
Private Airport Transfers in Cuba
Cuba's international air traffic concentrates on three airports that together cover the three main tourism regions. José Martí International (HAV) in Havana handles the capital's cultural tourism, business travel and most long-haul arrivals from Europe and Latin America. Juan Gualberto Gómez (VRA) in Varadero is the charter-dedicated gateway to the 20-kilometre resort peninsula of Varadero beach. Frank País International (HOG) in Holguín serves the eastern resort coast including Guardalavaca, Playa Esmeralda and Playa Pesquero. Santiago de Cuba (SCU), Camagüey (CMW) and Cayo Coco (CCC) handle secondary tourism volume but sit outside the main three-hub pattern used by most international visitors.
Ground transport in Cuba has its own rhythm and pricing logic. The country's currency landscape shifted dramatically in 2021 when the dual-currency system (CUC and CUP) ended — today the Cuban peso (CUP) is the sole domestic currency but heavily devalued against tourist-denominated pricing, and US dollars and euros circulate informally at tourist-facing venues. Most private transfer operators quote in EUR for price certainty. The Cuban state operates Cubacar, Havanautos, and CubaTaxi formal transport, while particular taxis and the classic American cars (frozen in time from 1950s imports) form the unofficial private sector. Uber does not operate. LocalsRide pre-booking locks an EUR fare at reservation and places a driver at the arrivals meet-and-greet point with a name sign.
Havana (HAV): The Capital Gateway
HAV sits 15 kilometres south-west of central Havana and handles the bulk of long-haul international arrivals — Madrid, Paris, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Mexico City, Panama City, Moscow, Toronto. Terminal 3 handles international traffic; Terminals 2 and 5 run charters and domestic connections. Transfer times to Havana Vieja (the UNESCO old town), Vedado (the 20th-century cultural district) and Miramar (the diplomatic and business zone) run 25 to 45 minutes depending on traffic on the Avenida de la Independencia. Havana is the core sightseeing destination for most first-time Cuba visitors — Plaza Vieja, Plaza de la Catedral, the Malecón, Museo de la Revolución, the Che Guevara memorial in Santa Clara as a day-trip further east.
Varadero (VRA): The Resort Peninsula
VRA is 25 kilometres south-west of the Varadero resort strip itself and 32 kilometres east of Matanzas city. The airport-to-Varadero transfer runs 30 to 50 minutes along the A1 autopista to the peninsula entrance. Varadero's 20-kilometre continuous sand beach is one of the Caribbean's best by pure geography — white fine sand, clear shallow water — and hosts the majority of Cuba's international charter-resort traffic from Canada, the UK, Germany and Russia. The peninsula runs from the town of Varadero at the base to the resort strip along the northern shore with Cayo Santa María visible across the bay. Direct HAV to Varadero transfers (150 km, 2 hours) are common for travellers who land in Havana and move to the resort for beach days.
Holguín (HOG): The Eastern Coast
HOG sits 12 kilometres south of Holguín city in eastern Cuba and is the gateway to the Guardalavaca resort coast 50 kilometres north-east. Transfer times from HOG to Guardalavaca run 50 to 75 minutes through sugar-cane country and the rolling Oriente landscape. The eastern coast has a different profile from Varadero — smaller resort strips, less density, more natural shoreline between properties, and easier access to the Alejandro de Humboldt National Park (UNESCO) and the Playa Pesquero / Playa Esmeralda coves. Holguín city itself is rarely a tourist destination but makes a natural stopover on the way to Baracoa (200 km east) or Santiago de Cuba (150 km south).
Getting Around Cuba
Internal movement between the three airport regions is done either by domestic flight (Cubana, Aerogaviota with light schedules) or by long road transfers. Havana-Varadero is 150 kilometres and 2 hours on the A1 autopista. Havana-Holguín is 700 kilometres — a 9 to 11 hour road trip or a 1.5-hour domestic flight. Varadero-Holguín is 550 kilometres and a similar flight pattern. The Viazul national bus network connects all major cities with reliable schedules but limited luggage capacity. Car rental is available at all three airports but the supply is thin and booking months in advance is usually necessary; rental vehicles are often older Chinese or European models with variable maintenance. Pre-booked private transfers are the standard for most international tourism — the fare locks in EUR at reservation and the driver speaks Spanish with varying degrees of English or other European language skills. Cuba's road infrastructure is adequate on main autopistas and deteriorates sharply on secondary rural roads.
Frequently Asked Questions
What currency should I bring to Cuba and what's accepted for transfers?
Euros are the most practical currency for Cuba at the time of writing — they're accepted at virtually all tourist venues, pre-booked transfers, casas particulares (private guesthouses), and resort hotels. US dollars work but a 10% penalty fee was re-imposed on USD currency exchange in 2020 (reduced in 2023 but still higher-friction than EUR). Canadian dollars are widely accepted in Varadero because of heavy Canadian tourism volume. Bank cards issued by US banks do not work in Cuba due to ongoing sanctions; Mastercard and Visa issued outside the US work at most ATMs in Havana and Varadero but with inconsistent reliability. Bring enough EUR cash to cover the full trip plus a buffer.
Is Airbnb and independent travel practical in Cuba?
Casas particulares — family-run private guesthouses — are the local equivalent of Airbnb and have been legal and regulated since the early 1990s. They're widely used by independent travellers and offer a closer cultural experience than the international resort hotels. Airbnb itself operates a direct marketplace for these properties. Pre-booked airport transfers delivering to casa particular addresses is standard and the driver typically calls ahead on arrival. The address format often relies on landmarks rather than street numbers — "Casa Isabel, Calle Obrapía between Aguiar and Habana, two houses from the corner with the red door" is a normal destination description. Confirm the exact address and landmark with the casa at booking.
Can I rely on a Cuban SIM card and mobile data for navigation?
Cuba's mobile network (ETECSA) is improving rapidly but remains slower and more expensive than most Caribbean networks. Tourist SIM cards are available at HAV, VRA and HOG arrivals for about EUR 15-20 for 1-2 weeks with a few GB of data. Coverage is solid in cities and along main autopistas; rural and resort-coast zones can see drops. Offline Google Maps (downloaded before arrival) is the standard fallback for navigation. Your pre-booked LocalsRide driver does not need you to have active data — communication is via the dispatch-confirmed meeting arrangement with a name sign at the airport.
Is it true that American-plated cars are still common on Cuban roads?
Yes — the 1950s American car fleet is a distinctive feature of Cuban transport, with an estimated 60,000 vehicles still in use. Classic Chevrolets, Fords, Buicks and Oldsmobiles work as private taxis (particulares) particularly in Havana. They're a tourism experience in their own right but not always the most comfortable or reliable transfer option — most have been rebuilt with Soviet or modern Asian engines, variable air conditioning, and older suspension. For a long transfer (Havana to Varadero, HOG to Guardalavaca), a modern SUV or minivan handles heat and distance better. A classic-car city tour is commonly booked as a separate half-day experience rather than as the main airport transfer.
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