
Cuba Travel News 2026: Everything That’s Changed for Visitors This Year
Entry rules, cash logistics, power outages, new flight routes, accommodation shifts, and what the island actually feels like on the ground right now. Not the tourism board version.
Cuba 2026: Everything That’s Changed for Visitors
Entry rules, cash logistics, power outages, new flights, accommodation changes — what the island actually feels like right now.
Cuba in 2026 is not the same Cuba that travelers visited in 2022 or even 2024. The island is moving — slowly, unevenly, sometimes painfully — through a period of genuine change. Some of it is positive: more private businesses, improved mobile data, new flight connections, a paladar scene that keeps getting more ambitious. Some of it is harder: electricity shortages that are the worst in the country’s modern history, ongoing economic pressure that squeezes daily life, and a cash situation that still catches first-time visitors badly off-guard.
This article isn’t a tourism board update. It’s a working document for people who are either planning a trip to Cuba in 2026 or who went recently and want to understand what’s changed since. We’ve covered every category that matters to a traveler — entry requirements, money, power, accommodation, food, flights, safety, and internet — with honest assessments of what’s improved, what’s gotten harder, and what you need to do differently this year compared to previous trips.
The bottom line, before you read anything else: Cuba is still worth going to. It’s still unlike anywhere else. But it rewards travelers who prepare, and it’s harder than it used to be for those who don’t.
The Ten Biggest Changes to Cuba Travel in 2026
Cuba 2026 — The Honest Numbers
Context before detail: Cuba’s economy is under real pressure, and that shapes the traveler experience in ways that matter.
None of these numbers should stop you from going. They should help you plan properly. The travelers who have the hardest time in Cuba in 2026 are the ones who arrived expecting 2019 conditions. The travelers who have great trips are the ones who prepared for what the island actually is right now — which is still extraordinary, just with more logistical friction than it used to have.
Entry Requirements & Visas in 2026: What’s Changed
Cuba’s entry requirements for 2026 are largely consistent with 2024 and 2025, but there are a few operational details that have shifted and some persistent sources of confusion that keep catching people out at the airport.
The Tourist Card (Tarjeta del Turista)
The Cuban tourist card is still required for all visitors and must be obtained before arrival — you cannot buy one on arrival at a Cuban airport. The price has remained at $50–75 depending on where you buy it and your nationality. Airlines flying directly to Cuba from the US (American, United, JetBlue, Southwest) typically sell them on board or at the gate. Travelers from the UK and Europe can buy them through specialist travel agencies or directly from some airline counters. The card covers a 30-day stay, extendable once in-country for another 30 days at an immigration office.
Bought at airline check-in (US routes): $50–75. Bought through a UK travel agent or specialist: £25–45. Bought in Mexico City or Cancún before connecting: around $25. The cheapest option, if your itinerary allows it, is buying through a connecting hub in Latin America or the Caribbean. Full details and current prices in the Cuba tourist card guide for 2026.
Travel Insurance — Still Checked at the Border
Cuba maintains its requirement for proof of travel insurance covering medical treatment and emergency evacuation. This is not a formality — immigration officers do check, and travelers without documentation can be required to purchase a policy from Asistur (Cuba’s state insurer) at the airport, at prices significantly higher than pre-purchased policies. The requirement hasn’t changed in 2026, but enforcement has been consistently applied and shows no signs of relaxing.
US travelers need specialist insurance — most standard US travel policies exclude Cuba due to OFAC sanctions. World Nomads, IMG Global, and Seven Corners are the commonly used options. Non-US travelers have more choices but still need to confirm Cuba is explicitly included in their policy, as “worldwide” coverage often excludes Cuba in the fine print.
US Travelers — OFAC Status in 2026
The legal framework for American travel to Cuba remains unchanged in 2026. Americans must travel under one of twelve OFAC-authorized categories. The most used for independent travelers is “Support for the Cuban People” — which means staying at casas particulares rather than government hotels, eating at private restaurants rather than state-run establishments, and engaging with Cuban civil society in ways that create direct economic benefit for Cuban individuals rather than state enterprises. There has been no policy liberalization under the current administration, and no significant tightening either. The rules that applied in 2024 still apply in 2026.
Keep receipts from every private business you patronize in Cuba: casas, paladares, private tour guides, markets. These form the paper trail that demonstrates your travel was conducted under the Support for the Cuban People category. Insurance claims, if needed, may also require this documentation. The full Cuba visa guide for 2026 covers the OFAC requirements in detail.
Cash, Currency & the Money Situation in 2026
If you only read one section of this article, read this one. Cuba’s cash situation is the single biggest practical challenge for travelers in 2026, and it’s the thing that most first-timers underestimate most badly.
Cards Still Don’t Work — And This Won’t Change Soon
Foreign debit and credit cards cannot be used at Cuban ATMs or in Cuban businesses. This applies to Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and every other card network. The reasons are a combination of OFAC sanctions (which prevent US financial institutions from processing transactions in Cuba) and Cuba’s own banking infrastructure limitations. Cuban authorities have discussed various solutions over the past several years, and none have materialized in a meaningful way for tourists. The honest expectation for 2026 is: plan as if cards don’t exist.
What this means in practice: you need to calculate your entire budget before you leave home — accommodation, food, transport, activities, tipping, and a 20% contingency for anything unexpected — convert it to USD, EUR, or CAD, and carry it as physical cash. The Cuban Peso (CUP) is what locals use, and USD, EUR, and CAD can be exchanged at CADECA exchange houses and some hotel desks. USD exchange has historically attracted a slight premium in informal markets, though the official rate has improved.
There are no emergency solutions in Cuba if you run out of money. Western Union transfers to Cuba are suspended for US senders due to OFAC sanctions. Bank wire transfers from abroad are complicated and slow. The only realistic option is a family member or friend wiring money to a Cuban bank account held by a Cuban national — which requires a local contact willing to help and takes days. Bring more than you think you’ll need. The complete guide to managing cash in Cuba covers every option in detail.
What Currency Should You Bring?
USD, EUR, and CAD are all accepted in tourist-facing businesses. The practical difference: USD has occasionally attracted slightly better informal exchange rates, but EUR is now widely accepted and slightly easier to carry for European travelers. Avoid GBP — while not impossible to exchange, it’s less common and exchange houses may not always have it available. Bring a mix of denominations — lots of $10 and $20 bills rather than $100s, which are harder to break in local restaurants.
| Situation | 2024 Reality | 2026 Update | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foreign card ATM withdrawals | Not possible | Still not possible | Unchanged |
| USD exchange rate | Unofficial premium common | Official CADECA rates improved | Improved |
| EUR acceptance | Widely accepted | Even more widely accepted | Better |
| Western Union from US | Suspended | Still suspended | Unchanged |
| Card payments in hotels | Non-US cards only, rarely | Some Gaviota hotels: non-US cards | Marginal |
| Digital payment apps | Not functional | Still not functional | Unchanged |
A realistic daily budget for an independent traveler in Cuba in 2026: $55–80 per person staying at casas and eating at paladares. This covers a private room with breakfast, two meals, local transport, and one paid activity or museum. For a couple, budget $110–160 per day combined. Add 20% contingency. Our detailed $50-a-day Cuba budget breakdown goes through every category.
Power Outages in 2026: The Honest Picture
Cuba’s electricity crisis is the most significant change to the on-the-ground travel experience since 2022. Power outages — some lasting 8–12 hours a day in the worst-affected provinces — became routine from 2022 onwards as the national grid, operating on aging Soviet-era infrastructure, repeatedly failed to meet demand. In 2026, the situation has improved modestly from the worst periods of 2023–24, but rolling blackouts remain a feature of daily life across most of the island.
What this means for travelers depends heavily on where you stay and what you’re doing. Hotels, particularly larger tourist-facing properties in Havana and Varadero, maintain generators that kick in during cuts — you may not notice a blackout at all if you’re in the pool or dining room. The experience is different at a casa particular in a Havana residential neighborhood, where the power going out means exactly what it says: no lights, no fans, no air conditioning, potentially no hot water if the building runs an electric water heater.
Which Areas Are Most Affected?
The provinces with historically the worst blackout frequency are: Santiago de Cuba, Holguín, Granma, and parts of the interior. Havana has generally had shorter and more manageable cuts than the rest of the country, partly because the government prioritizes the capital and partly because Havana has a higher concentration of tourist infrastructure with generator backup. Varadero’s resort strip operates largely on generator backup and is the least affected tourist zone. The cayos (Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco) are resort-only environments with self-sufficient power and are essentially unaffected.
Add these to your packing list regardless of where you’re staying: a USB power bank (fully charged before you leave your accommodation each morning), a small torch or headlamp, a portable fan for hot nights if traveling June–September. If you rely on charging medical devices or CPAP machines, confirm with your accommodation that generator backup is available overnight. The full Cuba packing list covers this and everything else.
Is the Situation Getting Better?
Slowly, and unevenly. Cuba has been investing in solar panel installation across the country since 2023, which has the potential to materially reduce outage frequency in a country with abundant sunshine. Several large solar farms have come online and more are under construction. The government has also been working on fuel supply agreements and on restarting some of the thermoelectric plants that went offline during the 2022–23 crisis. None of these are quick fixes, and the structural challenges facing the national grid are significant. The realistic expectation for a 2026 visit: plan for power cuts as part of the experience rather than hoping they won’t affect you.
Book your accommodation with generator backup confirmed in writing. In Havana, properties in Old Havana and Miramar tend to have better backup infrastructure than residential Vedado or Centro Habana. Ask your casa host directly: “Do you have a generator for overnight cuts?” A good host will answer honestly. Tour operators and activity providers have also adapted — most outdoor activities, diving, and horseback riding in Viñales are genuinely unaffected by power outages.
Accommodation in 2026: What’s New, What’s Better, What to Watch For
Cuba’s accommodation landscape has shifted noticeably since 2022. The most significant change is the continued growth of the private sector — more licensed casas particulares, more small private hotels, and more booking infrastructure to connect travelers with these properties. The state-run hotel sector has struggled: some properties have reduced services or closed temporarily due to fuel shortages and maintenance challenges. Meanwhile, the private sector has expanded into the gap.
Casas Particulares — Still the Best Choice for Most Travelers
A casa particular in 2026 remains the ideal accommodation choice for independent travelers on most budgets. Prices have risen modestly since 2022 — expect $30–55 for a private room with breakfast in Havana, $25–45 in smaller cities and towns — reflecting both inflation and increased demand from travelers who have moved away from state hotels. The quality range is wider than it was: at the top end, some Havana casas now offer genuinely boutique-level rooms with thoughtful design, good showers, and exceptional breakfasts. At the budget end, you’ll find clean, simple rooms that do exactly what they need to.
Airbnb’s access in Cuba for US-connected accounts remains restricted due to OFAC sanctions, though non-US travelers can still use it with some success. Alternative booking platforms have improved significantly — Cuba Casas, Infotur Cuba, and several specialist travel agencies maintain up-to-date listings. Booking directly through your host via WhatsApp after an initial platform introduction is common and encouraged by most hosts.
State Hotels — A More Honest Assessment
The state hotel chains — Gaviota, Gran Caribe, Islazul — are in mixed shape in 2026. Some flagship properties (the Gran Hotel Manzana Kempinski and Hotel Saratoga in Havana, though Saratoga had a gas explosion in 2022 and its status varies) maintain international standards with full generator backup and consistent service. Further down the tier, state hotels have suffered from supply chain issues, deferred maintenance, and variable staffing. Several properties that were listed as operational in 2023 are now effectively closed or operating at reduced capacity.
The best hotels in Havana for 2026 includes both private boutique options and the state properties that are reliably operational. Checking current status before booking any state hotel is more important in 2026 than it was in previous years — conditions change faster than booking platforms update.
Food & Drink in Cuba 2026: Where the Scene Has Moved
Cuba’s food scene in 2026 is genuinely better than it was five years ago, and the gap between what’s available at a good paladar versus a state-run restaurant has never been wider. The private restaurant sector has continued to grow, diversify, and improve, even as economic pressure creates real challenges for ingredients and consistency.
What’s Changed in the Food Scene
The most significant development is the continued maturation of Havana’s better paladares. Places that opened in 2018–2020 have now had years to refine their menus, develop supplier relationships, and build the kind of consistency that makes them genuinely worth planning a trip around. The top end of Havana’s paladar scene — San Cristóbal, Doña Eutimia in Old Havana, La Guarida — continues to operate at a level that would be competitive in major cities internationally.
Below the top tier, the picture is more varied. Ingredient supply issues mean that menu items listed can be unavailable on any given day. The standard Cuban response — “no hay” (there isn’t any) — is more common in 2026 than it was in 2019 because supply chains remain fragile. The best approach is to ask your host which paladares they personally recommend, order the things that feel genuinely Cuban (not the items that seem designed for foreign palates), and be flexible. The paladares where locals actually eat are the right reference point.
Rum, Coffee, and What’s Still Excellent
Cuba’s rum production remains exceptional and largely unaffected by the economic pressures hitting other sectors. Havana Club, Santiago de Cuba, and Cubay aged rums are available at prices that represent absurd value by international standards. A bottle of Havana Club 7 Year costs $8–12 in a Cuban shop. The mojito culture at Havana’s best bars remains one of the Caribbean’s genuine pleasures. Coffee — particularly from the Sierra Maestra region — is consistently excellent if you find the right places.
Cuban customs allows travelers to take home up to 3 litres of rum duty-free. At Cuban in-country prices, this is an extraordinary value proposition compared to duty-free airports. Buy at state liquor stores (TRD Caribe) or from specialist shops rather than tourist traps near the main squares. Our Cuba rum guide covers the best bottles to buy and bring home.
Flights to Cuba in 2026: Routes, Airlines & What’s New
Cuba’s international flight connectivity has improved modestly in 2026 compared to the reduced schedules that followed COVID-19 and subsequent demand disruption. Several routes have resumed and a few new connections have been added, particularly from European and Canadian departure points.
US Routes — Unchanged and Limited
Direct flights from the United States to Cuba are operated by American Airlines (Miami to Havana, Camagüey, Holguín, Santa Clara, and Varadero), United Airlines (Miami and Houston to Havana), JetBlue (several US cities to Havana and other Cuban airports), and Southwest (some seasonal routes). The route network is smaller than it was pre-2019 when Cuba travel was briefly more open under Obama-era policies, and no significant new US routes have been added in 2026. Pricing from major US hubs (Miami, New York, Houston) typically runs $300–600 round-trip for economy, depending on booking window.
European and Canadian Routes — Improved
Air Canada, Air Transat, and Sunwing maintain strong seasonal schedules from Toronto, Montreal, and Quebec City to Havana, Varadero, Holguín, and Cayo Coco. Pricing from Canada is typically the most competitive globally. From Europe, Air France (Paris), Iberia (Madrid), Condor (Germany), and TUI (UK and Germany) maintain regular service, with Iberia and Air Europa offering the best connectivity from Spain and Latin America. Several charter operators from Italy and the UK have added or resumed Cuba routes in 2025–26.
Peak season (December through March) books out quickly, particularly from Canada and the US. Book at least 8–12 weeks ahead for peak season travel. Shoulder season (October–November and April–May) offers significantly better pricing with almost identical weather in Cuba. A full breakdown of options in the cheapest ways to get to Cuba from the US, UK, and Canada.
Cuba is one of the few Caribbean destinations where the cheapest way in depends enormously on your nationality. Canadians pay half what Americans pay for the same flight duration. Europeans booking through Madrid often beat both.
Internet & Mobile Connectivity in 2026
Cuba’s internet situation in 2026 is meaningfully better than it was in 2020, which is damning with faint praise — but the improvement is real. Mobile data via ETECSA (the state telecommunications company) is now accessible across most of the island’s major population centres and tourist areas. Speeds are still lower than travelers from developed countries are accustomed to, but WhatsApp, basic web browsing, and Google Maps all function adequately on ETECSA’s network.
Your Best Options for Connectivity in 2026
The most reliable approach is buying an ETECSA SIM card on arrival (available at ETECSA offices in major cities and at José Martí International Airport). Costs are minimal — a top-up card giving several gigabytes of data costs $1–3. Data packages can be purchased via the ETECSA Nauta app once you have a local SIM. The alternative that has become genuinely viable in 2026 is international eSIM providers (Airalo, Holafly, and others) that sell Cuba-specific eSIM plans in advance of travel. These work on the same ETECSA network but can be set up from home without needing to find an ETECSA office on arrival.
Hotel and casa particular Wi-Fi is available in most tourist accommodation, with variable quality. Havana’s better hotels and many casas now have reasonable speeds during low-usage hours (early morning and late night work best). Public Wi-Fi parks — once the primary way Cubans and tourists got online — are now less relevant since mobile data became accessible.
Cuba is not Jamaica or Mexico in terms of connectivity. Expect slower speeds, occasional dead zones, and Wi-Fi that goes offline during power cuts. Download offline maps (Google Maps, Maps.me, or OsmAnd) before leaving your accommodation each morning. Download whatever you’ll want to read or watch offline. Full detail in the Cuba internet guide for 2026.
Safety in Cuba 2026: What’s Actually Changed
Cuba’s safety record for tourists has historically been one of the island’s strongest selling points, and this broadly remains true in 2026. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. Cuba’s government takes tourist safety seriously for economic and diplomatic reasons, and the police presence in tourist areas is consistent. Walking Havana’s streets at night — in Old Havana, Vedado, and Miramar — remains safe in a way that’s unusual in the Caribbean.
What Has Changed — Petty Crime More Common
The more visible change since 2022 is an uptick in petty opportunistic crime — mostly bag-snatching and pickpocketing in crowded tourist areas, particularly around the Capitolio, Obispo street, and the Malecón in Havana. This is directly related to the economic pressure on Cubans, where the gap between tourist-visible wealth and local wages has widened sharply. The absolute numbers remain low by any Caribbean comparison, but the trend is worth noting. The standard precautions that apply everywhere — don’t flash expensive cameras on crowded streets, keep phones in a front pocket, use a crossbody bag rather than a daypack — now genuinely matter in Havana’s busiest tourist areas in a way they were largely optional a few years ago.
Scams targeting tourists have also become more sophisticated in Havana’s tourist areas. Common ones: “My family needs help” approaches near the Capitolio; unofficial money changers offering rates that are too good (the currency you receive will be counterfeit or old demonetized notes); fake art gallery invitations. None of these are dangerous — just annoying and potentially expensive. The guide to avoiding tourist traps in Havana covers the specific scams to know about.
Protests and Civil Unrest
Cuba saw significant civil unrest in July 2021 — the largest protests in decades. Since then, the political situation has been stable on the surface but tense underneath. There have been no major protest events in 2024–25 on the scale of July 2021, but economic grievances that drove that unrest have not been addressed. Most travel advisories from the UK, Canada, and EU countries rate Cuba as a standard “exercise normal precautions” destination for tourists. The US State Department maintains heightened advisories for Cuba for political reasons unrelated to tourist safety specifically. The full Cuba safety guide for 2026 goes into considerably more detail.
What’s Still Great About Cuba in 2026
This article has covered a lot of practical challenges, and it’s worth pausing to say clearly: Cuba in 2026 is still one of the most genuinely extraordinary destinations in the Western Hemisphere. The things that have always made it singular haven’t gone anywhere.
Havana is still Havana. The Malecón at sunset still looks like no other seafront in the world. Old Havana’s colonial architecture — crumbling grandeur that no restoration project has been able to fully sanitize — still stops you mid-stride in a way that perfectly polished heritage sites don’t. The music is still everywhere and still genuine, from the son quartets in bar doorways to the salsa nights at Casa de la Música. The casas particulares still offer the kind of access to ordinary Cuban life that most Caribbean destinations simply can’t replicate.
The hiking in Viñales is still exceptional. The diving around the Jardines de la Reina is still among the best in the Caribbean. Trinidad’s colonial core is still one of the best-preserved historic towns in Latin America. The food at the right paladares is genuinely excellent. The rum is still some of the world’s best at some of the world’s most embarrassing prices. The combination of all these things in a single island, at a price point that makes the Caribbean’s resort alternatives look expensive, is still an extraordinary proposition.
Go prepared. Go flexible. Go with realistic expectations about electricity and cash and connectivity. Go knowing it’s complicated and worth it. That assessment hasn’t changed in 2026 — if anything, it’s stronger, because the number of travelers who have prepared properly and had outstanding trips keeps growing, and the travelers who struggled are almost always the ones who didn’t read the logistics section before landing.
Cuba 2026 FAQ — The Questions People Are Actually Asking
The bottom line on Cuba in 2026
Cuba in 2026 is harder to visit than it was in 2018. The logistics require more preparation — cash planning, insurance, tourist cards, power bank packing, flexibility with schedules. The economic pressures affecting Cuban daily life are real and visible in ways they weren’t a decade ago.
None of that is a reason to not go. Cuba remains one of a tiny number of destinations in the world that produces the kind of travel experiences people talk about for years: a city that doesn’t look like anywhere else, food and music and architecture that exist nowhere else in quite the same form, and a price point that makes every other Caribbean island look expensive. The island is also changing — not quickly, and not always smoothly — in ways that will eventually transform what it is. The Cuba of 2030 or 2035 may be a very different place from the Cuba of today.
If Cuba is on your list, 2026 is a reasonable time to go. Just go prepared.
Published on hotelhavanaerror.com | Last updated: May 2026. All prices and logistics reflect conditions as of the date of publication. Cuba’s situation changes — check for updates before travel.