News

Travel to Cuba has gotten more difficult – and more confusing – for Americans and travelers under US jurisdiction. Here’s what we know about the most significant effects on travelers of the ...
Cuba has long been a metaphorical forbidden fruit due to political rifts. A web of travel restrictions imposed in the 1960s made it difficult for Americans to make the journey, an idea that still ...
Tourism to Cuba will likely drop 8.5% this year in the wake of tighter U.S. restrictions on travel to the Caribbean island, the government said on Thursday and the decline in arrivals will further ...
Confusion swirled after the Trump administration on Tuesday ended the most popular forms of U.S. travel to Cuba, banning cruise ships and a heavily used category of educational travel in an ...
Cuba’s fledgling private sector, including cab drivers, tour guides, souvenir sellers and shop owners, is hurting from the Trump administration's travel restrictions on Americans.
On April 19, Raul Castro is expected to step down as president of Cuba and be replaced by Vice President Miguel Díaz-Canel – a move not expected to impact the dearth of U.S. visitors to Cuba.
The most dramatic changes are the elimination of cruise visits and people-to-people trips. But while the U.S. government has closed some windows, the door to Cuba remains open a crack.
The reclassification of the travel advisory to Cuba came shortly after the Congressional Research Service issued a memo detailing the detrimental effects of the reduced U.S. staff in Havana.