Cuba is still one of the most rewarding destinations in the Caribbean—culturally rich, safe to travel with the right preparation, and full of warm human moments you don’t find anywhere else. But if there’s one thing that can create stress for travelers, it’s money in cuba.

In January 2026, Cuba’s payment environment continues to evolve. What worked two years ago may not work today, and what works today may change again depending on government policies, currency availability, and local conditions. This guide is designed to keep things simple and practical: what cash to bring, where to exchange it, and how to plan so you never get stuck.

This guide will provide insights into managing money in cuba effectively.

At Marysol Travel, our rule is straightforward: cash planning is part of trip planning. If you prepare properly, Cuba becomes easy again.

The Core Reality: Cash Still Wins in Cuba

Even in 2026, Cuba remains a destination where cash is the most reliable option for day-to-day travel spending—especially outside large hotels and the most internationalized venues.

You will use cash for:

  • tipping
  • private restaurants (paladares)
  • taxis
  • small shops and markets
  • local guides and small services
  • many add-ons and spontaneous purchases

Cards may work sometimes (depending on issuer and network), but they are not dependable enough to be your only plan. The U.S. Embassy still advises U.S. travelers that U.S. credit/debit cards cannot be used in Cuba and to bring sufficient cash.

What Changed: The January 2026 Exchange-Rate Update (and Why You Felt “MLC is not valid”)

Cuba’s government has been moving further into partial dollarization, meaning more transactions—especially in certain state-linked stores and services—are oriented toward foreign currency flows. (OnCubaNews)

The most important recent change for “money in Cuba” is that Cuba’s Central Bank introduced a new official floating exchange rate in addition to existing official rates. According to the Caribbean Council briefing, the reform created three regulated official segments:

  • a new official floating rate, launched at 410 CUP per USD, and by 2 January 2026 reported at 466 CUP per USD (and 396 CUP per EUR). (The Caribbean Council)

In practice, this explains why travelers are hearing “everything changed.” The same Reuters reporting also describes the street rate hovering around the mid-400s, while multiple official rates still exist. (Reuters)

What about MLC?

MLC has been losing relevance as the system shifts toward “real” foreign currency accounts and more direct USD-based operations, and many travelers and Cubans describe it as effectively “dead” in day-to-day usefulness even if parts of the system haven’t disappeared overnight. The OnCuba analysis notes that new “real foreign currency accounts” appear to be replacing MLC accounts in practice, though the regulations and official confirmation remain complex. (OnCubaNews)

For travelers, the takeaway is simple:

  • Do not build your payment plan around MLC.
  • Plan around cash (USD/EUR) and CUP for daily spending, plus a backup card only if you’re non-US and you’ve verified it works.

USD vs EUR: Which Cash Should You Bring?

Bringing USD: Pros

  • Increasingly accepted in some tourism-linked and “dollarized” settings, especially where prices are effectively pegged to USD.
  • Very useful as a “universal” hard currency for emergencies and backup spending.
  • Familiar for many vendors who price informally in USD even when paid in CUP.

Bringing USD: Cons

  • Policies and acceptance points can shift. Some places accept USD cash; others insist on CUP; some have their own rules.
  • You may still need CUP for daily life even if you carry USD.

Bringing EUR: Pros

  • EUR is widely recognized and often practical for European travelers.
  • Depending on the official segment being used, EUR can sometimes exchange favorably—especially if the floating official EUR rate is applied (reported at 502 CUP per EUR on 24 Jan 2026). (The Caribbean Council)
  • Useful if your home banking and cash access is Euro-based.

Bringing EUR: Cons

  • In smaller towns, some vendors are more comfortable handling USD than EUR.
  • You may sometimes get better day-to-day simplicity with USD.

Marysol Travel rule of thumb (simple and effective)

For most travelers, especially EU clients:

  • Bring mostly EUR or USD (your preference) as your “main reserve”
  • Plus a mix of small denominations
  • And plan to exchange into CUP for local spending

If you want maximum flexibility:

  • 60–70% USD + 30–40% EUR (or the reverse if you’re Euro-based) works well in real travel life.

Where to Exchange Money in Cuba

1) CADECA exchange houses

CADECA is the official exchange network used widely by travelers. Their website describes foreign currency exchange services and notes that exchange is done at the day’s rate. (cadeca.cu)

2) Banks

Banks can exchange as well, but queues and availability vary.

3) Airports

CADECA notes that certain airports have multifunction ATMs/services supporting currency exchange (including EUR?CUP in listed locations). (cadeca.cu)
Airports are convenient for a first amount (taxis + first day), but it’s still wise to exchange the bulk in town if queues are better.

4) Hotels

Some hotels exchange money, but the rate and fees are not always the best, and availability can fluctuate.

Important warning (for client safety and your liability)

Many travelers hear about “street rates.” They exist, and the numbers are often higher—but they carry legal, scam, and counterfeit risk. For a tour operator, the safest policy to communicate is:

  • Use official exchange points (CADECA/banks/hotels) unless you have formal legal guidance to recommend otherwise.

How Much Cash Should Travelers Bring?

This depends on itinerary style, but here’s a practical guide:

Comfortable daily spend (typical)

  • €40–€80 / day per person for meals, drinks, tips, taxis, small purchases
    (Varies by city, comfort level, and how many meals are included.)

Higher-spend travelers

  • €80–€150 / day per person for frequent private restaurants, frequent taxis, premium experiences, heavier tipping.

Best practice

Bring:

  • enough cash for the entire trip, plus
  • a 10–20% buffer for price variability and unexpected needs.

The U.S. State Department also explicitly advises bringing USD or EUR and exchanging at authorized sources, and warns that Cuban policies can change—so having a cash buffer is smart.

Card Payments: What Travelers Should Know

If your client is U.S.-based

Assume cards won’t work. Plan cash only.

If your client is EU/UK/Canada-based

Some non-U.S. Visa/Mastercard cards can work in certain hotels/ATMs—but reliability varies. Your safest guidance as a tour operator:

  • treat cards as backup only
  • confirm with the bank before departure
  • still bring sufficient cash

A Simple “Marysol Travel” Money Plan (The Calm Checklist)

  1. Bring USD or EUR cash (with small denominations).
  2. Exchange a first amount to CUP on arrival for immediate expenses.
  3. Keep a second reserve in USD/EUR for flexibility.
  4. Do not rely on cards; treat them as backup.
  5. Use official exchange points (CADECA/banks/hotel desks).
  6. Budget with a buffer because pricing and payment rules can shift locally.

Closing note: What we tell Marysol Travel clients

Cuba’s currency situation can look confusing online because multiple exchange rates and payment rules can exist at the same time. The good news is that travel remains straightforward if you plan correctly: carry enough cash, exchange responsibly, and keep small denominations for daily life.

Our teams on the island monitor practical changes continuously, and if anything affects on-the-ground payments in a specific destination (Havana vs. Trinidad vs. Varadero vs. Viñales), we brief clients in advance and help them plan accordingly.

Marysol Travel — Discover Cuba Beyond the Postcard.

 

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