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After 20 months of pandemic restrictions, Cuba is reopening again and preparing to ease travel restrictions on November 15, removing the need for coronavirus tests for vaccinated tourists. Cuba is also eliminating mandatory quarantine for all visitors unless they contract COVID-19 on their trip.
A successful inoculation campaign driven by Cuba's home-grown vaccines and a significant decrease in COVID-19 infections will allow airports to reopen and commercial flights to resume on Monday, November 15, officials confirmed. The relaxed rules will offer a welcome boost for Cuba's tourism sector and coincides with the country's peak travel season which runs from mid-November until late March.
What are Cuba's new travel rules?
Travelers will no longer have to present a recent PCR test if they are fully vaccinated and can prove it with an official vaccination certificate. Those who aren't vaccinated must present a negative result of a PCR test taken no more than 72 hours before traveling to Cuba. Children under 12 years of age will be exempt from presenting proof of vaccination or a PCR test.
In an interview outlining the government's plan to ease restrictions at the borders, MacÃas Rutes, the tourism ministry's director of operations, said COVID-19 rules will be relaxed upon travelers’ arrival, with sanitary protocols focused on "the surveillance of symptomatic patients and temperature-taking."
In addition, diagnostic tests will be carried out randomly at the airport. If a patient tests positive for COVID-19, they will be transfered to a hotel-hospital: a tourist facility authorized by the government for isolation and medical care.
What are the current travel rules?
Currently, all incoming travelers are required to quarantine for five days at these hotel-hospitals while awaiting the results of their PCR tests. Then they're required to undergo a second test before leaving quarantine. By November 15, that will change as the country gradually reopens, with tourist activities resuming, including excursions and tours.
Face masks will be required in all enclosed public spaces, physical distancing rules will apply throughout the island nation and officials will continue to maintain Cuba's successful tracing and isolation system.