Colourful colonial courtyard in Havana Cuba โ€” a typical casa particular setting
Cuba Budget Travel ยท Accommodation Guide

Casa Particular in Cuba: the Budget Traveler’s Best-Kept Secret

Private rooms in Cuban homes cost $15โ€“40 a night, include breakfast, and come with a local who knows everything. This is how most first-timers wish they had done it from the start.

๐Ÿ  All of Cuba covered ๐Ÿ—“ Updated May 2026 โฑ 13 min read ๐Ÿ’ต Real prices included

Somewhere around day two of their first Cuba trip, most travelers figure out that the people staying in casas particulares are having a better time. They’re eating home-cooked food that no restaurant quite matches. They’re getting restaurant recommendations that aren’t on any list. They’re paying $20 a night for a clean private room in a family home while the hotel down the road charges $90 for roughly the same square footage and half the local knowledge.

A casa particular is Cuba’s version of a bed and breakfast โ€” a private home where the owners rent out one or several rooms to foreign visitors. The blue anchor-and-house sign outside tells you it’s registered with the government. What it doesn’t tell you is that staying in one is, for most people, the single best decision they make on their Cuba trip. This guide covers everything: what to expect, what it costs, how to find a good one, what the unwritten rules are, and where the experience varies across different parts of the island.

๐Ÿ 

What Is a Casa Particular?

The basics โ€” and why Cuba invented it

A casa particular (pronounced kasa par-tee-koo-lar) is a private home in Cuba where the owners rent out one or more rooms to foreign travelers. The concept has existed since 1997, when the Cuban government โ€” under pressure from the collapse of Soviet subsidies โ€” legalized private room rentals as a way for families to earn hard currency. It became, accidentally or not, one of the best tourism models on the island.

What makes it work is that the incentive structure is aligned. The family makes more money if you’re happy โ€” from repeat visits, from good word of mouth, from online reviews on the platforms that have slowly found their way into Cuba. So they have a direct personal interest in your experience being good. Your host will remember your name. They’ll notice if you come back at 2am looking lost and ask where you went. They’ll save you a cup of coffee if you sleep in. This is not a transactional relationship in the way that most accommodation is.

$15โ€“40
Typical nightly rate per room across Cuba
1997
Year Cuba legalized private home rentals
โš“
Blue anchor sign outside means it’s government registered
Most
Include breakfast for $3โ€“6 โ€” one of the best deals on the island

The blue anchor-and-house sign on the door is the government registration marker. It signals that the family has paid the licensing fees, registered with MINTUR (Cuba’s tourism ministry), and is authorized to host foreign guests. Registered casas are required to log guest details with local authorities โ€” your host will ask for your passport on arrival. This is normal and mandatory, not intrusive. It takes two minutes.

Not every room rented out in Cuba carries the blue sign. Some families operate informally, particularly in smaller towns. Informal casas can be perfectly good โ€” or can be genuinely problematic when there’s a dispute and no recourse. For a first visit, stick to registered casas. For experienced travelers who know Cuba, the informal network has its own recommendations worth following.

Typical Cuban home interior with tiled floors and vintage furniture โ€” the inside of a casa particular
The interior of a well-run casa particular โ€” clean, characterful, and usually cooler than you’d expect thanks to thick colonial walls and ceiling fans. Photo: Airbnb
๐Ÿจ

Casa Particular vs Hotel: The Honest Comparison

What you get, what you give up, and when each makes sense

Most budget travelers arrive in Cuba already leaning toward casas based on price alone, and then leave with a much longer list of reasons they were the right choice. But the comparison isn’t entirely one-sided โ€” there are situations where a hotel genuinely works better. Here’s what the two actually look like side by side.

๐Ÿ  Casa Particular
  • $15โ€“40/night for a private room, often with en suite bathroom
  • Breakfast for $3โ€“6 that frequently outperforms any hotel buffet
  • A host who knows the city, the restaurants, the taxi drivers, the real schedule
  • A local address for your Tourist Card โ€” hosts handle this automatically
  • No passport-stamp-in-the-hotel-ledger energy; more like a family home
  • Dinner available most nights for $8โ€“12 โ€” genuinely the best food deal in Cuba
  • Your money goes directly to a Cuban family, not a state enterprise
  • Flexibility โ€” late check-out, early check-in, storage, all negotiated personally
๐Ÿจ Hotel
  • $60โ€“350+/night depending on category and location
  • 24-hour reception โ€” useful if you arrive at 3am without a contact number
  • Swimming pool, business center, tour desk (often with tourist-priced tours)
  • Air conditioning more reliably maintained, though power cuts affect everyone
  • Anonymity โ€” if privacy and distance from local life is what you need
  • Hotel restaurant (usually mediocre; the paladares around it are better)
  • Loyalty points if you’re with an international chain (rare in Cuba)
  • Less negotiation required if you need predictable, frictionless service
๐Ÿ’ก
When a Hotel Actually Wins

If you’re arriving very late at night on a first visit and don’t speak any Spanish, a hotel’s 24-hour reception removes one anxiety from an already unfamiliar arrival. The same goes if you have mobility requirements โ€” most casas are in older buildings without lifts. For everything else, the casa wins on value, experience, and connection to the country you’ve actually traveled to see.

๐Ÿ’ฐ

What a Casa Particular Actually Costs

Nightly rates, breakfast, dinner, and the other expenses to factor in

The price range across Cuba is wider than most guides admit. A basic room in a small Viรฑales casa might cost $15 a night. A well-appointed private room with en suite bathroom, air conditioning, and a rooftop terrace in Havana’s Vedado neighbourhood might be $45. Both are casas particulares. Both are decent value by regional standards. Here’s how the pricing actually breaks down.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Room (per night)
$15โ€“45
Varies by city, season & room quality
โ˜• Breakfast
$3โ€“6
Fruit, eggs, bread, coffee, juice โ€” almost always worth it
๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Casa dinner
$8โ€“14
Usually 3 courses; best food deal in Cuba
๐Ÿ’ฆ Extras
$0โ€“5
Laundry, cold drinks, local SIM advice โ€” often free

Peak season (December through February, particularly Christmas and New Year) pushes prices up 20โ€“35% in popular destinations. Havana during the Jazz Festival in January is noticeably more expensive than Havana in October. If you have flexibility on timing, May and October give you better prices and thinner crowds with weather that’s still genuinely good.

โš ๏ธ
Pay in Cash โ€” There’s No Alternative

US cards don’t work in Cuba at all. European and Canadian cards work at ATMs in theory but the machines run out and charge fees. The overwhelmingly sensible approach is to bring all your trip cash from home โ€” in euros, Canadian dollars, or British pounds โ€” and convert it inside Cuba as needed. Casas are cash-only. Every paladar is cash-only. Every street vendor is cash-only. Read the full guide to managing money in Cuba before you fly.

The Total Cost Compared to a Hotel

Running the numbers for a 7-night trip in Havana: a casa at $25/night with breakfast ($5) and two casa dinners per week ($10 each) comes to roughly $255 for accommodation and most food. The equivalent 3-star hotel in Old Havana comes in at $420โ€“560 for the room alone, with meals on top at tourist paladar prices. You save $300โ€“400 on a week’s trip โ€” and eat better food.

Expense (7 nights, Havana)Casa Particular3-Star HotelDifference
Accommodation$175 ($25/night)$420โ€“$560 ($60โ€“80/night)Save $245โ€“385
Breakfast (7 days)$35 ($5/day)$56โ€“84 ($8โ€“12/day or hotel buffet)Save $21โ€“49
4 dinners in$48 ($12 each)Not available โ€” eat out every nightSave $40โ€“70
Local knowledge valueIncluded โ€” host knows everythingTour desk (commission-based)Priceless
Typical 7-night total~$258โ€“300~$560โ€“750+Save $300โ€“450
๐Ÿ”

How to Find and Book a Casa Particular

Platforms, word of mouth, and what actually works

Finding a casa has got significantly easier since 2015 โ€” several platforms now aggregate listings and allow advance booking. But the best casas still fill up via word of mouth and repeat visitors, and the best deals still come from showing up in person or through a trusted recommendation chain. Here’s the full picture.

1
Use Airbnb for your first few nights

Despite the platform restrictions that apply to US users booking through the main Airbnb app, Airbnb Cuba listings are widely used by Canadian, European, and other international travelers. The selection in Havana, Trinidad, and Viรฑales is good, photos are usually accurate, and the review system is reliable. Book your first 2โ€“3 nights before you fly. After that, your host or fellow travelers will have better recommendations than any platform.

2
Ask your host for the next stop

Cuban casa hosts operate an informal referral network that is genuinely one of the most efficient systems on the island. When you’re leaving for Trinidad, tell your Havana host. They’ll call ahead to someone they know, verify there’s a room available, and give you a name, address, and WhatsApp number before you leave. This system works remarkably well. The person you arrive with has already been described to the next host. You’re not a stranger off the internet โ€” you’re a trusted referral.

3
Walk in cold in smaller towns

In Viรฑales, Baracoa, Camagรผey, and most towns off the main tourist circuit, you can simply walk up to a blue anchor sign, knock, and ask if they have a room. This works more often than you’d expect. Outside peak season, casas in smaller towns run below capacity. The negotiation happens at the door โ€” have a rough sense of what the local going rate is before you knock (ask at your previous stop).

4
Use Cuba-specialist booking sites as a backup

Sites like CasaParticular.com and several others aggregate Cuban home listings. The coverage is reasonable; the quality of listings varies more than Airbnb. Use them if you’re struggling to find availability through your host’s referral network or if you’re in an unusual destination. Read reviews carefully โ€” and be aware that some listings are years out of date.

5
Communicate through WhatsApp

This is how Cuba works now. Most registered casas have a WhatsApp number. Confirm your arrival time, get the address for your Tourist Card, ask about parking if you’re driving, check whether dinner is available on arrival night. Do this a few days before, not the morning of. Hosts generally reply quickly โ€” they’re managing one or two rooms, not a 40-room hotel with a booking system.

๐Ÿ“‹
You Need the Address for Your Tourist Card

Cuba’s entry document requires an address for your first night’s accommodation. Get this from your casa host before you fly โ€” they’re completely used to being asked and will send it immediately. It needs to be a real, registered address. If you’re using Airbnb, the address is in your booking confirmation. Don’t leave for the airport without it written somewhere accessible โ€” your visa guide and your Tourist Card both need it.

๐Ÿ“

Casas Particulares by Region: What to Expect Where

The experience varies significantly across Cuba’s main destinations

Cuba is not homogeneous. A casa in Havana’s Vedado neighbourhood and a casa in Baracoa on the far eastern tip of the island are different experiences in almost every dimension โ€” the size, the food, the cost, the pace of life, and how often the power cuts out. Here’s the real regional picture.

๐Ÿ™๏ธ

Havana

The widest range in Cuba โ€” from basic rooms in crumbling Centro apartments to beautifully restored colonial townhouses in Habana Vieja with rooftop terraces. Stay in Vedado or Old Havana. Avoid Miramar unless you specifically want distance from the city centre.

$22โ€“45/night ยท Most choice, most competition
๐ŸŒฟ

Viรฑales

The tobacco valley west of Havana is where casas particulares are at their most relaxed. Most sit within view of the mogote limestone formations. Owners here often offer horseback riding, guided valley walks, and the best breakfasts in Cuba. Book ahead in high season โ€” it fills up.

$15โ€“30/night ยท Best breakfast tradition
๐Ÿ›๏ธ

Trinidad

The cobblestone colonial city in central Cuba has a dense network of casas in historic buildings. Many have interior courtyards, tiled floors, and rocking chairs on the street that feel genuinely 19th century. Some of Cuba’s best casa cooks are here. Popular with European package tourists โ€” book early.

$20โ€“35/night ยท Most atmospheric buildings
๐ŸŒŠ

Cienfuegos

Cuba’s most French-influenced city, on the south coast, is undervisited relative to its quality. Casas here are well-run, prices are lower than Havana, and the city’s waterfront boulevard is one of the finest in Cuba. A genuine hidden-gem destination for an extra night.

$18โ€“28/night ยท Underrated, lower prices
๐ŸŒด

Baracoa

The easternmost city in Cuba โ€” isolated, deeply individual, and with a food culture unlike anywhere else on the island (chocolate, coconut, seafood). Casas here are often run by families who have hosted travelers for decades and whose cooking is genuinely extraordinary. The journey is long; the reward is proportional.

$15โ€“25/night ยท Best cooking, most remote
๐ŸŽถ

Santiago de Cuba

The second city. Hotter, louder, and more Afro-Caribbean in character than Havana. Casas here are less polished but full of musical life โ€” Santiago is the heartland of son cubano and the Carnival is extraordinary. Stay near the historic centre for walkability.

$18โ€“30/night ยท Music capital, raw energy
Colonial street in Trinidad Cuba with colourful buildings and cobblestones
Trinidad’s colonial streets โ€” the casas here are housed in some of Cuba’s best-preserved 19th-century architecture. Photo: Unsplash
๐Ÿ“œ

House Rules and Unwritten Etiquette

What your host expects โ€” and what you’re entitled to ask for

Casas particulares are people’s homes. The dynamic is different from a hotel in ways that need a moment of adjustment. Most of this is common sense โ€” but there are some Cuba-specific norms worth knowing before you arrive.

1
Register your passport on arrival โ€” it’s not optional

Cuban law requires casa owners to record passport details for every foreign guest and submit them to local authorities. Your host will ask to photograph or copy your passport within an hour of arrival. Don’t make this awkward โ€” it’s the same process in every registered casa in Cuba and takes two minutes. Hosts who don’t ask are either operating informally or have already done it from your Airbnb booking details.

2
Tell them when you want breakfast and dinner

Cuba runs on schedules that feel loose to Western visitors but are actually quite precise at the household level. If you want breakfast at 8am, tell them the night before. If you want dinner, tell them that morning. Showing up at 9pm expecting a meal that wasn’t discussed is going to create friction. The food is almost always excellent when it’s expected. When it’s improvised, less so.

3
Water, power, and the internet โ€” manage expectations

Cuba has ongoing electricity challenges. Rolling blackouts still affect most cities, sometimes for hours. Your host has workarounds โ€” candles, gas for the stove, water stored from before the cut. Don’t panic and don’t complain loudly about something that is entirely outside their control. Hot water availability varies by casa and by city water pressure. Ask when you book if it matters to you. The internet is Wi-Fi hotspot based โ€” ask your host where the nearest ETECSA park is.

4
Bring guests in politely, not silently

Some casas have rules about guests โ€” specifically about bringing other travelers or local Cubans back to your room. The rules vary by host and are usually clearly stated or evident. If it’s not clear, ask. Cuban people you’ve met during the day are welcomed warmly in most casas as visitors; the question of overnight guests is a separate conversation and should be one. This is their home.

5
Gifts go a long way

Bringing small practical gifts for your host โ€” good coffee (Cubans love good coffee but access is limited), aspirin, batteries, a pen, vitamins โ€” is entirely optional and never expected. When offered, it’s received with genuine warmth. It’s not about value; it’s about the gesture of knowing something real about the country before you arrived. This is not a performance. It’s just a kind thing to do.

๐Ÿค
Leave a Good Review โ€” It Matters More Than You Think

A positive Airbnb or Google review can make a meaningful difference to a Cuban family’s income for months. If your host was excellent, say so specifically โ€” not “great stay!” but why it was great, what they did well, what made it stand out. Other travelers will rely on your words to make their decision. Cuban hosts know this and often ask โ€” not pushily, but genuinely. If you can spare five minutes after you leave, do it.

๐Ÿณ

The Casa Breakfast and Dinner: Why Everyone Talks About It

The food situation โ€” and how to get the best of it

The food served at casas particulares is, by a significant margin, some of the best eating you’ll do in Cuba. Not because Cuban home cooking is technically sophisticated โ€” it isn’t โ€” but because the ingredients are fresher, the portions are generous, the cook has one job and has been doing it for years, and the dining experience of sitting in someone’s home and being fed is entirely different from eating in a restaurant.

“The best meal I had in Cuba was a $10 dinner at a casa in Baracoa โ€” coconut-braised chicken, rice cooked with something smoky, plantain done two ways, and a papaya juice that tasted like a different fruit entirely from anything I’d had before.”

Breakfast: the genuinely great deal

A typical casa breakfast for $4โ€“6 will include fresh tropical fruit (papaya, mango, guava depending on season), eggs cooked to your preference, toasted bread with butter and sometimes jam, a glass of fresh juice, and cafรฉ con leche or strong black coffee. In Viรฑales and Trinidad specifically, the breakfasts develop a local mythology โ€” there are casas whose egg dishes and fruit spreads have been recommended in traveler circles for years.

The hotel breakfast at the same price tier is usually a sad buffet of processed items kept warm under a lamp. The casa breakfast is the opposite โ€” made when you sit down, brought to a table in a family dining room or courtyard, hot and fresh. If your casa offers breakfast and you skip it to save money, reconsider.

Dinner: the best food deal in Cuba

Casa dinners typically run $8โ€“14 per person for what amounts to a full 2โ€“3 course meal. The structure is usually: a small soup or salad, a main of fish, chicken, pork, or lobster (where available and in season), with rice, black beans, plantain, and a simple salad. Lobster on the coast in particular โ€” where it’s caught locally and cooked that day โ€” at a casa dinner price represents one of the best food-value moments available anywhere in the Caribbean.

โœ…

Practical Tips for Staying in a Casa Particular

The stuff that makes the difference between a good stay and a great one
๐ŸŒ™

Arrive With a Confirmed Room

Never arrive in a Cuban city โ€” especially Havana โ€” without confirmed accommodation for at least the first night. The hustlers near the airport and bus stations who offer to “help you find a casa” get a commission from whichever casa they take you to, not necessarily the best one for you. Confirm before you travel.

๐Ÿ’ฌ

Basic Spanish Changes Everything

Even 20 words of Spanish โ€” please, thank you, where is, how much, hot, cold โ€” transforms the relationship with your host from transactional to something warmer. Cuba’s older generation in particular lights up when a foreign visitor makes the effort. Google Translate with the camera function handles menus and signs tolerably well.

๐Ÿ”‘

Ask What the Key Situation Is

Some casas give you a key to come and go independently at any hour. Others require you to ring or knock โ€” the host is always there but you don’t have autonomous access. Know before your first late night out. Most casas are flexible but the conversation is worth having in advance rather than at midnight.

๐Ÿงณ

Luggage Storage Is Usually Free

If you’re moving on but your bus or flight is in the late afternoon, ask if you can leave bags until you go. Almost every casa will say yes without charging โ€” it’s part of the hospitality ethos. Confirm the arrangement explicitly: where the bags go, who has access, when you’re picking them up.

๐Ÿš—

Your Host Knows the Transport Network

Need a taxi to the airport at 4am? A Viazul bus connection? A shared almendron colectivo to the next city? Your host has contacts for all of this and their recommendations are usually better โ€” and cheaper โ€” than anything you’ll arrange independently. Ask the night before, not the morning of.

๐Ÿงบ

Laundry Is Available Almost Everywhere

Most casas offer a laundry service โ€” hand-washed, dried overnight, folded. Prices are usually $1โ€“2 per kilo or a flat fee per item. Ask your host. In a country where laundromats are essentially nonexistent, this is one of the genuinely practical services casas offer that hotels at double the price don’t match on value.

๐Ÿ“‹ Casa Particular Checklist โ€” Before You Arrive

  • Confirmed booking with registered address for Tourist Card
  • WhatsApp contact for the host saved before you fly
  • Arrival time communicated โ€” don’t show up unannounced at midnight
  • Cash brought โ€” no cards accepted anywhere
  • Dinner request flagged if you want to eat in on arrival night
  • Passport accessible โ€” they’ll need to photograph it on arrival
  • Departure transport discussed so your host can help arrange it
  • Small gift packed if you’d like to โ€” entirely optional but always appreciated
โ“

Frequently Asked Questions

The things people actually want to know before they book
Is staying in a casa particular safe?

Yes. Registered casas particulares are among the safest places to stay in Cuba. The owners have a legal license they need to keep, a direct financial incentive for guests to feel comfortable, and a personal stake in their home’s reputation. Cuba’s overall crime rate against tourists is very low by regional standards. The main concerns โ€” opportunistic theft, scams โ€” are more associated with busy street environments than with accommodation.

Leave valuables in the room with sensible precautions. Most casas have lockable rooms and a secure front entrance. If your host offers a safe, use it for passports and cash you won’t need that day. If not, the inside of a sock at the bottom of a bag works adequately for most trips.

Do I need to book in advance or can I just show up?

For Havana, Trinidad, and Viรฑales between December and March, book at least your first night before arriving โ€” these destinations fill up and showing up without a reservation in peak season means accepting whatever is left, which is usually the most expensive rooms in the worst locations.

In smaller towns and outside peak season, walking up to a blue anchor sign and knocking works fine and often gets you better prices than platform rates. Your current host’s referral network is usually the most reliable path to good rooms in your next destination.

Are casas particulares available everywhere in Cuba, or just the tourist destinations?

Registered casas are found throughout Cuba โ€” in virtually every city, town, and many villages along the main travel routes. The density and quality varies: Havana, Trinidad, Viรฑales, Cienfuegos, and Santiago have the most options. Smaller towns along the classic route โ€” Camagรผey, Holguรญn, Las Tunas โ€” have adequate choices. The more remote eastern destinations like Baracoa and the Sierra Maestra foothills have fewer casas but the ones that exist are often exceptional.

Can I negotiate the price?

When booking through a platform, the listed price is the price โ€” negotiating against a public Airbnb listing is awkward and usually unsuccessful. When booking directly โ€” via WhatsApp, referral, or in person โ€” there’s more flexibility, particularly for longer stays. A week at a casa versus a single night often comes with a modest discount. Outside peak season, prices are slightly more negotiable. Don’t push hard on price if the accommodation is clearly good โ€” these families are running a livelihood, not a hotel chain with margin to burn.

What happens if there’s a power cut during my stay?

Power cuts happen across Cuba, including in Havana. They’re sometimes announced in advance (your host may know), sometimes not. Most casa hosts have candles, gas stoves for cooking, and stored water. The experience is less dramatic than it sounds when you’re prepared for it and staying somewhere with good ventilation and ceiling fans. Air conditioning becomes a fan during a cut, which in the right season is adequate. The cuts rarely last more than a few hours in urban areas, though rural Cuba can experience longer outages.

Can US citizens stay in casas particulares?

Yes โ€” and for US travelers, casas are specifically encouraged under the most commonly used OFAC travel category (Support for the Cuban People). Spending money directly with Cuban private families rather than state-owned hotels is explicitly what that category is designed to promote. US citizens staying in casas and eating at private paladares are genuinely in compliance with the spirit and practice of the authorization, as well as having a better trip for it.

What’s the difference between a casa particular and a hostel in Cuba?

A casa is a private home renting out rooms โ€” usually private rooms with their own bathroom, to one guest or group at a time. The relationship with the host family is central to the experience. Hostels in Cuba exist in the larger cities and offer dormitory-style beds at lower prices ($10โ€“15/night), typically with a common room and a more social, backpacker atmosphere. Both are legitimate choices; casas give you a more intimate, private, and culturally immersive experience. Hostels are better if you’re traveling solo on the tightest possible budget and want to meet other travelers easily.


One last thing about staying in a casa

The best Cuba trips almost always have a casa particular somewhere in the middle of them. Not because it’s the cheapest option โ€” though it usually is โ€” but because it’s the most honest version of the country. You’re sleeping in someone’s home, eating their food, listening to what they actually think about their city and their life and where you should go next.

That’s not something you find in a hotel corridor. It’s what makes Cuba different from every other Caribbean destination, and the casa system is the clearest way into it. Sort your Tourist Card, bring your cash, learn ten words of Spanish, and knock on the door with the blue anchor sign. You’ll figure out the rest from there.

Before you go, the Cuba travel tips every first-timer needs to read covers the on-the-ground realities โ€” currency, SIM cards, transport, and the things no accommodation guide has room for. And if you’re planning the Havana side of things, the 3-day Havana weekend itinerary maps out exactly where to go once you’ve unpacked your bag.

Published on hotelhavanaerror.com ยท Last updated May 2026

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 โ€” a city that fuels his love for storytelling every single day.

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