Cuba may just be the most exciting travel destination
that’s a quick flight away from the United States. But it requires a lot more
advanced planning than its Caribbean neighbors.
There’s
no place in the world like Cuba, particularly right now. Only 103 miles away
from the United States (that’s about the distance between New York City and
Philadelphia), the largest island in the Caribbean has lived through a
complicated estrangement from its nearest neighbor since 1961. What Americans
call “the embargo,” and what Cubans call “the blockade,” has arguably done more
(or at least as much) to shape Cuba’s present as its 1959 revolution. Since
President Obama lifted many of the longstanding travel restrictions for U.S.
citizens when he restored diplomatic ties with Cuba in 2015, Americans are now
able to experience a country that, in the 1950s, they flooded with tourists.
(Now Cuba is probably flooding your Instagram feed.) What has happened since
that high-rolling (and often mob-backed) heyday for American travel is a little
paradoxical: Almost nothing has changed, and almost everything has.
Many Americans describe Cuba as being lost or frozen in
time, and this is true—while Havana is a magnetic, lively city, there’s been
very little new construction since 1959. But Cuba also wears those six decades,
more or less, on its sleeve—the half-century-old cars chugging around the city
neither look, nor sound, new. The ripple effect of U.S.-Cuban relations touches
almost everything having to do with the island, from the paperwork you have to
fill out before your Havana-bound flight to the dearth of shampoo and toilet
paper once you arrive. (We recommend you bring your own.) If relations continue
to thaw, travel will likely become easier for American visitors, but in the
meantime, you’ll get the most out of your Cuba trip if you plan ahead. Here are
all the nitty-gritty, unsexy details you’ll need to know before you leave.
The paperwork
Here’s the good news: All the paperwork you have to do can
be handled at the airport before departure. Tourist travel remains prohibited
for U.S. citizens, but most trips fall under one or more categories of “authorized
travel” permitted by the U.S. government. If you plan, on your visit to
Cuba, to hear live music, you can confidently check off “public performances”
as your reason for travel. If you plan to stay in a “casa particular,”
accommodations provided by a private family, you can check off “support for the
Cuban people.” If you plan to visit a museum, you can check off “educational
activities.”
The Cuban government, on the other hand, welcomes you as a
tourist. Some airlines allow you to purchase your $50 Cuban tourist card, which
you’ll pick up at the airport, ahead of time. Other airlines will sell the card
to you at the airport before your departure (and some will tack on a processing
fee). If filling the tourist card out by hand, write with care—if you cross
anything out, you have to buy a new one. Make sure to keep it somewhere safe:
You’ll present the card upon your arrival in Havana, and again when you leave
the country. If you lose it, you have to buy a new one. Not fun.
The money question
Cuba has two currencies, the CUP—the peso that most Cubans
earn and use—and the CUC—which is linked to the American dollar and which is
what tourists use. (You get one cuck joke. Use it now. Get it out of
your system.) This system exists so that tourists don't inflate costs for
normal Cubans and so that Cubans can charge tourists prices they are used to
paying—creating what's essentially a local price and a tourist price. For
instance, a Cuban might pay the equivalent of 5 cents to go to the Museo
Nacional de Bellas Artes, but an American tourist would pay the equivalent of 5
dollars. Expect to pay in CUCs, and make sure the change you receive is in
CUCs, too.
In Cuba, you can't use credit or debit cards from U.S.-based
banks. (Even if you do have a non-U.S. bank, few places take cards.) This means
you have to bring all your money with you on the plane. And be sure
to ask for new bills from your bank: The Cuban government will not take
wrinkled, torn, or old bills. Cuba also charges a 10 percent fee for American
currency—you can try to get around this by bringing Canadian dollars or euros;
the exchange rates for those will often work out to be less than the dollar
exchange rate plus the 10 percent fee. But do your research, and check exchange
rates before you travel.
So how much should you bring? Havana is cheaper than, say,
New York, but still within the same realm of cost. So, no $15 cocktails, but
expect to pay $3–$8 for a mojito or daiquiri. Taxi rides will likely be your
biggest expense: They can range between $10 and $30 for inter-Havana travel.
Budgets will vary depending on the traveler and the itinerary, but if you have
paid for your lodging ahead of time, planning on $200 per day for two people is
a safe bet, plus another $200 for emergencies. It’s better to bring too much
than too little.
If you want to get to know Cuba you’re going to need to get
to know Cubans. There’s no easier way of doing this on a two-week trip than to
stay in the Cuban version of a B&B, a casa particular. You’ll feel
more like a lodger than a hotel guest, sharing the owners’ living space with
them and, given the national penchant for chat, engaging with them in next to no
time.
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