Outdoor cabaret performance at night with elaborate feathered costumes and tropical garden stage lighting in Havana
Tropicana Cabaret Havana · 2026 Price Guide

Tropicana Cabaret Havana Price: What It Actually Costs in 2026

The Tropicana is one of the most famous nightclub shows on earth. It’s also one of the most expensive single evenings you’ll spend in Havana. Here’s what the different ticket tiers include, what gets added to the bill, and whether the price holds up against the experience.

✦ 2026 Price Tiers Detailed ✦ What’s Included vs Extra ✦ Honest Worth-It Verdict

The Tropicana opened in December 1939 and has been running every night since — except during the worst of the Special Period in the 1990s — through revolution, economic collapse, hurricanes, and a global pandemic. That continuity is itself remarkable. The show has evolved, the performers have changed, but the fundamental proposition has remained constant: an outdoor cabaret under the Cuban night sky, elaborate costumes, live music, and rum. It’s the longest-running cabaret show in the western hemisphere and, for a lot of visitors, one of the defining memories of a Havana trip.

The price has kept pace with the experience. Attending the Tropicana is one of Havana’s most expensive tourist activities — the entry tier starts at around $90 per person and runs well above $120 depending on what package you choose and when you go. This guide breaks down exactly what each tier includes, what gets added to the bill during the evening, and — most importantly — whether it actually delivers enough to justify the cost in 2026.

$90–140
Per person price range — entry tier to premium package in 2026
1939
Year the Tropicana opened — the longest-running cabaret in the Americas
2hrs
Show duration — starting at 10pm most nights
200+
Performers in the full cast including dancers, musicians, and acrobats
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What Is the Tropicana Cabaret?

The history, the setting, and what makes it different from every other cabaret show in the world

The Club Tropicana opened on December 31, 1939 on what was then the western outskirts of Havana — a tropical garden venue designed by Max Borges Recio, whose 1951 architectural renovation introduced the arched concrete roof shells that still define the main stage. The specific genius of the Borges design is the integration of the real tropical garden into the performance — the stage is under concrete arches open on three sides, the performers pass through the garden paths between numbers, and the trees themselves are incorporated into the choreography.

Before the revolution, the Tropicana was the most famous cabaret in the Caribbean — the casino and club that attracted Meyer Lansky, Frank Sinatra, Nat King Cole (who performed here), Edith Piaf, and every international celebrity who passed through Cuba during the 1950s. After the revolution, the casinos were closed and the foreign ownership ended, but the state chose to continue the Tropicana specifically — it was too culturally significant and too economically useful as a tourism asset to shut down. The result is that the Tropicana has operated continuously for more than 85 years under three different political and economic systems, and its current form is the direct descendant of the pre-revolution original.

“The Tropicana is not kitsch and it’s not retro — it’s a living institution that happens to be 85 years old. The dancers performing tonight trained at the same school as the ones performing in 1975. The arches are exactly what Borges built. The rum is better than it was before the revolution.”

Outdoor tropical garden stage at night with coloured lighting and elaborate stage set dressed for a Havana cabaret show
The Tropicana’s outdoor stage under the iconic concrete arches — the setting is as much part of the experience as the performance. The tropical garden surrounds the audience on all sides. Photo: Unsplash

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Tropicana Havana Ticket Prices 2026: What Each Tier Includes

The three ticket categories, what’s included in each, and what you’ll pay on top

🎭 2026 Ticket Price Tiers

Entry Tier
$90
per person
Show admission · One bottle rum (shared, table) · One bottle water · Seat allocation standard zone · No dinner
Premium Tables
$130–140
per person
Best seating (front/centre) · Dinner · Two bottles rum (shared) · Mineral water · Welcome cocktail · Priority entry
⚠️
The price on the ticket is not the total cost of the evening

The ticket price covers admission, the stated rum allocation, and dinner if you’ve chosen that tier. What’s not included and routinely adds to the bill: additional drinks beyond the allocation (a bottle of rum at the Tropicana bar runs $15–25), the cigar you’ll be offered on arrival ($8–15), photographs with performers after the show ($5–10 per photo), and transport to/from the venue (the Tropicana is in Miramar, not walkable from most Havana accommodation). A couple doing the standard show without dinner, booking through a hotel, and taking two taxis, can reasonably expect to spend $250–300 total for the evening. Budget accordingly.

What the rum allocation actually means

The ticket price includes a shared bottle of Havana Club rum on the table — one bottle between the people in your group. This sounds generous, but a 700ml bottle at a table of four works out to roughly 175ml per person, which is about two drinks each at a standard pour. For most people, this is not sufficient for a 2-hour show. Additional bottles are available from the table service at prices that are high by Cuban standards but reasonable by international cabaret standards. The premium tier includes two bottles of rum, which is adequate for most groups.

How prices vary: hotel booking vs direct

Booking ChannelEntry TierStandard + DinnerPremiumNote
Direct at Tropicana box office$85–90$105–110$130–135Lowest price
Hotel concierge booking$100–110$115–125$140–15510–15% premium
Tour operator package$110–120$125–140$145–160Usually includes transport
Street scalpers outside venueVariableVariablen/aApproach cautiously — some fake
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Book directly at the box office for the best price

The Tropicana box office accepts bookings up to a week in advance. If you’re in Havana, visit the box office in the afternoon (the venue is in the Marianao district of Miramar — 30 minutes by taxi from Old Havana) and book directly for that evening or a later one in your stay. The direct price is consistently the lowest, and you can see the seating chart and choose your table position. Peak nights (Friday and Saturday) book out the best tables earliest; weekdays have better availability and sometimes cheaper walk-up prices. See how to get cash in Cuba first — the box office is cash-only.


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What to Expect: The Show, the Venue, and the Full Evening

Timeline of a Tropicana night — what happens when, and what the experience actually feels like

The evening runs on a standard timeline. Doors open at 9pm (for dinner bookings) or 9:30pm (show-only). The dinner service runs 9–9:45pm for those who’ve booked it; the show starts at 10pm and runs approximately two hours without an intermission. After the show, there’s typically a shorter set from a live band in the main garden area. The venue closes by 1am most nights.

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The Stage and Venue

The performance space is the original outdoor garden — the Max Borges arches, the tropical trees, the garden paths where dancers emerge and retreat throughout the show. The seating is tiered tables around the central performance area. The experience of being outdoors under real Cuban sky while watching a full-production cabaret is one of the things that distinguishes the Tropicana from any indoor equivalent.

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The Costumes

The Tropicana is famous for its costumes — elaborate feathered headdresses, rhinestone bodysuits, and choreographed costume changes throughout the show. The costume workshop employs a full-time team whose work is visible in every number. The more expensive tables are positioned to see the headdresses at their full height; at the furthest standard tables, some of the detail is lost. This is part of the seating premium’s value.

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The Music

The Tropicana has its own orchestra — a full big band augmented with specific Cuban percussion. The music ranges from classic Cuban son and mambo to more contemporary salsa and timba across the show’s two hours. The musical quality is genuinely high; the Tropicana is one of the better venues in Havana to hear a full-scale Cuban orchestral performance.

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The Dancers

More than 200 performers are involved in a full Tropicana production, though not all perform on the same night. The dancers are trained at Cuba’s national performing arts schools and hold one of Havana’s most sought-after performance positions. The technique level is universally high; individual numbers feature acrobatics, partner work, and precision ensemble choreography.

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The Dinner (If Booked)

The dinner served before the show is a set three-course menu — typically a soup or salad, a protein main (chicken or pork), and dessert. The food quality is above average Cuban state-restaurant standard but not at the level of Havana’s best paladares. It exists primarily to fill the time between arrival and showtime while providing a revenue stream; eat a proper dinner at a paladar before arriving if food quality is important to you.

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After the Show

After the main performance, a live band typically plays in the Arcos de Cristal section of the garden for 30–60 minutes. This is the informal, more genuinely Cuban part of the evening — tables can order additional drinks, some guests dance, and the performing staff mingle with the audience for photographs. The post-show section is included with your ticket; it’s when the evening relaxes from production into something more spontaneous.


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How to Book and Get to the Tropicana

Dress code, transport, and the practical details that most guides skip past

Booking options

  • Direct at the box office — visit in the afternoon of the day you want to attend, or book up to a week ahead. Walk to the venue by taxi (30 minutes from Old Havana) and book at the reception. Cash only. This is the cheapest and most reliable method.
  • Through your casa host — most casa hosts know how to arrange Tropicana tickets and often have relationships with the booking desk. The price will be slightly above direct but they handle the logistics. For groups of four or more, the casa host route is often worth the small premium for the convenience.
  • Hotel concierge — available but the most expensive channel. Reserve for situations where the hotel concierge can guarantee specific table locations that matter for your group (accessibility, best views).

Getting there

The Tropicana is located on Calle 72 in the Marianao area, which is in the Miramar direction — approximately 7km from Parque Central in Old Havana. This is not walkable and the venue is not on any useful public transport route. Transport options: private taxi (negotiate $12–18 each way), classic car hire for the evening (adds to the atmosphere and photograph opportunities), or a tour operator transfer included in a package. Always pre-arrange a pickup time with your taxi driver after the show rather than trying to flag one on the street outside at midnight — Tropicana-area taxis at show-end time apply a premium and the competition is high.

Dress code

The Tropicana has a smart dress code — no shorts, no flip-flops, no athletic wear. The expectation is smart casual at minimum; many visitors dress more formally. This is one of the occasions in Havana where the dress code is taken seriously and enforced at the entrance. Women in dresses or smart separates and men in trousers with a collared shirt is the minimum that will get you in without question. The premium seating area is somewhat more strictly enforced than the standard sections.

🎭 Tropicana Night Checklist

  • Tickets booked: direct box office or casa host
  • Cash for tickets, extra drinks, tips, transport
  • Taxi arranged both ways — agree return pickup time
  • Dress code: smart — no shorts, no flip-flops
  • Dinner plan before arrival (paladares are better)
  • Arrive 30 min before show starts (9:30pm latest)
  • Camera/phone ready for post-show photos with performers
  • Budget for extras: cigars, additional rum, photos
  • Power cut contingency: Tropicana has generators — show runs regardless

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Is the Tropicana Worth the Price? An Honest 2026 Assessment

What you actually get for $90–140 per person — and who it suits best

The Tropicana is a complicated value proposition. At $90–140 per person plus transport and additional drinks, an evening for two comfortably costs $250–300. In a country where you can eat extremely well for $10–15 and where outstanding live salsa music is often free on street corners, that’s a significant spending decision that deserves honest analysis.

The case for it: the Tropicana is genuinely unique. There is no comparable experience anywhere in the Caribbean or Latin America — an outdoor cabaret of this production scale, this historical continuity, and this performance quality doesn’t exist elsewhere. The setting (the garden, the arches, the real Cuban night air) cannot be replicated indoors. The costumes and choreography are the result of generations of craft accumulated in a single institution. This is an experience, not just a show. The case against: for some travellers, the theatrical experience — which is fundamentally a staged, tourist-oriented production — feels disconnected from the authentic Cuba they came to find. The audience at the Tropicana is predominantly international tourists; the Cuba of casa particulares, street music, and paladares conversations is not in that audience. If what you’re seeking is authentic Cuban nightlife, the Tropicana is not it.

Type of TravellerTropicana Value?Reasoning
First-time Havana visitor (any budget)Yes — onceThe experience is genuinely extraordinary and historically significant
Honeymoon or anniversary coupleStrong yesThe premium tables, the setting, and the occasion make it a perfect splurge
Budget backpackerOnly if it’s a priority$90+ is a significant chunk of a budget trip; can be planned around
Traveller seeking authentic Cuban cultureWith expectations managedThe Tropicana is real Cuba but the tourist-facing version; supplement with Malecón evenings
Repeat Havana visitorOnce is enoughThe show doesn’t change significantly year to year; one visit covers the experience
US citizen with OFAC restrictionsFully compliantCultural performances are explicitly permitted under all Cuba travel authorisations

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Alternatives to the Tropicana: Havana Nightlife at Every Price

From free street music to formal cabarets — the full range of Havana evening options

The Tropicana is not Havana’s only nightlife option. It’s not even the only cabaret. For travellers who want Cuban live performance without the Tropicana’s price point, or who want to complement one Tropicana evening with something more genuinely local, these are the alternatives that work.

  • Casa de la Música (Galiano, Vedado) — the most popular salsa venue in the city for both tourists and Habaneros. Live bands from 10pm, entry $5–15 depending on the act, genuinely mixed Cuban and tourist crowd. This is where you find the real Havana dancing scene. Thursday–Sunday nights are the best.
  • Fabrica de Arte Cubano (FAC) — a converted arts complex in Vedado that combines contemporary art exhibitions with live music, film screenings, and DJ sets across multiple indoor spaces. Entry $2–5. The most contemporary, mixed, and intellectually interesting of Havana’s nightlife venues. Best Thursday–Saturday from 9pm.
  • El Palenque (Callejón de Hamel) — the Sunday rumba sessions at Callejón de Hamel are free and represent the most culturally authentic weekly performance in Havana. Afro-Cuban religious music, drumming, and dance starting at 11am on Sundays. Not a nightlife option but the best value performance in the city.
  • Copa Room at Hotel Nacional — the Hotel Nacional has its own cabaret show in the Copa Room, at roughly $35–45 per person. Lower production values than the Tropicana, more tourist-friendly atmosphere, and significantly cheaper. A reasonable alternative for travellers who want the cabaret experience without the Tropicana price.
  • The Malecón at night — completely free, the most authentic evening in Havana, and the experience that most Havana visitors remember longest. Walk the seawall from 8pm onward, find the musicians, join the conversations, watch the city at night. Zero cost. See free things to do in Havana for more.

Planning Everything Else Around Havana and Cuba


Frequently Asked Questions

What travellers ask most about the Tropicana price, booking, and experience
What is included in the Tropicana ticket price and what’s extra?
The entry-level ticket ($85–90 direct) includes show admission, one shared bottle of rum on your table, and one bottle of water. Dinner is not included unless you’ve specifically purchased the dinner package ($105–110+). What you’ll typically spend on top of the ticket: transport to and from the venue (a taxi each way from Old Havana costs $12–18), additional drinks beyond the one included bottle, cigars offered on arrival ($8–15), and photographs with performers after the show ($5–10 each). A couple doing the base-tier entry, round-trip taxis, two additional bottles of rum, and photographs with performers is likely to spend $280–320 total.
Is the dinner at the Tropicana worth booking?
For most visitors, no — not because the dinner is bad (it’s adequate) but because the price difference between an entry ticket and a dinner ticket ($15–20 per person) is better spent at a proper Havana paladar before the show. The dinner at the Tropicana is a set menu designed to fill the 9–9:45pm window before the 10pm show; it’s not the reason to go. The exception: if you’re arriving directly from the airport or from another city and the Tropicana dinner is genuinely the most convenient meal option, the quality is sufficient. See Havana’s best paladares for better pre-show dining options.
Do I need to book in advance or can I turn up on the night?
Walk-up on the night is possible, particularly on weeknights. The best tables — front rows and centre positions — sell out earliest, so walk-up guests are seated in remaining positions which are often at the edges or further back. For Friday and Saturday nights in peak season (December–April), advance booking is strongly recommended for any seat, as the show fills completely. The ideal is to book directly at the box office 1–3 days before your preferred evening. If you’re booking through a hotel concierge or tour operator, they can often reserve specific table positions that aren’t available to walk-ups.
What happens if it rains? Is the Tropicana outdoors?
The main performance area is under the Max Borges concrete arches, which provide significant shelter, but the venue is open on three sides and rain does reach parts of the audience and the performance area. In heavy rain, the Tropicana typically moves the show to the covered Arcos de Cristal section of the venue, which has lower capacity — some performances are cancelled or partially curtailed in severe weather. This is relevant primarily for visits in Cuba’s wet season (June–October). November through April rarely has this problem — the dry season produces clear skies most evenings. The Tropicana does not offer refunds for weather-related adjustments, which is worth knowing when booking during rainy season months.
Is the Tropicana appropriate for children?
The Tropicana is a cabaret — the costumes are elaborate and revealing, and the performances include adult themes appropriate to the cabaret genre. The show is not explicitly prohibited for children and some families do attend, but the late start time (10pm), the predominantly adult-tourist audience, and the cabaret content make it more appropriate for adults and older teenagers. Children under 12 are not admitted. For families specifically, the Cuba travel guide covers better options for families with children in Havana.
Can US citizens legally attend the Tropicana?
Yes. Cultural performances — including cabaret shows and live entertainment — are explicitly permitted under all OFAC Cuba travel authorizations. The Tropicana is a cultural institution and attending it is specifically the kind of activity the “Support for the Cuban People” and educational/cultural exchange categories are designed to include. Keep your receipt as documentation of a cultural expenditure. There is no separate license required to attend a performance at a Cuban cultural venue.

The Tropicana is worth exactly what you make it worth

At $90–140 per person, the Tropicana is not cheap by any Cuban standard. But it’s also genuinely irreplaceable — there is no other outdoor cabaret of this age, this scale, and this quality anywhere in the Caribbean, and the combination of the tropical garden, the live orchestra, the elaborate productions, and the Cuban night air makes for an evening that’s difficult to compare to anything else.

Book the standard tier with show-only if you’re budget-conscious — the entry ticket gives you the full experience. Eat at a paladar before arriving rather than paying for the dinner package. Pre-arrange a taxi both ways rather than scrambling for transport after midnight. And sit in the front third if you can — the headdresses are designed for proximity, and the performers who pass through the aisles during numbers come close enough to touch the tables. The people who remember the Tropicana most clearly are the ones who sat close enough to see the sweat on the dancers.

Published on hotelhavanaerror.com | 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 — a city that fuels his love for storytelling every single day.

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