Airbnb Starts Listing Homes In Cuba; Average Rate Is $43 A Night

JEK

Senior Insider
Airbnb Starts Listing Homes In Cuba; Average Rate Is $43 A Night


APRIL 02, 2015 9:22 AM ET
BILL CHAPPELL

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A new section of the Airbnb home rental site shows places available for short-term stays in Havana.

Airbnb


Less than three months after the U.S. announced it will ease travel to Cuba, home rental site Airbnb is listing properties in the island nation. The average price for a room or home in Havana is currently $43. The company says it's starting out with more than 1,000 listings.
A look at the offerings Thursday morning found everything from "beautiful colonial rooms for rent in the heart of Havana" for $27 a night to a "a holiday sanctuary" chalet on the outskirts of Havana that can accommodate 10 guests for $1,000. It includes a pool.
Airbnb says its short-term rental service will help Cubans capitalize on a tradition of sharing their homes with travelers.
Announcing the move, the company says:
"Hospitality isn't a commodity in Havana — it's a way of life. Cubans have been welcoming visitors into their homes for decades. Casas particulares — a network of private homestays — have been a popular choice for visitors, as well as an important source of income for thousands of Cuban families."

But travel writer Simon Calder tells the BBC he thinks the service might hit some snags in Cuba for two reasons: Hosts will not want to share their profits with a third party, and they could also have a hard time staying up to date on reservations and requests, due to the country's slow Internet service and spotty Web access (which NPR recently wrote about).
Since the new thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations, NPR has visited the island and reported on the country's efforts to modernize both its baseball system and its economy — and its inhabitants' attempts to navigate a shifting set of rules. You can follow our reporting here.
 
It is just a matter of time before one of the best islands in the Caribbean opens for business to all of us Americans!
 
Just returned from Cuba the other day. Quite a change since 2009 when I visit the last time (Laura's been a few times since then -- and it was a huge change even from 2013).

Casa particulares (homestays, the ones airbnb lists) are everywhere. In Havana there are so many restaurants now that the prices have halved, elsewhere they were still the same but no doubt competition will kick in popular places like Trinidad and Santiago. Ridiculous amounts of tourists in e.g. Havana and Trinidad.

The biggest issue was that mojitos are no longer the same. They used to be great everywhere, now you're lucky to get a great one. They skip the rum like they were an all-inclusive bar, and the herba buena taste isn't proper.

On the positive side, not even a mild diarrhea happened. The first.
 
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