5.90 CUC for 70cl of Havana Club Réserve.
1 CUC is 25 national pesos and for tourists to buy ciggs it costs 1.5 CUC but costs locals 7 pesos.
£1 is 1.37 CUC. We didn't bring any cash, only plastic. When you withdraw cash they convert it to USD first which is artificially kept the same as the CUC but then they impose a 10% tax because the dollar is banned.
If you withdraw £1000, the government rips you off £200 of your own money and stops you taking advantage of the stronger £ to the $ and you also loose out on £360. If the government isn't ripping you off, its the people. Not that we got ripped off, but its all the fucking time everyone tying it on. Nothing like it is in Asia where they just want to charge you a bit more than they'd charge the locals or try it on with commission deals.
The Cuban people in general don't like tourists but realise they depend on them to simply get by.
In the future when one can get a big mac for a few quid instead of the current 6 quid for some shitty burger for tourists with their split economy then it'll be a better place. I say this because of the UNESCO protection of some places like Trinidad and Old Havana, which are two amazingly stunning places, will remain no matter what.
Most expensive Latin American country but cheapest Caribbean island, although on the more luxurious islands at least you know you're getting what you pay for.
1 CUC is 25 national pesos and for tourists to buy ciggs it costs 1.5 CUC but costs locals 7 pesos.
£1 is 1.37 CUC. We didn't bring any cash, only plastic. When you withdraw cash they convert it to USD first which is artificially kept the same as the CUC but then they impose a 10% tax because the dollar is banned.
If you withdraw £1000, the government rips you off £200 of your own money and stops you taking advantage of the stronger £ to the $ and you also loose out on £360. If the government isn't ripping you off, its the people. Not that we got ripped off, but its all the fucking time everyone tying it on. Nothing like it is in Asia where they just want to charge you a bit more than they'd charge the locals or try it on with commission deals.
The Cuban people in general don't like tourists but realise they depend on them to simply get by.
In the future when one can get a big mac for a few quid instead of the current 6 quid for some shitty burger for tourists with their split economy then it'll be a better place. I say this because of the UNESCO protection of some places like Trinidad and Old Havana, which are two amazingly stunning places, will remain no matter what.
Most expensive Latin American country but cheapest Caribbean island, although on the more luxurious islands at least you know you're getting what you pay for.
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