Cuba Visa Guide 2026: Who Needs One & Exactly How to Get It
The paper tourist card is dead. Cuba switched to a mandatory digital e-visa in January 2026. Here’s everything that changed β and what every nationality needs to do before boarding.
Cuba’s visa situation used to be simple β you bought a paper tourist card at the airport, scribbled your name on it, and handed half to the immigration officer. That system ran for over 30 years. It ended on January 1, 2026.
Cuba now requires a digital e-visa (applied for before you travel) for all foreign visitors, replacing the old pink and green tourist card entirely. Most of the rules underneath haven’t changed much β but the process has. If you’re still reading 2024 travel guides, you need this one instead.
This guide covers exactly who needs what, what it costs, how to apply correctly, and what happens at Cuban immigration when you land. We’ve broken it down by nationality where it matters, including the extra layer US citizens have to deal with.
The Quick Answer: Who Needs What
Cuba doesn’t issue traditional tourist visas. What you need is an e-visa (the digital replacement for what used to be called the tourist card). There are essentially three different situations depending on where you’re from:
- Most nationalities (EU, UK, Canada, Australia, Latin America etc.): Apply online for a standard e-visa before you travel. No embassy visit, no interview, no weeks of waiting. Apply, pay, receive a QR code by email, show it at check-in and immigration. Done.
- US citizens: Same e-visa process β but with the extra step of declaring one of 12 US government-authorized travel categories. Cuba doesn’t check this; the US government theoretically does. We’ll cover this fully in the US traveler section.
- Nationals of certain countries (Afghanistan, Nigeria, Pakistan, India, Philippines, and others): You previously needed a full visa from a Cuban consulate. Under the new 2026 system, these nationalities can now also apply for the e-visa, replacing that consulate requirement for tourism purposes.
A handful of nationalities are visa-exempt for Cuba β mostly Caribbean island nations and some CARICOM states. These remain exempt under the new system. If your country appears on Cuba’s visa waiver list, you still don’t need the e-visa. Check with your nearest Cuban embassy if you’re unsure β the list is small and specific.
Cuba’s New e-Visa (2026): What Changed
Cuba announced the move to a digital e-visa system in the summer of 2024 and enforced it from January 1, 2026. The paper tourist card β both the pink version for US-route travelers and the green one for everyone else β is no longer valid. Airlines won’t board you without the e-visa, and Cuban immigration won’t process you with an old paper card.
The good news is that the underlying rules haven’t changed dramatically. It’s still a single-entry permit. It still covers up to 90 days with the same extension process. It still doesn’t go in your passport unless you ask for a stamp (and for Americans who’d rather not have Cuba in their passport, the same option exists). The main difference is process β you do this online before you travel, not at an airport kiosk on the day.
What the e-Visa Actually Is
The Cuban e-visa is a QR code and a unique visa number linked electronically to your passport. It’s issued in PDF format, arrives by email, and is valid for 12 months from issue β so if your trip gets delayed or rescheduled, you don’t need to reapply as long as you travel within that window. The visa number also pre-fills your D’Viajeros entry form (the mandatory digital customs and health declaration β more on that below), which saves one step.
The e-visa system applies to air travelers. If you’re arriving in Cuba by cruise ship, you may still need a paper Green Tourist Card obtained through your cruise line or a Cuban consulate. Check directly with your cruise operator β this part of the rules is handled separately and your ship should handle it for you.
Where to Apply
The official Cuban government e-visa portal is evisacuba.cu. You can apply directly there without going through any third-party agent. Processing takes up to 72 business hours (three working days), and you pay online by card.
There are also authorized third-party providers β including the airline you fly with in some cases, your travel agent, or specialist Cuba travel platforms β who can apply on your behalf, sometimes with faster processing. Canadians should check with their airline first, as several Canadian carriers include the e-visa in the ticket price or process it automatically when you complete the D’Viajeros form six days before departure.
72-hour processing means business days, not calendar days. If you apply on a Thursday before a public holiday, you could be waiting five days or more. Apply at least seven days before your flight to give yourself breathing room, and keep a printed backup of the QR code alongside the digital version on your phone.
Requirements by Nationality
The table below covers the major nationalities and what the 2026 system means for each. This is the situation as of May 2026 β Cuba’s entry rules can shift, so always cross-check with your airline and the Cuban embassy for your country before you travel.
| Nationality / Region | Entry Document | Max Stay | Additional Requirements |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | e-Visa | 90 days | Travel insurance required; D’Viajeros form |
| EU (all member states) | e-Visa | 90 days | Travel insurance required; D’Viajeros form |
| Canada | e-Visa | 90 days | Often included with airline ticket β check at booking |
| United States | e-Visa (US route) | 90 days | Must declare OFAC travel category + travel insurance |
| Australia / New Zealand | e-Visa | 90 days | Travel insurance required; D’Viajeros form |
| Latin America (most) | e-Visa | 90 days | D’Viajeros form; some nationalities visa-exempt |
| Russia / CIS countries | e-Visa | 90 days | Travel insurance required; D’Viajeros form |
| India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka | e-Visa (new 2026) | 90 days | Previously needed consulate visa β now e-visa available |
| Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Ethiopia | e-Visa (new 2026) | 90 days | Previously needed consulate visa β now e-visa available |
| Philippines, Indonesia | e-Visa (new 2026) | 90 days | Previously needed consulate visa β now e-visa available |
| Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen | Consulate Required | Varies | Contact nearest Cuban embassy β special processing applies |
| Cuba (nationals / dual nationals) | Cuban Passport | β | Must enter and exit on Cuban passport by law |
| CARICOM / select Caribbean nations | Visa-Exempt | 30β90 days | No visa required; D’Viajeros form still needed |
Your passport must be valid for at least six months from your date of entry into Cuba, and at least three months from your departure date. Cuba is strict about this β a passport that’s valid but close to expiry can result in boarding denial. Check the date before you apply for your e-visa.
US Travelers: The Extra Layer
Here’s the honest picture: Cuba doesn’t particularly care why you’re there. Cuban immigration will process you, stamp your e-visa (not your passport, if you ask), and welcome you to the island. The complication comes from the US side of this β specifically the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).
US law prohibits purely recreational tourist travel to Cuba. However, OFAC authorizes 12 categories of travel that are legal, and the vast majority of independent American travelers visit Cuba under the “Support for the Cuban People” category. This doesn’t require any license application or prior government approval β you self-certify when booking your flight.
The 12 OFAC Authorized Travel Categories
Family Visits
Visiting close relatives who are Cuban nationals or permanent residents
Support for the Cuban People
Most common category. Requires engaging with Cuban private sector β casas, paladares, private taxis
Educational Activities
Students enrolled in accredited programs or academic research visits
Official Government Business
US government, foreign governments, or intergovernmental organizations
Religious Activities
Church groups on mission trips or organized religious travel
Humanitarian Projects
Medical aid, environmental projects, disaster relief, social support work
Journalistic Activity
Credentialed journalists and media professionals on assignment
Exportation of Information
Documenting and distributing information or informational materials
Medical Research / Treatment
Visiting for medical care or conducting authorized clinical research
Authorized Exports
Travel directly related to authorized US exports of goods or services
Artistic Activities
Musicians, performers, filmmakers, and artists on cultural exchange
Other Authorized Activities
Specific OFAC licenses issued for activities that don’t fit the above categories
What “Support for the Cuban People” Actually Means in Practice
This is the category most independent American travelers use, and it’s worth understanding what it actually requires β not just the theory. The rule is that you must maintain a full schedule of activities that directly benefit Cubans in the private sector rather than the Cuban government. In practice, this means:
- Sleep in casas particulares (private homes), not government-owned hotels like those operated by Gaviota or Gran Caribe chains
- Eat at paladares (privately owned restaurants), not state restaurants
- Use private taxis and transport, not state-run vehicles
- Spend money with private entrepreneurs β independent tour guides, private market vendors, independent musicians
- Keep receipts and a basic log of your daily activities for at least five years β enforcement is minimal, but OFAC audits can happen
Wondering what this looks like day-to-day with real numbers? Our Cuba $50/day budget breakdown shows exactly how to structure your spending across accommodation, food, and transport while staying fully within OFAC’s Support for the Cuban People guidelines.
This is important and widely misunderstood. If you travel to Cuba after January 12, 2021, you are no longer eligible for the ESTA Visa Waiver Program when returning to the US from certain countries. This primarily affects dual nationals or travelers who hold passports from a Visa Waiver Program country (UK, Germany, Australia, etc.). If this applies to you β check before you book. The US Embassy in your other country’s capital can advise.
The Passport Stamp Question
Cuba does not stamp US passports upon entry, provided you ask the immigration officer not to. They will stamp your e-visa document instead, leaving no trace in your passport. This has been standard practice for years and continues under the new system. Ask clearly and politely at the immigration window β they’re used to it.
How to Apply for the Cuba e-Visa
Here’s the full process from start to finish. The entire application takes about 15 minutes once you have your documents in front of you.
Check your passport expiry date
Your passport needs at least six months validity from your Cuba entry date. If it’s close, renew before applying β Cuban immigration will turn you away and your e-visa won’t be refunded.
Sort travel insurance with Cuban medical cover
Cuba requires proof of travel insurance covering medical emergencies. You’ll need your policy number and insurer details when completing the D’Viajeros form. If you don’t have it, you can buy basic cover at Havana airport for around $2β3 per day β but cheaper to sort it before you fly.
Go to evisacuba.cu and complete the application
You’ll need your passport details, travel dates, accommodation address in Cuba (your first night’s hotel or casa particular), and a payment card. The fee varies by nationality and is paid online. Processing takes up to 72 business hours.
Receive your e-visa QR code by email
You’ll get a PDF with a unique QR code and your visa number. Save it to your phone AND print a paper copy. Airlines scan this at check-in. If your phone dies and you have no paper backup, you have a problem.
Complete the D’Viajeros form
This is Cuba’s mandatory online entry declaration β health conditions, items you’re bringing, where you’re staying. Go to dviajeros.mitrans.gob.cu. Your e-visa number pre-fills most of it. After submission you get a QR code β you’ll need this at the Cuban border alongside your e-visa. Save both.
Present e-visa, D’Viajeros QR, passport, insurance
The airline will verify your documents before boarding. They’re legally required to check β airlines are responsible for ensuring passengers have correct entry documents. Have all four things ready and accessible, not buried in your bag.
What the Cuba e-Visa Costs
The price depends on where you’re departing from (not just your nationality) and whether you buy directly from the Cuban government portal or through an intermediary. Here’s a realistic picture:
A significant number of unofficial websites charge $60β$100+ for the Cuba e-visa and either deliver the same document you’d get directly, or deliver nothing at all. The only official portal is evisacuba.cu. If you use a third-party provider, stick to your airline’s own booking process or well-established travel agencies. Never trust a site you found through a Google ad with no verifiable history.
What Happens at Cuban Immigration
Cuban immigration has a reputation for being thorough but not unfriendly. If your documents are in order, it’s usually a straightforward 20β45 minute wait. Here’s what actually happens:
The Process, Step by Step
- Join the foreign visitor queue β not the Cuban nationals line. Signs are in Spanish but the distinction is clear.
- At the window: Hand over your passport, your e-visa QR code (digital or printed), your D’Viajeros form QR code, and your travel insurance documentation if asked.
- Passport stamp: The officer will ask or you can proactively say (in Spanish if possible) that you’d prefer the stamp in your e-visa document rather than your passport. They will comply. Say: “Por favor, no selle mi pasaporte.”
- After immigration: Collect your bags and go through customs. Random bag checks do happen. You’re allowed to bring in reasonable amounts of personal electronics, clothing, and toiletries. Declare large cash amounts (over $5,000 US equivalent) and commercial quantities of goods.
- Keep your e-visa document: You hand one part to immigration on arrival. Keep the rest β you’ll need to surrender it when you exit Cuba. Losing it causes delays at the airport on departure day.
Immigration officers sometimes ask for the name and address of your first night’s accommodation. Have it written down somewhere accessible β not just in a booking app that requires Wi-Fi to open. A note on your phone’s home screen or a printed page works perfectly. New to Havana and not sure where to base yourself? Our ultimate first-timer’s guide to Havana covers every neighborhood, what’s walkable, and how to avoid the most common rookie mistakes.
Extending Your Stay in Cuba
Cuba allows you to extend your e-visa for an additional 90 days β up to a maximum of 180 consecutive days in the country. This is done in person at a Cuban immigration office (InmigraciΓ³n) before your initial 90 days runs out.
- Find the nearest Oficina de InmigraciΓ³n β in Havana, the main one is in Vedado at the corner of Calle 17 and J
- Bring your passport, current e-visa document, and proof of accommodation (a booking or your casa particular’s registration)
- Pay the extension fee of approximately $40β50 USD (paid in cash in Cuba)
- Processing is usually same-day but can take a day β don’t leave it until the last day of your visa
- Canadian and some other nationalities may receive 90-day initial stays by default β verify what your passport got stamped for rather than assuming
Overstaying your Cuban visa β even by a few days β can result in fines, detention at the airport, and complications with future travel to Cuba. The extension process is straightforward and not expensive. Just do it before the deadline.
π Full Pre-Travel Checklist β Cuba 2026
- Passport valid for 6+ months from Cuba entry date
- Cuba e-visa applied for at evisacuba.cu and received by email
- D’Viajeros form completed 6β7 days before departure
- Travel insurance with Cuba medical coverage confirmed
- e-Visa and D’Viajeros QR codes saved on phone AND printed
- Sufficient cash brought in USD, EUR, CAD or GBP
- First night’s accommodation booked and address written down
- US travelers: chosen and noted OFAC travel category
- US travelers: receipt/log system ready for activities
- US travelers: checked ESTA eligibility impact if dual-national
- Return flights booked (immigration may ask to see them)
- Cruise travelers: confirmed paper Green Card through cruise line
“The switch to the e-visa made Cuba’s entry process more modern on paper β but it also means you genuinely cannot wing it anymore. The traveler who shows up at the airport planning to sort the tourist card at the kiosk is going to miss their flight. Sort it a week out, print a backup, and you’ll be fine.”
Frequently Asked Questions
One final thing before you go
Cuba’s entry rules have changed more in the last two years than they did in the previous decade. The e-visa system is the right direction β more modern, easier to track, less paper lost at the bottom of backpacks β but it means the old “sort it at the airport” approach is over.
Apply a week out. Print a backup. Complete D’Viajeros. Bring cash. Have your insurance policy number somewhere accessible.
After that, Cuba does the rest. The immigration queue at JosΓ© MartΓ is actually the easy part β the hard part is leaving. Before you board, the Cuba travel tips every first-timer needs to read covers the on-the-ground realities β currency, SIM cards, safety, and the stuff no visa guide has room for.