Your home in Havana: Airbnb starts offering rentals for some travellers in Cuba
Cuba listing will only be available to US tourists visiting under one of 12 US-government approved categories of legal travel

The popular online home-rental service Airbnb is allowing American travellers to book lodging in Cuba starting today in the most significant US business expansion on the island since the declaration of détente between the two countries late last year.
For a half-century, the US trade embargo had blocked such businesses from entering the Cuban market. In January, however, the Obama administration loosened a series of restrictions on US business in an attempt to encourage the growth of the island’s small private sector.
Airbnb searches for “Cuba” now turn up more than 1,000 properties across the island, with 40 per cent in Havana and the rest in tourist destinations such as Cienfuegos a few hours away on the southern coast. The company has been sending teams of representatives to Cuba for three months to sign up home owners, and plans to expand steadily in coming months.
“We believe that Cuba could become one of Airbnb’s biggest markets in Latin America,” said Kay Kuehne, regional director for Airbnb, the website and mobile app that allows users to book rooms in more than one million private homes around the world.
“We are actually plugging into an existing culture of micro-enterprise in Cuba. The hosts in Cuba have been doing for decades what we just started doing seven years ago.”
One of the most developed and important elements of Cuba’s entrepreneurial sector is a network of thousands of privately owned rooms and houses for tourists.