How to Get to Cayo Santa María from Havana: Ferries, Flights and Road Trips
Cayo Santa María is 340 km from Havana and connected to the mainland by 48 km of causeway across the sea. There’s no ferry from Havana and limited domestic flights to the area — so the road, in various forms, is your route. Here’s every option, what it costs, and which one fits your trip.
How to Get to Cayo Santa María from Havana: Ferries, Flights and Road Trips
Every option for the 340 km journey from Havana to Cuba’s quieter northern cay — costs, times, and which works best for your trip type.
First, the reality check that the title promises: there is no scheduled ferry from Havana to Cayo Santa María. There is no meaningful domestic flight service to the cay for most international visitors. Cayo Santa María is reached by road — across the island’s interior and then across 48 km of elevated concrete causeway over the sea known as the Pedraplén. That road journey, in one of several forms, is the answer to how to get there from Havana.
The good news: the 4–5 hour drive is genuinely one of the more rewarding stretches of Cuban road travel. The route through Villa Clara province passes tobacco farms, colonial towns, and the increasingly flat Caribbean coastal plain before the causeway delivers you onto water level with turquoise sea on both sides and the cay’s white sand shoreline ahead. Knowing your options before you go is the difference between a smooth transfer and an expensive improvisation at Havana’s taxi ranks.
This guide covers all four realistic transport options in detail — private taxi, resort transfer bus, Viazul bus, and rental car road trip — with accurate 2026 pricing, timing, and honest assessments of each. Plus: the complete picture of the Pedraplén causeway, what to expect once you arrive, and the comparison table that lets you decide in five minutes which option fits your trip.
Cayo Santa María: Where It Is and Why the Journey Takes What It Takes
Cayo Santa María sits in the Jardines del Rey archipelago off Cuba’s north coast, in Villa Clara province. It’s part of a chain of cays that includes Cayo Coco and Cayo Guillermo to the east — better-known names in the Cuban beach resort circuit — but Santa María has a specific appeal: slightly quieter, more environmentally managed, with beaches (Playa Perla Blanca, Playa Las Dunas, Playa El Medio) that consistently rank among Cuba’s finest. The resort development is predominantly all-inclusive, though independent travelers do visit.
The cay is connected to the mainland at Caibarién — a small town on Villa Clara’s north coast — via the Pedraplén, a 48 km elevated concrete causeway built through the 1980s and 1990s. From Havana, the route follows the Autopista Nacional east, cuts south of Santa Clara, then turns north toward the coast and eventually onto the causeway. The total distance is approximately 340 km.
There is no ferry service from Havana or from any major port. The sea crossing at the Pedraplén is a road bridge, not a boat route. Domestic flights do operate to the area through Santa Clara’s Abel Santamaría Airport — but this airport is 80 km from the cay and requires an onward transfer that often costs as much as the flight itself. For most travelers, the road is the only practical option.
Option 1: Private Taxi — The Most Flexible and Most Common Choice
The private taxi is how most independent travelers make this journey. You negotiate a price for the full car (fits 3–4 people plus luggage) from Havana directly to Cayo Santa María — typically $80–120 per car depending on the driver, the season, and your negotiating position. Split among three or four travelers, this comes in at $20–40 per person for a door-to-door transfer in a reasonably comfortable vehicle.
The drivers who do this route regularly know it well. The journey takes 4–5 hours on the main route via the Autopista Nacional through Matanzas and then north toward Caibarién. Good drivers stop once at a service area midway. The causeways portion is typically done without stopping — there’s nowhere to stop, and the drive across open sea is something you watch through the window rather than on foot.
Booking: the most reliable way to arrange a taxi for this route is through your Havana casa particular host, who will either have a trusted regular driver or contact one through their network. This produces better prices and more reliable drivers than negotiating with taxis at Parque Central or the Viazul terminal. The Havana taxi ranks near Hotel Nacional and the tourist areas charge premium prices and often use intermediaries who add commission layers.
For solo travelers, a private taxi costs $80–120 for the full car. The alternative is a shared colectivo — a taxi carrying multiple passengers who each pay a per-person rate. Finding colectivos to Cayo Santa María specifically is less straightforward than for Viñales or Trinidad; the routes are less established. Ask your casa host to organize a shared arrangement with other guests heading the same direction.
The baseline for Havana to Cayo Santa María is $80–90 for a private car carrying up to 4 people. Drivers may quote $120–150 initially to tourists who don’t know the route — this is standard opening negotiation. Counter with $80 and expect to settle around $90–100. Make sure the agreed price is clear about whether it includes the causeway toll (it should — approximately $10–15 equivalent) and any stops. Pay half before departure and half on arrival rather than the full amount in advance.
Option 2: Resort Transfer Bus — The Easiest Route If You’re All-Inclusive
If you’re staying at an all-inclusive resort on Cayo Santa María — and the majority of visitors to the cay are — the organized transfer bus is often the simplest option. Most major Cuban tour operators (Cubatur, Havanatur, Gaviota, and the international brands that work with them) offer a Havana-to-resort transfer as an add-on or inclusion when you book a package. The bus departs from Havana’s José Martí Airport or from a central Havana hotel, makes the full journey along the Autopista Nacional, and delivers you directly to your resort’s front entrance.
The transfer bus is an air-conditioned modern coach, typically runs on schedule, and requires no negotiation or logistics beyond the advance booking. It’s the transport equivalent of an all-inclusive — everything handled, no friction, and you arrive at your resort without any Cuba logistics overhead. The trade-off: no flexibility on timing or route, you travel with other resort guests rather than independently, and if you want to stop anywhere along the way (Santa Clara for a few hours, for example), this isn’t the vehicle to do it on.
Cost: when booked as part of a package, the transfer is often included or costs $25–45 per person added to your booking. Booked independently through a Cuban tour operator at the airport or through a hotel concierge, expect $35–60 per person. At group scale (6–8 people), a private taxi often works out cheaper — but for solo or couple travelers whose resort package doesn’t include transfer, the organized bus at $35–45 is reasonable.
Option 3: Viazul Bus to Santa Clara + Local Transfer
The Viazul tourist bus connects Havana and Santa Clara (the nearest major city to Cayo Santa María) several times daily. The Havana-to-Santa Clara fare is approximately $12 per person, and the journey takes 3–3.5 hours. Santa Clara is genuinely worth a few hours if you have time — the Che Guevara Memorial, the historic city center, and the local food market are all accessible within an afternoon.
From Santa Clara, the onward journey to Cayo Santa María requires a taxi — there is no Viazul service to the cay itself. A Santa Clara taxi to Cayo Santa María (approximately 80–90 km including the Pedraplén) costs $35–50 per car. Split among multiple passengers, the total journey cost by this route runs $15–25 per person versus $20–30 by private taxi from Havana — a marginal saving that needs to be weighed against the additional complexity, a bus station connection, and the longer total journey time (5.5–7 hours door-to-door versus 4.5–5.5 by direct taxi).
The budget case for the Viazul route is strongest for solo travelers who can share the Santa Clara-to-cay taxi with other travelers from the bus, and for anyone who genuinely wants to spend a few hours in Santa Clara — in which case the bus stage is part of the experience rather than just a transfer. Book the Viazul bus in advance online or at Havana’s bus terminal; Santa Clara is a heavily used route and fills up in peak season.
Santa Clara’s bus terminal doesn’t have a large pool of taxis waiting to go to the cays. On a busy bus arrival, there may be several travelers wanting the same onward taxi — or none. The most reliable approach: arrange the Santa Clara-to-CSM taxi in advance through your Havana casa host, who can call a contact in Santa Clara to have a driver meet you at the terminal. Turning up at Santa Clara and expecting to immediately find a car heading toward Caibarién and the Pedraplén is possible but can involve a wait.
Option 4: Rental Car Road Trip — For Those Who Want to Own the Journey
Renting a car in Cuba is more complicated in 2026 than the travel guides written five years ago suggest. The car rental market is predominantly state-operated through REX and Havanautos, with limited fleet availability, steep prices ($80–150/day for a basic vehicle), and mandatory insurance that can’t be waived. Availability at Havana airport has been inconsistent — reservations sometimes don’t translate into actual vehicles being present. Book as far in advance as possible through the official Cuban rental company websites, and don’t rely on walk-up availability.
That said, driving the Havana-to-Cayo Santa María route independently is one of the better road trip experiences Cuba offers to self-drivers. The Autopista Nacional is relatively well maintained. The option to stop in Santa Clara for the Che Guevara Memorial, continue to Remedios (a beautifully preserved colonial town 45 minutes from Caibarién, often overlooked by package tourists), and then take the Pedraplén at your own pace — with stops for photographs across the causeway — adds a layer of experience that taxis and buses can’t replicate.
Fuel: petrol stations (cupets) are available in Santa Clara and Caibarién. Carry cash as some rural stations have limited payment options. The causeway has no petrol station — fill up in Caibarién before heading onto it. Total fuel cost for a return trip Havana-Cayo Santa María runs approximately $25–35 equivalent depending on the car’s fuel efficiency.
Parking: all major resorts on Cayo Santa María have guarded parking lots. The fee is typically $1–3 per night. Security is generally reliable.
What About Domestic Flights?
Santa Clara’s Abel Santamaría Airport (SNU) has historically received some domestic flights from Havana, but in 2026 the scheduled domestic network is unreliable enough that building a trip around it is risky. Cubana de Aviación and Aerocaribbean have both had service interruptions, schedule changes, and fleet problems that make domestic flight timetables more aspirational than operational in practical terms.
More practically: the Santa Clara airport is 80 km from Cayo Santa María. Even if you successfully fly to SNU, you need an onward taxi to the cay — a journey of approximately 1.5 hours that will cost $35–50 by private car. Combined with the airport check-in time, the flight itself (45 minutes from Havana), and the arrival formalities, the total time for the fly-then-drive route often equals or exceeds a direct taxi from Havana. Unless domestic flight service improves substantially, or unless you have a specific reason to visit Santa Clara, domestic flights are not a practical transport choice for reaching Cayo Santa María.
The Pedraplén Causeway: Cuba’s Most Spectacular Road
The Pedraplén is the most remarkable piece of road in Cuba and one of the most visually extraordinary stretches of highway anywhere in the Caribbean. Built between 1988 and 2001 (different sections completed at different times), it crosses 48 km of the Bahía de Buenavista — a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve — on an elevated concrete structure that keeps you just above sea level with open water on both sides for the entire crossing.
The colour of the water changes as you cross: shallow inshore areas where the sea floor is visible through 1–2 meters of crystal water, deeper channels that shift from turquoise to deeper blue, and the salt pans and mangrove edges of the biosphere reserve visible to the south. In winter months, flamingo colonies gather in the lagoon areas visible from the causeway — hundreds of birds standing in shallow water that the road passes directly above. Seeing this from a moving vehicle is a specific Cuban experience that no tourism brochure adequately prepares you for.
The practical details: the Pedraplén has a toll checkpoint (currently approximately CUP $300–500 equivalent, which your taxi driver will pay and likely include in the fare you’ve agreed). The road surface is generally reasonable but has some sections that warrant reduced speed — the construction age means some repaired sections are rougher than others. There are no petrol stations, food stops, or facilities on the causeway itself. Fill up and eat before you start it. The crossing takes approximately 45–60 minutes at normal road speed.
“Halfway across the Pedraplén, when the Cuban coast behind you has disappeared into the haze and the cay ahead is still barely visible, you’re driving across open sea on a road that feels entirely implausible. That feeling doesn’t go away no matter how many times you cross it.”
Best Transport Option by Traveler Type
The Full Comparison: All Four Options Side by Side
| Option | Cost Per Person | Door-to-Door Time | Booking Required | Flexibility | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Private Taxi (whole car) | $20–30 (split 4 ways) | 4.5–5.5 hrs | Via casa host — 1 day ahead | Departs when you want | Groups of 3–4 |
| Resort Transfer Bus | $25–60 (or included) | 5–6 hrs | Via tour operator — advance | Fixed schedule, no stops | All-inclusive package guests |
| Viazul + Santa Clara taxi | $15–25 (shared taxi) | 5.5–7 hrs | Viazul: book online in advance | Bus: fixed; taxi: flexible | Solo/budget travelers |
| Rental Car | $40–80+ per day | 4–5 hrs (your pace) | Book car well in advance | Complete freedom | Multi-day road trippers |
What to Do at Cayo Santa María Once You Arrive
Cayo Santa María’s appeal is primarily its beaches. Playa Las Dunas, Playa Perla Blanca, and Playa El Medio are consistently rated among Cuba’s finest — the shallow Caribbean platform produces water clarity and colour that puts most other Cuban beaches at a disadvantage. The sand is fine white coral, the depth is gentle and gradual, and the development is controlled enough that the beaches don’t feel overwhelmed by resort infrastructure in the way that Varadero’s main strip sometimes does.
Beyond the beach: snorkeling and diving off the cay’s reefs, sport fishing on the flats and offshore banks (the area is one of Cuba’s better fishing destinations), bird observation in the wetland areas around the causeway and the biosphere reserve, and catamaran day trips out to nearby offshore reefs and sandbanks. The resorts offer organized versions of all these activities; independent traveler options are more limited but available through the Marina Gaviota on the cay.
🏖 Cayo Santa María Transport Checklist
- Decided on transport option: private taxi, resort transfer, Viazul+taxi, or rental car
- Private taxi: arranged through Havana casa host at least 1 day before departure
- Resort transfer: confirmed included or booked separately with tour operator
- Viazul bus: booked online at viazul.com — fills quickly in peak season
- Rental car: booked as far in advance as possible — fleet availability is limited
- Causeway toll: confirm whether included in agreed taxi price (~$10–15 equivalent)
- Cash available for tolls, fuel stops, and any roadside needs
- Fuel up before the Pedraplén — no petrol stations on the 48 km crossing
- Santa Clara taxi: pre-arranged for Viazul travelers via Havana host contact
- Travel insurance in place with medical cover (mandatory at Cuba border)
- Accommodation at Cayo Santa María confirmed before departure
- Downloaded offline maps — mobile data unreliable on rural roads and causeway
Frequently Asked Questions
Before you finalize your transport
The most common mistake for first-time Cayo Santa María visitors is arriving in Havana without a transport plan and discovering that the organized resort transfer buses have already departed, the Viazul bus to Santa Clara is full, and the taxi rank near Parque Central wants $160 for the trip. Plan the transport before you need it.
If you’re staying all-inclusive and haven’t asked your tour operator or hotel about transfers yet — ask now. If you’re going independently, your Havana casa host is your best booking agent and will arrange a private taxi at a fair price for exactly this kind of journey. The Pedraplén crossing at the end of it makes the logistical effort worthwhile, every time.