
Staying in a Colonial House in Havana: The Best-Preserved Casas
Sixteen-foot ceilings, stained-glass arches, interior courtyards that haven’t changed in two centuries. A field guide to the casas particulares where Spanish colonial Havana still lives β and how to actually book the good ones.
There’s a particular feeling that comes the first time you step through a heavy wooden door on a Habana Vieja side street and find yourself in a courtyard that hasn’t been seriously rebuilt since the Spanish were running the place. Tile floors worn smooth by two centuries of footsteps. A mediopunto β the half-moon stained-glass arch above the door frame β throwing colored light onto a wall. Banana trees in a corner planter. Someone’s grandmother in a rocking chair offering you coffee before you’ve even put your bag down.
This is what staying in a colonial casa particular in Havana actually looks like. Not the Instagram version with the perfectly styled photos, but the lived-in, peeling-in-places, gloriously real version that you cannot get at any hotel in the city, no matter how many stars it has.
This guide covers the 18 best-preserved colonial houses you can sleep in across Havana’s three main neighborhoods, what architectural details actually make a house “colonial” (not all of them do, even when the listing says so), how to book one without getting swapped to a modern apartment at the last minute, and what to expect once you’re inside. Prices, periods, neighborhoods, and the things nobody tells you until you’ve stayed in three or four yourself.
Why a Colonial Casa Beats Any Hotel in Havana
Havana has good hotels. Several of them β the Kempinski, the Packard, the Iberostar Grand β are genuinely fine places to spend money. But none of them are the city’s actual architecture. They’re modern interiors slotted inside historic shells, restored to a standard that’s perfectly comfortable and entirely deracinated. You sleep in a marble bathroom and you could be in any capital with money.
The colonial casa is the opposite proposition. You’re not visiting Havana’s old houses β you’re sleeping inside one. The plumbing is older than you. The mediopuntos in the salon were installed by a family that owned a sugar plantation in 1850. The owner is the great-grandchild of the original household and grew up in the room down the hall. The thing isn’t curated. The thing just is.
It is also, for what you get, the best accommodation value in the Caribbean. A room in a beautifully preserved colonial house in Habana Vieja β high ceilings, antique tile floor, working louvered shutters, breakfast cooked by your hosts β runs $30 to $55 a night. The equivalent experience in Cartagena de Indias, the closest aesthetic comparison anywhere, runs $250 to $400. Cuba’s economic situation has produced this anomaly: staying in a private Cuban home is both the most authentic and the cheapest option on the menu.

A word on definitions before we go further. “Colonial” in the Havana sense means anything built during Spanish rule β which ended in 1898 β and that’s a 400-year window with several distinct architectural periods. Sixteenth and seventeenth-century buildings are rare and mostly museum pieces or institutional. The casas you can actually sleep in tend to be 18th- and 19th-century, which is when Havana’s domestic architecture reached its peak. A few are early 20th century but built in the colonial revival style and indistinguishable from the real thing to anyone who isn’t an architectural historian.
The word casa particular itself just means private home β it’s the licensing category Cuba created in the 1990s for residents legally renting rooms to travelers. Not every casa is in a colonial building. Plenty of them are 1950s apartments in Vedado, modern Centro Habana flats, or recently built additions on top of older houses. What this guide focuses on is the subset that have kept their original colonial bones intact β which is a meaningful minority, not the default.
What “Best-Preserved” Actually Means
Plenty of casas describe themselves as “colonial.” A lot of them aren’t, in any meaningful sense β they’re modern buildings or heavily renovated structures with a colored facade and some old-looking furniture. To know what you’re actually paying for, learn the six elements below. If a casa has at least four of them in their original (not replica) form, you’re looking at the real deal.
Mediopuntos
The half-moon or fan-shaped stained-glass arches above doors and windows. Unique to Cuban colonial architecture. Originals are hand-blown and use specific period colors β emerald, cobalt, amber. Modern replicas exist but look flat by comparison.
Interior Courtyard (Patio Central)
The non-negotiable feature. A central open-air patio with rooms arranged around it, often with a fountain, plants, and a wraparound balcony. If a house doesn’t have one, it’s not a colonial house in the classical sense β it’s a townhouse that came later.
Persianas and Tall Wooden Shutters
Full-length louvered wooden shutters, often nine to twelve feet tall, that open onto interior balconies or the street. They’re functional β Havana’s pre-AC ventilation system β and the originals are made from local hardwoods that haven’t warped in 150 years.
Original Floor Tile (Losas)
Hydraulic cement tiles in geometric patterns β usually black-white-ochre or burgundy-cream. Look for slight wear in the high-traffic spots and tiny variation between tiles. Brand-new replica tile floors look uniform and dead by comparison.
16-Foot Ceilings & Wooden Beams (Vigas)
Original colonial houses have extremely tall ceilings β often 4.5 to 5 meters β with exposed wooden ceiling beams. The height is what makes the rooms tolerable in summer without air conditioning. Drop ceilings or false ceilings are a sign of later renovation.
Original Front Door & ZaguΓ‘n
The zaguΓ‘n is the wide entrance vestibule between the street door and the patio β originally for carriages to pass through. The street door itself is usually a massive double-leaf wooden affair with iron studs and a small inner pedestrian door (the postigo) cut into one side.
When you arrive, walk through the casa with your eyes on the corners and ceilings rather than the furniture. Are the floor tiles original or are they a freshly laid replica pattern? Do the wooden ceiling beams look like one continuous piece of timber or are they decorative cladding? Is there an actual patio open to the sky? You’ll know within sixty seconds whether you’re in a colonial house or a building that was painted to look like one.

The Three Colonial Periods You’ll Encounter
Not every “colonial” house is from the same era, and the differences matter both for atmosphere and for what’s still preserved. The three main periods you’ll find in the casas:
- Early colonial (1600sβ1700s): Heavy walls, small windows, fortress-like proportions. Almost all the surviving buildings of this era are in Old Havana and are mostly museums or government buildings. A few private casas exist in these structures but they’re rare and expensive.
- Late colonial / mid-19th century (the sweet spot): Tall ceilings, big shuttered windows, ornate mediopuntos, central patios. This is the period most “colonial casas” actually belong to. The 1800s in Havana were the wealth era β sugar money paid for some of the most beautiful domestic architecture in the Spanish empire.
- Eclectic and colonial revival (1880sβ1920s): Built after independence but in the colonial style. Some of the most spectacular Vedado mansions belong here. Technically not “colonial” by date, but architecturally part of the same continuum and often the best-preserved because they had more recent solid construction.
Old Havana (Habana Vieja): The Classical Quarter
Old Havana is where the colonial architecture density is highest and where you sleep inside the city’s UNESCO designation. The casas here tend to be smaller β most are within larger subdivided 18th- or 19th-century mansions β but they put you walking distance to everything. The downside is noise. Habana Vieja’s streets carry sound up the canyon walls of tall colonial buildings, and a Friday night in the casa on a busy street can mean music until 3am whether you wanted it or not. The casas below are the ones I’d send a first-time traveler to β quiet enough streets, preserved enough buildings, and hosts who know what they’re doing.
Casa Vitrales
An 1860s townhouse named for the seven original mediopuntos still in place along the main salon β every single one a different color pattern. The patio is small but properly colonial: open to the sky, paved in original black-and-ochre tile, with a working fountain and a banana tree that probably predates the current owner. Five guest rooms occupy the second floor, each with 16-foot ceilings and full-length persianas opening onto the interior balcony. The host family has run this casa for over a decade and breakfast is included β strong Cuban coffee, fresh papaya, eggs, and bread from a bakery two streets over. The rooftop terrace is the secret asset: views over Old Havana’s tile rooftops toward the harbor.
Casa Concordia 418
One of the larger surviving 19th-century townhouses on this stretch β three rooms for rent inside what is genuinely still a family home. The current owner inherited it from her grandmother, who inherited it from her grandfather, who ran a tobacco brokerage on the ground floor (the original counter is still in the entrance hall). What you notice first is the floor: original hydraulic tile in a burgundy and cream geometric pattern, perfectly intact in some rooms and worn to a beautiful patina in others. Ceilings here run almost 18 feet. The guest rooms are at the front of the house with proper street-facing balconies β close the persianas at night for quiet, open them in the morning for the sound of Havana waking up.

Casa Pedro y Sandra
A smaller operation β just two guest rooms β inside a beautifully kept 1840s townhouse two blocks from Plaza Vieja. Pedro is a retired architect who restored the building himself over fifteen years, sourcing replacement tiles from demolished colonial buildings rather than buying replicas. The conversations over breakfast about Havana’s preservation politics are worth the room rate by themselves. The double room on the patio side has its own private bathroom and a view directly across the central courtyard to the original 19th-century well. Sandra cooks breakfast (extra $5) β papaya, eggs, fresh juice, and Cuban toast with mantequilla and honey. Books up months in advance through word of mouth.

Casa San Ignacio
Tucked into one of the most photographed streets in Cuba β the cobbled approach to Plaza de la Catedral β Casa San Ignacio sits inside a late-18th-century townhouse that has somehow stayed in private family hands through every wave of Cuban history. Four rooms surround a small but exquisitely preserved patio. The detail to notice is the wrought-iron balcony railings, which are original colonial-era hand-forged work, not the cast-iron replicas you see elsewhere. The location is the best in Habana Vieja for first-time visitors who want to walk everywhere; the downside is the cathedral-square crowds during the day. Inside the building, however, it’s a different city.

Casa Mercaderes
Three rooms inside an 1830s merchant’s house β the name “Mercaderes” (merchants’ street) is literal here. The host, a retired Spanish teacher, kept everything she could when she renovated: the original cedar doors, the wrought-iron stair railing, the marble threshold worn into a perfect curve at the front entrance. The middle room overlooks the patio and has the casa’s most spectacular feature, a hand-painted ceiling with floral motifs from the original 1830s decoration that came back to light during restoration. Breakfast included and served in the patio.

Casa ObrapΓa 60
The street here is one of the quieter ones in Habana Vieja β no bars, mostly residential, and the casa sits between two restored museum buildings which means good preservation by association. Inside, you get the full classical setup: zaguΓ‘n entrance, patio with original tile and a small fountain, two floors with rooms surrounding the central well of light. The blue-painted facade is the family’s own choice but the interior is largely as it would have been in 1875. Two rooms, both with private bathrooms. The host family runs a cigar workshop on the ground floor which means the breakfast conversation often turns to tobacco and is consistently interesting.
Several of the same kinds of buildings have been turned into small boutique hotels β Hotel Santa Isabel on Plaza de Armas is the most famous. Those are excellent too, but they’re a different experience: hotel service, no host family, polished restoration. The colonial casa is the lived-in version of the same architecture. If you want to compare directly, our street-by-street guide to boutique hotels in Old Havana covers what’s available and how the price points compare.
Centro Habana: The Forgotten Middle
Centro Habana sits between Habana Vieja and Vedado and gets the lowest tourist traffic of the three main neighborhoods. This is to your advantage. The colonial buildings here are often better preserved than the equivalent ones in Habana Vieja simply because they haven’t been worked over by decades of tourist conversions. Many of them are also in worse external condition β peeling stucco, weeds in the cornices β which is part of the look and shouldn’t put you off. The interiors are frequently spectacular. Centro is also where you find the largest concentration of paladares and street life that hasn’t been adjusted for foreign visitors. Walking around Centro Habana at 6pm on a weekday is one of the better things you can do in this city.


Casa Galiano 207
Galiano was the grand commercial avenue of pre-revolutionary Havana, and the upper floors of its 19th-century buildings still hide some of the most preserved colonial interiors in the city. Casa Galiano 207 occupies the entire piano nobile (the main floor above the ground floor) of an 1880s eclectic-style building. Three guest rooms, all with 17-foot ceilings, original mediopuntos in graduated colors along the main salon, and a private street-facing balcony with the running ironwork. The host family has lived here for four generations. Breakfast in the formal dining room (yes, with the original mahogany sideboard) is one of the genuinely special things you can do in Havana for $5.
Casa Industria
A 19th-century building that survived more or less intact through everything β the wars, the Revolution, the Special Period β and which the host’s family has owned since the 1920s. The location is close enough to walk to Habana Vieja in fifteen minutes but quiet enough that you sleep properly. The casa’s signature feature is the floor-to-ceiling persianas in the main bedrooms β twelve feet tall, original wood, working hinges. Opening them in the morning is the kind of thing you remember from a trip. Two rooms, shared bathroom (in colonial Havana houses this is the norm β private en-suites are a modern luxury and sometimes mean you’re not in an authentic colonial layout).
Casa Lealtad
An 1890s eclectic-period townhouse where every room has its original ceiling moldings intact β heavy plaster work, repeated floral motifs, the kind of detail you usually only see in museums. The patio is small but properly designed, with a fountain that the family had restored a few years ago. Three rooms surrounding it. The host couple are both retired teachers and have a small library of books about Havana’s architectural history that they’re happy to walk you through over coffee. The room called El Cuarto Azul (the blue room) has the casa’s best preserved mediopunto, a cobalt-and-emerald fan above the door that throws colored light across the floor in late afternoon.
Casa Manrique 308
A pink-painted 1870s townhouse with one of the better-preserved zaguanes (entrance halls) in this neighborhood β the original wide doors, the floor tile in the entryway, the small inner postigo door cut into the larger one. Two rooms, both with private baths added discreetly in former dressing alcoves so the colonial proportions aren’t disrupted. The host runs a small breakfast operation that locals also use, which means the food is genuinely good and not the standard tourist version. Walking to the MalecΓ³n sea wall takes ten minutes; walking to Habana Vieja takes twenty.

Casa Reina
Avenida Reina was the broadest boulevard in 19th-century Centro and the buildings along it are the most ambitious in the neighborhood. Casa Reina occupies a top-floor flat in one of them, reached by a sweeping marble staircase that’s worth the climb for the staircase alone. Inside, the main salon is one of the highest-ceilinged rooms you’ll sleep near in Havana β easily 18 feet β with a full set of mediopuntos and the original parquet floor in herringbone pattern. Two rooms for rent. The host is a working artist whose work hangs throughout the apartment, which gives the whole place a particular character beyond the colonial bones.
“The first night I stayed in a real colonial casa in Centro Habana, I sat in the patio with the host’s mother drinking coffee at 10pm β the cat asleep on a chair, the smell of jasmine from the courtyard plant, and a salsa band rehearsing two buildings over. I knew within an hour that I’d never book a hotel in this city again. Eight years later I still haven’t.”
Vedado: The Mansion District
Vedado is technically post-colonial in date β most of its grand houses were built between 1880 and 1925 β but architecturally it’s part of the same continuum. The wealth of late-19th-century Havana spilled west out of the cramped colonial center and built itself the kind of mansions you usually only see in cities that were ports of an empire. Many of these are now subdivided, run as casas particulares by descendants of the original families, and represent the absolute peak of accommodation value in the Caribbean. You sleep in a room with parquet floors, fifteen-foot ceilings, and a balcony overlooking a tree-lined boulevard, and pay $40 a night to do it.
Casa Calle 17
A 1910 mansion built by a sugar magnate’s family and still owned by their descendants today. The exterior is colonial-revival stone with neoclassical columns; the interior is a series of high-ceilinged rooms organized around a grand staircase and a stained-glass cupola at the top of the stairwell. Three rooms for rent on the second floor. The host family lives on the third. The main feature you notice is the ceiling height combined with the parquet flooring β these rooms are huge in a way that no purpose-built hotel ever bothers to replicate. Quiet, residential, two blocks from the MalecΓ³n, three blocks from La Rampa’s restaurants.
Casa LΓnea
A green-painted 1905 mansion with a proper front garden β palm trees, a small fountain that doesn’t quite work, a wrought-iron fence. Inside, the layout is classical eclectic: a central salon flanked by formal rooms, a long corridor with original art-nouveau floor tile, and a back patio with a mango tree. Two guest rooms, both at the front of the house with garden views. The host’s grandmother runs the casa and has lived in the building since 1948. Breakfast on the back patio is one of the best in this guide β fresh fruit from the garden trees, eggs from a neighbor’s chickens, and her famous flan if you ask.

Casa Paseo
Avenida Paseo is the broad central boulevard of Vedado, divided by a tree-shaded promenade, and the houses along it are the neighborhood’s most spectacular. Casa Paseo occupies the second floor of an 1898 stone mansion with original parquet, ceiling plasterwork, and a balcony running the full length of the apartment overlooking the boulevard. Three rooms. The middle one (the master) has the building’s most preserved mediopunto and a small private balcony. Walking to Plaza de la RevoluciΓ³n takes fifteen minutes; walking to the Hotel Nacional takes twenty. The host is a working musician and you can often hear quiet practice in the late afternoon, which is more pleasant than it sounds.

Casa Calle G
A 1912 stone mansion on the wide central avenue of Vedado, with the kind of presence that makes you look up when you walk past. The casa occupies the second floor β formal salon with original chandelier still hanging, dining room with the family silver in a glass cabinet, three bedrooms running off a long corridor. The host inherited the building from her great-aunt who lived there alone for forty years before she died, which means everything was preserved by simple lack of disturbance. Two rooms for rent, both enormous, both with the original ten-foot windows. Breakfast is included and served in the formal dining room.
Casa Calzada
An 1899 colonial-revival villa with a small front yard and a back patio with the original brick-and-tile barbecue from the 1920s. Two rooms. The corner room has windows on two sides, both with original wooden shutters, and gets the best afternoon light of any casa in this guide. The host couple are both architects (this seems to happen a lot in Havana β preservation attracts professionals) and they’ve restored the building section by section over twenty years. The casa is unusually well-equipped for a colonial property β reliable hot water, working A/C in the rooms, fast internet β without losing any of the architectural integrity.
If the casas above are full or you want to push outside the obvious neighborhoods, two more come up consistently. Casa Miramar DiplomΓ‘tica (Miramar district, $70β95/night) β a 1920s sea-front mansion in the embassy district, much quieter than central Havana, and with a small private pool that almost no other casa in the city offers. Casa Cerro 1902 (Cerro district, $35β50/night) β a 1902 townhouse in a less-visited working-class neighborhood, with some of the best preserved interior tile work in any private home in Havana. Both reward travelers on second or third Cuba trips. First-timers should stick to the main three neighborhoods.
How to Actually Book a Colonial Casa (Without Surprises)
Cuba’s casa booking situation has shifted considerably in the last two years. Airbnb’s relationship with the country has been turbulent since their 2025 payment freeze, and a lot of casas dropped off the platform entirely. The reliable channels in 2026 are direct email booking, a couple of Cuba-specialized platforms, and the old method β getting a referral from one casa host to another. Here’s what works.
The single most common complaint about Cuba casa bookings is that travelers arrive and are shown to a different property than the one they saw in the listing. This used to be a regular Airbnb issue, less so on direct bookings. The defense is straightforward: in your confirmation email, get the exact street address in writing and explicitly confirm “this is the address I will be staying at.” If on arrival you’re being walked elsewhere, push back firmly and politely. Most legitimate hosts will resolve this on the spot.
The Four Booking Channels Worth Using
- Direct email to the host. Most established colonial casas have direct contact details circulated through Cuba travel forums, Reddit’s r/Cuba, Tripadvisor reviews, and word-of-mouth referrals. This is the most reliable method. You email, the host confirms availability and price, you exchange a few messages to confirm details, you arrive and pay in cash. No middleman, no platform fee, no payment problems.
- Cuba-specialized platforms. A handful of platforms exist specifically for Cuban casas β they tend to have smaller inventories than Airbnb but better reliability. Our guide to Airbnb alternatives for Cuba covers which ones currently work and which to skip.
- Casa-to-casa referrals. The most underused method. Your first casa host almost certainly knows hosts at your next destination β and if they don’t, they know someone who does. This network covers the entire island. Tell your host where you’re going next, ask for a recommendation, and let them make the call. The host who refers you stakes their reputation on the experience being good. The results are noticeably better than booking blind.
- Walk-up bookings. The old-school option that still works. Show up in a neighborhood you like, find a casa with the blue triangle “Arrendador Divisa” sign in the door (the official licensing badge), knock, ask if they have a room. In low and shoulder season this works fine. In peak season (NovemberβApril) you risk wasting a day.
The Questions to Ask Before You Confirm
- “Is this the original colonial building or a renovation?” If the answer is vague, dig deeper. Ask what year the building was constructed. A genuinely preserved colonial casa host will tell you with pride.
- “Are the bathroom and bedroom both in the same flat, or separate?” Some “colonial casa” listings turn out to be shared-bathroom situations that aren’t disclosed clearly.
- “Does the room have air conditioning?” Most do now. A few of the most traditional don’t β fans and persianas only. Either is fine; just know which you’re getting.
- “What’s the breakfast situation?” Most colonial casa breakfasts are excellent and cost $5β8 extra. Confirm this is available β it changes how your morning works.
- “Is the street quiet at night?” Especially important for Habana Vieja casas. A good host will tell you the honest answer.
Every colonial casa in this guide is cash-only. There are no card machines. There are no reliable ATMs in Cuba that accept foreign cards. Every dollar you spend in Cuba β including the entire cost of your accommodation β needs to be physically in your wallet before you board the plane. The mechanics of this are covered in our guide to getting cash in Cuba. Bring euros, Canadian dollars, or UK pounds β they convert at better rates than US dollars.
What a Colonial Casa Stay Actually Looks Like
The mechanics of a casa stay differ enough from a hotel that it’s worth walking through what actually happens day to day. None of this is complicated, but the first time can feel disorienting if you’re expecting hotel-style transactions.
Arrival
You arrive at the building β usually a heavy wooden street door that doesn’t immediately look like accommodation. Ring the bell or knock the iron knocker. Someone comes down. You climb the staircase (most colonial casas are upper-floor flats; ground floors were historically for businesses or staff). The host shows you the room, explains the bathroom situation, points out the kitchen if there’s one you can use, and asks when you’d like breakfast tomorrow. You hand over passport details for the casa’s mandatory registration form. Then they make you a coffee and ask about your trip. The whole arrival sequence takes 20 minutes and ends with you sitting in a patio that is two centuries old.
Breakfast
Most colonial casas include or offer breakfast (usually $5β8 extra). The standard spread is excellent: fresh tropical fruit, eggs cooked to order, Cuban toast with butter and honey, fresh juice (often guava or pineapple), and Cuban coffee β small, strong, sweet. It’s served at a set time, usually between 8 and 9am. Don’t sleep through it. The conversations across the breakfast table are often the best part of the trip.

Daytime
Casas are not hotels and there’s no reception, no concierge, no in-house anything (with a few exceptions). You leave in the morning, do your day, come back when you come back. Hosts will hold your room key, can usually arrange laundry for cheap, will book you a taxi to the airport if you ask, and will steer you toward the better paladares in their neighborhood. Take this advice. Local knowledge is the real value-add of the casa experience and the recommendations are almost always better than anything from a guidebook or TripAdvisor.
The Tipping and Payment Conversation
Pay your nightly rate in cash at the end of your stay (or at the start, if asked β both are normal). Tip if the service warranted it: $2β3 per night extra for hosts who went out of their way, more for longer stays. Breakfast charges are separate and itemized. If you used the casa’s laundry, taxi arrangement, or other services, settle those at the end. No tips are expected from a transactional standpoint, but the conversation about how you found the stay is part of the closing ritual and giving an honest answer means the host can adjust for the next guest.
The Cuban paladar scene β privately-owned restaurants β has exploded in the last decade and most of the genuinely good places in Havana don’t appear in tourist guides. Your casa host knows where to go. Ask. The cheap version of this is also possible: our guide to where locals actually eat covers what to look for and the ten paladares that consistently deliver.
Colonial Casa Quick Reference
| # | Casa | Neighborhood | Period | Price / Night | Stands Out For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Casa Vitrales | Old Havana | 1860s | $50β$70 | Seven original mediopuntos |
| 2 | Casa Concordia 418 | Old Havana | 1840s | $45β$60 | 18-foot ceilings, balconies |
| 3 | Casa Pedro y Sandra | Old Havana | 1840s | $55β$75 | Architect-restored, 2 rooms only |
| 4 | Casa San Ignacio | Old Havana | 1780s | $60β$80 | Near cathedral, original ironwork |
| 5 | Casa Mercaderes | Old Havana | 1830s | $50β$70 | Hand-painted original ceiling |
| 6 | Casa ObrapΓa 60 | Old Havana | 1870s | $45β$65 | Quiet street, cigar workshop |
| 7 | Casa Galiano 207 | Centro Habana | 1880s | $40β$55 | Piano nobile, mahogany dining room |
| 8 | Casa Industria | Centro Habana | 1880s | $35β$50 | 12-foot persianas, best budget |
| 9 | Casa Lealtad | Centro Habana | 1890s | $40β$55 | Plaster ceilings, library |
| 10 | Casa Manrique 308 | Centro Habana | 1870s | $45β$60 | Original zaguΓ‘n, near MalecΓ³n |
| 11 | Casa Reina | Centro Habana | 1890s | $50β$65 | Marble staircase, artist host |
| 12 | Casa Calle 17 | Vedado | 1910 | $55β$75 | Stained-glass cupola |
| 13 | Casa LΓnea | Vedado | 1905 | $50β$70 | Garden, grandmother’s flan |
| 14 | Casa Paseo | Vedado | 1898 | $60β$80 | Boulevard balcony, parquet |
| 15 | Casa Calle G | Vedado | 1912 | $60β$85 | Original chandelier, formal dining |
| 16 | Casa Calzada | Vedado | 1899 | $65β$85 | Architect couple hosts, A/C |
The Things Nobody Tells You
A handful of practical and social conventions are worth knowing about. None of these are make-or-break β Cuban hosts are remarkably forgiving with foreign guests β but observing them turns a good stay into a great one.
- Water is precious. Use it that way. Havana has chronic water supply issues and many old colonial buildings rely on rooftop tanks that refill on a schedule. Long showers are noticed. Five minutes is the polite norm.
- Power is also precious. Cuba has rotating blackouts, particularly in summer. The casa A/C is appreciated by everyone and runs on a finite electrical budget. Turn it off when you leave the room. Open the persianas instead β that’s why they’re there.
- Photography in someone’s home requires asking. The patios and architecture are stunning and you’ll want photos. Ask first. The answer is almost always yes. Don’t photograph hosts or their family members without asking. Don’t photograph anything that looks like it might be private (mail, papers, family photos on side tables).
- Bring gifts if you can. Coffee from your home country, a small bottle of decent perfume, a children’s book in Spanish β anything personal goes a remarkable distance. This isn’t expected but it transforms the dynamic. Hosts remember guests who showed up with something thoughtful for decades.
- Conversations about Cuba are an opportunity, not a minefield. Cuban hosts know more about Cuban politics than any tourist ever will and are mostly happy to talk about it openly, with nuance, without the polarization you’d find from someone watching from outside. Ask thoughtfully and listen.
- The breakfast is not a buffet. Don’t ask for second helpings of the eggs. Food rationing is real and your breakfast was prepared with what was available. If you’re still hungry, eat something more substantial at a paladar later.
π Pre-Arrival Checklist β Colonial Casa Stays in Havana
- Cuba e-visa applied for at evisacuba.cu and received by email
- D’Viajeros entry form completed within 7 days of arrival
- Travel insurance with Cuba medical coverage confirmed
- Cash brought in euros, Canadian dollars, or GBP (not USD if avoidable)
- First night casa booked and address written down
- Backup options noted in case of arrival issues
- Host’s name and phone number saved on phone
- Direct contact email confirmed within last 72 hours
- Total budget for stay calculated and cash brought to cover
- Small gift packed for host (coffee, perfume, book)
- Conservative water and electricity use mentally noted
- Camera/phone settings ready for low-light interior photos
Frequently Asked Questions
One final thing
The colonial casas in this guide aren’t museums. They’re homes. The host families have lived in some of them for four generations and the buildings will outlast all of us. Treat the rooms accordingly β gently, with care for the original tile floors, the working shutters, the small breakfast portions made with whatever was available that morning.
What you’re paying for, at $40 or $60 a night, is not really the room. It’s a temporary place inside a way of living that’s been refining itself in Havana since the 1700s. You’ll spend the rest of your life remembering the morning coffee in a patio open to the sky. The actual cost was almost nothing. The return is hard to overstate.
Sort the e-visa, bring the cash, email the host a week before arrival, and step through the wooden door when you get there. The architecture will do the rest.