Havana rates as a Budget destination for nomads, with an estimated all-in monthly cost of $1,100 for a comfortable single-person setup. Internet averages 30 Mbps in central neighborhoods, with stronger lines available at coworking spaces and most newer apartments. The city sits in Central America & Caribbean and works best as a medium-stay or seasonal base rather than a quick stop.
Remote Work Snapshot
Cost of living breakdown
The numbers below are sensible 2026 estimates for a single remote worker living comfortably — a private one-bedroom in a walkable central neighborhood, eating a mix of home-cooked and restaurant meals, with a coworking membership and modest social spending. Couples and families should expect housing to roughly double and food to add 50% rather than 100%. For a sanity check, cross-reference our numbers against the Numbeo entry for Havana.
| Category | Monthly estimate (USD) |
|---|---|
| Rent (1-bed, central, monthly) | $495 |
| Groceries and home cooking | $198 |
| Eating out and coffee | $154 |
| Coworking / work setup | $88 |
| Local transport | $55 |
| Other (gym, social, buffer) | $110 |
| Total | $1,100 |
Internet and work setup
Internet in Havana is workable but uneven. Standard video meetings, document work, and code editing run fine in most central locations; large uploads and high-definition streaming are sometimes painful. Check the actual line at your apartment and have a mobile data backup activated for important calls.
Cafes to work from
Cafe culture in Havana is more about coffee than co-working — laptop-friendly spots exist but they're scattered rather than concentrated. The pattern that works here: identify two or three reliable spots in your neighborhood, become a regular, and treat your apartment or a coworking space as the primary work base with cafes as a change of scenery. Power and Wi-Fi quality vary widely between venues; verify both on a short visit before committing to a four-hour session.
The actual list of standout cafes in Havana changes faster than any guidebook can keep up with — new openings, ownership changes, and policies shift. Use the framework from our cafe scouting guide to evaluate the current best spots in your specific neighborhood. Look for the four-criterion filter: stay-ability, accessible power, video-call-grade Wi-Fi, and a reasonable acoustic floor.
Coworking spaces
Coworking infrastructure in Havana is limited but improving. There's typically one or two reliable spaces in the central area, used by a small but tight community of long-stay remote workers. Day passes are cheap; the 'community' aspect depends entirely on whether you show up regularly. If your work needs heavy infrastructure or constant team calls, plan to lean more on a private apartment than on a coworking-default workflow. The Coworker.com listing for Havana is the most reliable starting point for current spaces and day-pass pricing.
Neighborhoods to stay in
For a first stay in Havana, focus on the central, walkable districts — they cost more per square meter but pay for themselves in time saved on transit and proximity to working amenities. As you settle in for longer, the second-ring neighborhoods often offer 20–40% savings on rent without dramatically compromising the daily routine. Ask for recommendations from people who've stayed at least 60 days; short-term-rental review platforms tend to over-index on tourism districts.
Best time to visit
Havana is workable year-round for most remote workers, though the shoulder seasons typically offer the best mix of weather, prices, and lighter tourist crowds. Local seasonality matters — events, school holidays, and weather extremes can shift both the cost of housing and the experience of daily life. A two-week scouting visit before committing to a longer stay is almost always worth the airfare.
Visa and stay length
Visa rules for Cuba change regularly and depend on your passport — verify the current entry requirements on the IATA Travel Centre before booking. The general framework from our visa strategy guide applies: figure out your maximum visa-free stay, then decide whether the city deserves a longer-term visa application or remains a shorter rotation in a multi-city year.
Is Havana right for you?
Havana tends to work best for nomads who want a low burn rate and are willing to invest some setup time in finding the right neighborhood and apartment. If your work involves heavy real-time collaboration, double-check the timezone overlap with your team before committing to more than a month here. For a wider shortlist, see our roundup of other cities in Central America & Caribbean or compare directly against the best overall cities for remote workers.