All-Inclusive Resorts in Cuba Ranked: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly
Cuba has over 70 all-inclusive resorts spread across its cayes, beaches and cities. A handful are genuinely excellent. Several are mediocre. A few are traps you’d pay not to return to. Here’s the honest ranking — by brand, by location, and by what your money actually gets you.
All-Inclusive Resorts in Cuba: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly
A frank ranking of Cuba’s all-inclusive resorts by brand, location and what your money actually gets you.
Cuba’s all-inclusive market is enormous, mostly mediocre, and occasionally genuinely good. That’s a more specific assessment than most resort roundups will give you, but it’s the accurate one. The island has over 70 all-inclusive properties spread across its beach destinations — Varadero, the northern cayos, Guardalavaca, Cayo Largo — plus a handful in the cities. They’re operated mainly by Spanish chains (Meliá, Iberostar, Barceló, Blau, Be Live) in joint ventures with the Cuban state, and the results vary enormously even within the same brand.
The honest complication with rating Cuban resorts is that the experience depends heavily on factors that have nothing to do with the resort’s nominal star rating: the year of the last renovation, the current power situation, the food supply chain (which Cuba’s ongoing economic constraints directly affect), and how well-managed the specific property’s maintenance schedule is. A four-star Meliá at one of the northern cayos can range from excellent to disappointing within the same calendar year depending on what’s been repaired and what hasn’t.
This guide separates the genuinely worth-booking properties from the ones that consistently underperform their price and their promise — ranked honestly by tier, by brand, and by what kind of traveler each resort actually suits.
How to Read This Ranking
Most online resort review aggregators blend reviews from people who paid very different prices, visited in different seasons, and expected different things. A Canadian couple who paid $150 per person per night in peak season will rate the same resort very differently from a European couple who found it for $90 in August. In Cuba this problem is amplified because the gap between what a resort looks like in December and what it looks like in September — in terms of food quality, staff ratios, maintenance, and the cumulative effect of power cuts on everything from air conditioning to refrigeration — is genuinely significant.
This ranking uses a three-tier system: Good (properties that consistently deliver what they promise), Middling (properties that are fine but not the best use of your Cuba budget), and Avoid (properties that consistently disappoint even relative to their price). Within each tier, specific properties are named and assessed honestly.
Iberostar is the most significant brand in Cuba’s all-inclusive market — they operate some of the best properties and some of the most disappointing. The brand has an honest detailed review of their Cuba properties that separates the excellent (Iberostar Meliá Varadero, Iberostar Selection Paraíso Lindo) from the overpriced and underperforming. Don’t book any Iberostar Cuba property without consulting the property-specific breakdown rather than the brand’s marketing.
Cuba experienced rolling blackouts of 12–16 hours per day in parts of 2024 and 2025. The situation has improved in 2026 but remains unstable. The best all-inclusive resorts in Cuba have invested in generators that cover the full property — not just public areas. Properties in this tier advertise it. If a property’s generator coverage is not explicitly mentioned by the booking agent or resort, ask before you pay. Running out of cold water, air conditioning and buffet refrigeration simultaneously is not a Cuban character experience — it’s a failed resort stay.
Before booking any Cuba all-inclusive, two pieces of admin: sort the Cuba e-visa (required for all nationalities from January 2026) and confirm travel insurance that specifically covers Cuba — it’s mandatory at the border, not optional. Neither of these takes long but both are trip-enders if overlooked.
The Good Tier: Resorts That Genuinely Deliver
The good-tier resorts in Cuba share a set of characteristics that distinguish them from the rest of the market: they’ve been renovated within the last five years, they have full-property generator coverage, their food supply chain is better than average (larger properties have more leverage with suppliers), and they employ enough staff to actually manage the guest experience at capacity. None of them are perfect — this is Cuba and perfect is not on offer — but they deliver what an all-inclusive holiday is supposed to deliver: a beach, a pool, decent food, and the ability to switch off.
Adults-only · Varadero peninsula · Renovated 2022
- Adults-only format keeps the atmosphere calm and the pool areas functional
- One of the better-maintained room stocks in Varadero — solid post-renovation quality
- Good beach position near the quieter western end of Varadero’s strip
- Food quality above the Varadero average — the à la carte restaurants work
- Reliable air conditioning with full-property generator backup
- Not the cheapest option — but the gap between price and quality is honest
Premium · Cayo Ensenachos · Adults-only section available
- Two private beaches on a small cay — the beach here is the best thing about it
- The resort sits on genuinely isolated water with a coral reef within swimming distance
- Well-maintained room stock; a notable step above standard Iberostar Cuba properties
- The Selection tier includes better à la carte options and a quieter premium pool section
- Snorkeling directly off the beach — no boat needed
- Remote location means you’re committed to the resort for the duration
Family-friendly · Cayo Guillermo · Classic Meliá quality
- Cayo Guillermo’s beach — Playa El Paso — is less crowded than Varadero and arguably better
- Well-organized property; Meliá’s Cuban operation is more consistent than most Spanish chains here
- Good for families — kids club, shallow beach, multiple pools
- Strong buffet quality relative to the Cuba market; the seafood is genuinely fresh
- The cay location means flamingos visible from the resort in season (Nov–Apr)
- Access requires the causeway from the mainland — no spontaneous city day trips possible
Adults-only · Premium · Meliá’s top Cuba brand
- Cuba’s closest thing to a Maldives-style resort experience, within the all-inclusive format
- Exceptional room quality — overwater bungalow-style villas available in the premium tier
- The food is genuinely good by Cuba standards; the Royal Service level is a proper upgrade
- Butler service on the premium floors makes a material difference to the experience
- Price reflects the quality — this is the most expensive Cuba AI option for a reason
- If you’re spending this much, the 5-star resorts Cuba guide has the broader context
The Middling Tier: Fine, But Not the Best Use of Your Cuba Budget
The middling tier is the largest category in Cuba’s all-inclusive market. These are four-star properties that deliver a functional holiday — clean rooms, a working pool, a beach somewhere in the vicinity, a buffet that feeds people reliably — without delivering anything that would make you recommend them specifically. They’re the resorts people leave without complaint but wouldn’t return to by choice.
Standard · Varadero beach · Large property
- Good beach position in central Varadero — this is genuinely its best feature
- Large property means inconsistent room quality depending on which block you’re in
- Buffet food is functional, not inspiring — no à la carte worth booking
- The entertainment program is dated and repetitive by the third day
- Suitable for budget travelers who specifically want Varadero beach for a week
- Often available at 20–30% below the Meliá/Paradisus rate — the price gap is honest
Standard · Cayo Coco · Budget AI option for the cayos
- The least expensive entry point to the Cayo Coco resort cluster
- Beach access is shared with the wider Cayo Coco strip — not the private cay isolation of Ensenachos
- Room quality is showing its age — renovation hasn’t reached the room stock evenly
- Generator coverage is partial — confirm before you book for peak summer
- Good for travelers on a strict budget who want the cayo experience without the premium price
- Flamingo colony day trips available from nearby — a genuine redeeming feature
A mid-tier Cuba all-inclusive at $90 PP/PN feels like reasonable value until you compare it against independent travel. A good casa particular in Trinidad with breakfast costs $25–35 per night. Dinner at Havana’s best paladares costs $20–40 for two. Traveling Cuba on $50 a day is genuinely possible — and delivers considerably more of Cuba than a week at a cayo resort does. The all-inclusive format has its place. Just be clear-eyed about what you’re trading for the convenience.
Be Live Resorts in Cuba: Worth Knowing About
Be Live (formerly part of Barceló, now operating independently) runs several Cuba properties in Varadero and Cayo Coco that sit squarely in the mid-tier. The Be Live Experience Turquesa in Varadero is their most consistent Cuban property — older but well-maintained, good beach position, predictable rather than impressive food. The Be Live Adults Only Turquesa (a semi-separate adults section) is the better half of the same site. Neither property is a standout but both are reliable for their price tier.
The Bad Tier: Avoid These Properties
Naming specific properties as ones to avoid is a stronger statement than most resort guides make, and it’s worth explaining why this one does. In Cuba’s all-inclusive market, “bad” means a specific combination: overpriced for the quality, poor maintenance that hasn’t been addressed over multiple seasons, generator coverage that fails in ways affecting the guest experience materially, food quality that falls below what the hotel category implies, and staff-to-guest ratios that make basic service unreliable.
These aren’t properties that had a bad week. They’re properties with consistent multi-year track records of disappointing guests who paid for something they didn’t receive.
The typical traveler logic — a higher star rating means a better experience — breaks down more severely in Cuba than in most destinations. A five-star rating in Cuba’s state-supervised classification system reflects the facilities that exist on paper, not the quality of the guest experience in practice. Properties in this tier often carry four-star classifications and charge four-star prices. What they deliver is consistently below their classification and well below comparable properties in the same destination.
Varadero: Properties to Approach with Caution
Varadero has the highest concentration of dated, unrevised resort stock in Cuba. The peninsula was the first major beach resort development in the country and several properties from the 1990s and early 2000s have received only cosmetic updates since — new paint on old infrastructure that doesn’t address the underlying issues. The tell: any Varadero property with a pool that has visible tile damage, an entertainment schedule prominently featuring activities for entertainment rather than quality, and a buffet that closes one of its sections at peak meal times is under-staffed and under-resourced relative to its category. A broader view of the Varadero resort market is covered in the Varadero complete guide including which properties to skip specifically.
Guardalavaca: The Region Where Quality Drops Off Sharply
Guardalavaca, on Cuba’s north-east coast in Holguín province, is the region with the largest gap between its marketing and its delivery. The beaches here are beautiful — genuinely — but the resort cluster is older, less maintained, and further from renovation investment than any other major Cuba beach destination. The Meliá and Brisas properties in the area rank among the most consistently disappointing in the country for their price tier. For a fraction of the price of a Guardalavaca all-inclusive, you can access the region’s genuinely spectacular diving and natural attractions independently. Cuba’s diving guide covers the underwater case for Holguín province if that’s the reason you’re considering the region.
“The worst all-inclusive in Cuba isn’t much cheaper than the best one. The gap that needs to justify the premium is not as wide as you might expect — which makes the argument for booking the good tier significantly stronger.”
State-Run “Cubanacán” Branded Properties
Cuba’s state tourism corporation Cubanacán operates a number of its own branded resorts directly, without a Spanish chain partner. These properties are almost uniformly the bottom of the market in terms of quality — not because of malice but because without the leverage of a Spanish chain’s operational standards and supply chain relationships, the infrastructure and service quality gaps in Cuba’s economy affect these properties most severely. If the property description doesn’t mention Meliá, Iberostar, Barceló, or Be Live, it’s almost certainly a direct state operation, and the expectation should be adjusted accordingly.
All-Inclusive Resorts by Region: Where to Stay and Why
Varadero: The Most Accessible, the Most Crowded
Varadero is Cuba’s most developed beach resort destination — a 23-kilometre peninsula east of Havana with 50+ resorts, a consistent white-sand beach, and the best transport connections of any Cuba beach destination. Its advantages are real: it’s the easiest to reach from Havana José Martí International (2 hours by road), it has the most resort options at every price tier, and the beach quality is genuinely good. Its disadvantage is equally real: it’s dense, commercial, and the resort strip has the least “Cuba” feel of any major beach destination on the island. The Havana vs Varadero comparison covers this trade-off in depth, and the 2026 beachfront hotel reviews for Varadero identifies the specific properties worth booking.
The Northern Cayos: The Best Beach Quality, the Most Isolation
Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco, Cayo Guillermo, and Cayo Ensenachos collectively offer the best white-sand beaches in Cuba — consistent, clear-water, with coral reef accessible from the shore and a genuine Caribbean island atmosphere that Varadero’s peninsula can’t replicate. The trade-off is isolation: once on the cay, you’re committed to the resort environment. Day trips to Trinidad or Havana require significant travel time. The guide to Cuba’s 15 best beaches ranks the cayo beaches specifically if beach quality is the determining factor.
Cayo Largo: Isolated, Spectacular, Very Limited Options
Cayo Largo del Sur is a 26-kilometre island with extraordinary beaches — consistently ranked among Cuba’s best — but with fewer than a dozen resort properties and essentially no independent infrastructure. You fly in on a small aircraft from Havana or another airport, you stay at one of the few resorts, and you leave the same way. For couples who want isolation and the best beach Cuba offers, Cayo Largo delivers. For anyone who wants variety, activities beyond the beach, or the option of going somewhere else for dinner, it doesn’t.
Guardalavaca (Holguín): Beautiful Setting, Below-Average Resorts
As covered above, Guardalavaca’s resort cluster doesn’t match the quality of its natural setting. The beaches and diving here are genuinely remarkable — the reef systems north of Holguín province are some of the least disturbed in Cuba. But the resort quality is the weakest of the major destinations. The case for the Holguín region as an independent traveler’s destination — staying in Gibara, diving day trips from the coast, exploring the area without the resort context — is actually stronger than the all-inclusive case.
The Full Comparison: All Major Resorts at a Glance
| Resort | Location | Brand | Type | Tier | Peak PP/PN | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paradisus Varadero | Varadero | Meliá | Adults-only · Premium | ✅ Good | ~$220+ | Couples, luxury, honeymoon |
| Iberostar Selection Ensenachos | Cayo Ensenachos | Iberostar | Premium cay · Mixed | ✅ Good | ~$180 | Beach, snorkelling, isolation |
| Meliá Las Américas | Varadero | Meliá | Adults-only · Golf | ✅ Good | ~$160 | Couples, golf, quiet resort |
| Meliá Cayo Guillermo | Cayo Guillermo | Meliá | Family · Cay | ✅ Good | ~$140 | Families, cay beaches, flamingos |
| Iberostar Playa Pilar | Cayo Guillermo | Iberostar | Adults · Boutique | ✅ Good | ~$150 | Couples, quiet, Hemingway beach |
| Meliá Las Dunas | Cayo Santa María | Meliá | Family · Large | ⚠️ Mid | ~$130 | Families on a tighter budget |
| Barceló Solymar Arenas Blancas | Varadero | Barceló | Family · Large | ⚠️ Mid | ~$100 | Budget families, Varadero beach |
| Be Live Experience Turquesa | Varadero | Be Live | Mixed · Budget | ⚠️ Mid | ~$90 | Budget beach holiday, Varadero |
| Iberostar Mojito | Cayo Coco | Iberostar | Standard · Large | ⚠️ Mid | ~$90 | Budget cayos intro |
| Blau Varadero | Varadero | Blau | Adults · Dated | ⚠️ Mid | ~$100 | Adults seeking value; manage expectations |
| Meliá Brisas Guardalavaca | Guardalavaca | Meliá | Family · Dated | ❌ Avoid | ~$110 | Avoid — poor quality for price |
| Cubanacán Direct Properties | Various | State-run | Budget · Unreliable | ❌ Avoid | ~$60–80 | Avoid — below acceptable standard |
The Three Tiers at a Glance
Key names: Paradisus Varadero, Iberostar Ensenachos, Meliá Cayo Guillermo, Iberostar Playa Pilar
Who they suit: Couples, families who want reliable quality, honeymoons, beach-focused holidays
Key names: Barceló Solymar, Be Live Turquesa, Meliá Las Dunas, Iberostar Mojito
Who they suit: Budget travelers who specifically want the all-inclusive format; first-time Cuba visitors who want simplicity over quality
Key names: Most Guardalavaca properties; state-run Cubanacán direct resorts; any Varadero resort whose last renovation predates 2018
Who they suit: Nobody, at current prices — the independent travel option at the same cost is vastly better
All-Inclusive vs Independent: The Honest Trade-Off for Cuba
Cuba’s all-inclusive format has a specific and legitimate use case: you want a beach holiday, you don’t want to manage Cuba’s cash-only, logistics-variable country, and you’re prepared to sacrifice cultural depth for predictability. That’s a completely valid reason to travel, and the good-tier properties in this ranking deliver it well.
What the all-inclusive format doesn’t do is give you Cuba. The country’s genuinely compelling qualities — Havana’s specific atmosphere, Trinidad’s colonial streets, the mountain cloud forests above the Caribbean coast, the casas particulares where breakfast conversations with your host are the best part of the day — are entirely absent from a week at a Varadero resort. You could be in any Caribbean destination. The all-inclusive format in Cuba, at its most successful, is a generic Caribbean holiday that happens to be on a Cuban island.
- You want to switch off completely — no decisions, no cash management, no logistics
- You’re traveling with young children who need consistent routines and safe, shallow water
- It’s a honeymoon and the privacy and pampering of a quality resort is the priority
- You’ve already done independent Cuba and want the cayo beach experience this time
- Power cuts and cash-only infrastructure genuinely stress you out
- You found a good-tier property at a genuinely competitive rate
- Culture, history, food and music are your reasons for choosing Cuba specifically
- You’re on your first Cuba trip and will spend a week at a cayo resort without seeing Havana
- Budget matters — a week at a mid-tier all-inclusive costs more than 10 nights independent travel
- You want the social texture of Cuban family life that casas particulares give you
- You’re flexible and want to change your plans based on what you find on the ground
- The all-inclusive format removes everything that makes Cuba different from any other Caribbean island
The most common itinerary for experienced Cuba travelers who still want beach time: 7–8 nights independent travel (Havana, Viñales or Trinidad, a hidden gem city like Cienfuegos or Camagüey) followed by 3–4 nights at a good-tier cayo resort at the end. You get the full Cuba experience and the beach decompression. The all-inclusive provides a defined end to the trip that feels like a reward rather than a substitute. The full all-inclusive vs independent Cuba comparison covers the cost math in detail.
For anyone considering Cuba’s all-inclusive market because it removes the need to manage the country’s quirks — the cash situation, the connectivity, the logistics — the Cuba travel tips guide makes independent travel significantly less intimidating than it sounds. And the honest Cuba cost breakdown puts the all-inclusive price in context against what independent travel actually costs per day.
Frequently Asked Questions
📋 Before You Book Any Cuba All-Inclusive
- Apply for Cuba e-visa at evisacuba.cu — required from Jan 2026
- Complete D’Viajeros health form within 7 days of arrival
- Confirm travel insurance includes Cuba medical coverage
- Ask about full-property generator coverage before booking
- Check renovation year for the specific room category you’re booking
- Verify what à la carte restaurants are included vs extra charge
- Confirm beach access: private or shared with neighbouring resorts?
- For peak season (Dec–Mar): book 3+ months ahead minimum
- Check month-by-month Cuba weather before fixing dates
- Carry some CUP cash for tips, off-resort purchases, taxis
The Honest Summary
Cuba’s all-inclusive market has a smaller proportion of genuinely good properties than its total volume suggests. The good tier is real and worth finding. The bad tier is real and worth avoiding even at a discount. The middling tier is fine for what it is — a functional beach holiday in a Cuban location — but it shouldn’t be the default destination for first-time visitors who came to see Cuba.
If a cayo resort is what you want, the Ensenachos, Guillermo and Paradisus properties deliver it well. If you came to Cuba because Cuba is the point — the history, the music, the streets, the food, the conversations — a good casa particular network and some independent planning will give you ten times more of what Cuba actually is.
The island’s genuinely compelling destinations — Trinidad, the places most tourists miss, Havana’s depth beyond the tourist circuit — are not accessible from a cayo resort without significant extra effort. Make sure you’re booking the trip you actually want, not the trip a brochure made look appealing.