and well-appointed.
The property is big, which means it can feel impersonal at peak season. The best rooms are in the oceanfront categories; the garden category rooms are a step down. For travelers looking to stay a day or two of the week in Santiago de Cuba, the Holguín coast’s relative proximity makes this the most practical choice.
The Full Resort Comparison Table
| Resort | Zone | Stars | Beach Score | Food Score | Value Score | Price/couple/night | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iberostar Ensenachos | Cayo Santa María | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 9.8 | 8.6 | 8.8 | $240–380 | Couples / Honeymoon |
| Meliá Buenavista | Cayo Santa María | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 9.4 | 8.4 | 8.6 | $220–350 | Couples (newer rooms) |
| Iberostar Mojito | Cayo Coco | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 9.0 | 7.8 | 8.6 | $170–270 | Families |
| Meliá Varadero | Varadero | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 9.0 | 8.2 | 8.0 | $200–320 | Couples / Proximity to Havana |
| Iberostar Playa Pesquero | Holguín | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 9.0 | 8.0 | 9.0 | $160–260 | Value Seekers / Santiago Day Trip |
| Iberostar Laguna Azul | Varadero | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 8.8 | 7.8 | 8.4 | $150–240 | Families in Varadero |
Which Zone and Resort Is Right for You?
Honeymoon / Romantic Couple
Iberostar Ensenachos on Cayo Santa María. Adults-only, the best beach in Cuba, extraordinary food, spa available. Worth every additional peso over cheaper alternatives. Alternatively the Meliá Buenavista for slightly newer room aesthetic.
Family with Young Children
Iberostar Laguna Azul in Varadero for the clearest logistics and proximity to Havana for a day trip. Or Iberostar Mojito on Cayo Coco for better beach quality if you’re willing to do the longer transfer. Both have strong kids’ club infrastructure.
Budget-Conscious Beach Traveler
Iberostar Pesquero in Holguín — five-star quality at the most accessible price in Cuba’s resort market. Consider off-season dates (May, October) for the best rate. The beach is genuinely excellent and the value is hard to match anywhere in the country.
Serious Snorkeler / Diver
Iberostar Ensenachos. The reef snorkeling directly off Playa Ensenachos is the best at any Cuban all-inclusive. Alternatively, the Cayo Guillermo properties give access to some of the country’s finest dive sites off the cay’s southern coast.
Culture + Beach Combination
Varadero for the Havana day trip logistics (1.5 hours). Or base in Havana for 3–4 nights, then transfer to a Cayo Santa María resort for 4 nights — the standard combination that gives you both halves of the Cuban experience properly.
Seeking Total Disconnection
Any cayo property — but the Iberostar Ensenachos or Meliá Buenavista specifically. The geographic isolation of the cayes (no town, no off-resort life, no reason to leave) is exactly what some travelers are actively seeking. The slow internet makes the disconnection more complete.
How to Book a Cuba All-Inclusive and Not Get It Wrong
November through March is Cuba’s dry season and the peak resort window. The best rooms at the Iberostar Ensenachos and Meliá properties on the cayes book out three to four months ahead for December and January dates. April–May and October are the shoulder sweet spots — weather still good, prices down 15–25%, crowds thinner. If your dates are flexible, these months give the best value without significant quality compromise. Avoid June through September if you can — the heat and hurricane risk are genuine considerations.
Cayo Santa María and Cayo Coco don’t have airports on the island itself. Transfers from the nearest mainland airports (Santa Clara for Cayo Santa María, Ciego de Ávila/Máximo Gómez for Cayo Coco) add 45 minutes to an hour of causeway driving to the journey time. From Varadero airport to Varadero hotels: 15–20 minutes. From Holguín airport to Pesquero: 30 minutes. The cayo transfers are worth it for the beach quality but factor them into the arrival and departure day planning.
Cuban resort staff earn state wages that are significantly below what their service quality deserves. Tipping is expected and important. Budget $10–15/couple/day in tips distributed across housekeeping, bar, restaurant, and entertainment staff. Bring this in small USD or euro notes. The difference between a resort trip where you tip appropriately and one where you don’t is noticeable in the level of service and attentiveness. Cuba’s hospitality industry relies on tips to bridge the wage gap in ways that are more acute than in most other all-inclusive destinations.
Frequently Asked Questions
The honest resort ranking conclusion
If you read this guide and take one thing from it: the quality gap between Cuba’s best resorts and its average ones is significant, and the gap between resort zones is even more significant. Choosing the Iberostar Ensenachos over a mid-range Varadero property isn’t just about a star rating — it’s about a fundamentally different beach experience. The extra cost and the longer transfer are real; so is the difference in what you get.
For the complete picture on Cuba — from the visa you need before flying to where to stay in Havana before or after the resort — the Cuba first-timer’s travel tips guide covers everything else in detail.
Published on hotelhavanaerror.com · Last updated May 2026