
Cost of Living inSantiago de Cuba, Cuba
Image credit: Edicion Renacimiento, Santiago de Cuba
Purchasing Power vs. United States
Based on GDP per capita (PPP). Cuba: $9,605/capita.
How Far Your Money Goes
Prices are 58% lower than the global benchmark (New York City = 100).
Using the country-level NYC comparison for now. We do not have a defensible city-level aggregate cost index for this city yet.
Income Category
GDP per Capita
City Population
Monthly Costs
Rent
Food
Transport
Utilities
Education
Child Education
Public-school quality, expat access, instruction language, and homeschool legality for relocating families.
Public schools
Public-schooling rules are set nationally for Cuba; Santiago de Cuba-specific enrollment notes are still being verified.
Quality
Mixed public-school option
Expat access
Possible, but highly localized
hardInstruction
Spanish
Language fit is more manageable.
PISA / outcomes
Qualitative only
Using curated quality notes for now.
Why this quality rating
Cuba has a universal public-school system, but it is not usually the default schooling path for internationally mobile expat families.
Why the expat-access rating looks like this
Resident enrollment may be possible, but Spanish-medium instruction and a strongly local system make the public route a hard fit for most expat families.
🚫 Homeschooling
Homeschooling not legalCuba requires compulsory school attendance in state schools. Homeschooling is not legally permitted. Education is a state function under the Cuban constitution. This is the single biggest barrier for families considering Cuba as a long-term base.
Homeschool legality in Cuba — check current regulations before committing.
Source: User-curated family relocation research (initial seed) (2026-04-14)
Childcare & Domestic Help
Estimate-only country fallback for the family-support costs we track in Cuba.
Full-time nanny (5 days)
$250-$400
Estimate-only country fallback
Live-in / 24-7 nanny
$450-$650
Estimate-only country fallback
Source: curated family relocation research(derived country fallback)
Getting Around
Neighborhood mobility profiles are rolling out city by city.Santiago de Cuba is still missing a verified walkability, transit, airport, and rideshare profile.
Healthcare
System strength, outcome signals, facility coverage, and self-pay visibility in Cuba.
Method: country metrics come from public system indicators, facility coverage reflects mapped providers we can inventory, direct pricing only reflects observed self-pay pages, and relative care cost can fall back to broad cost-of-living healthcare indices. Sparse pricing does not imply sparse healthcare availability.
Healthcare system
StrongHigh national coverage, strong doctor availability, and solid hospital-bed capacity support this rating.
Public care
StrongBroad public coverage, strong public funding, and relatively low patient cost-sharing support this rating.
Private care
LimitedA meaningful tracked hospital and clinic network help, but the private footprint is not very visible yet and self-pay pricing transparency is still sparse.
UHC coverage
86/100
2023
Physicians
9.54/1k
2021
Hospital beds
4.33/1k
2023
Out of pocket
17%
2023
Outcome signals
Life expectancy
78.3 yrs
2024
Maternal mortality
35/100k
2023
Neonatal mortality
4.3/1k
2024
International patient readiness
LimitedCountry-level outcomes are comparatively strong help, but the private footprint is still thin and price transparency is still sparse.
Pricing transparency
LimitedPublished self-pay prices are scarce and few facilities expose web pages we can verify weigh on this rating.
Facility coverage
Self-pay pricing visibility
No verified self-pay prices are published for the tracked facilities in Cuba yet.
This usually reflects low online price transparency rather than a lack of healthcare providers.
Notable facilities
System metrics: World Bank WDI · Updated 2026-06-01
Safety & Governance
Street Safety
Source: Numbeo where a city row is matched; otherwise World Bank WGI and country-level safety context.
Political Stability
World Bank WGI scale: -2.5 to +2.5.
Wages by Sector
| Sector | Median |
|---|---|
| Agriculture & Farming | — |
| Arts, Entertainment & Recreation | — |
| Construction | — |
| Education | — |
| Finance & Insurance | — |
| Healthcare & Social Work | — |
| Manufacturing | — |
| Mining & Quarrying | — |
| Other Services | — |
| Professional & Scientific Services | — |
| Public Administration & Defence | — |
| Retail & Wholesale Trade | — |
| Transport & Logistics | — |
| Utilities | — |
2010 annual wages in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba · Source: ILO ILOSTAT (national)
Price Comparison vs. US
Visa Information (US passport)
Short-stay entry
US passport holders need advance travel authorization or a visa before entry.
Quick comparison FAQ
Structured from the deltas already shown on this page — no invented facts, no extra data sources.
How far does your money go in Santiago de Cuba compared with the US?
Your money goes about 1.7x further in Santiago de Cuba than in the US, based on the current PPP estimate. We are using the country-level cost index for Cuba here because a defensible city-level aggregate index is not available yet.
Is Santiago de Cuba cheaper or more expensive overall than New York City?
Santiago de Cuba is cheaper overall than New York City — overall living costs are about 58% cheaper than the global benchmark (New York City) for Santiago de Cuba. We are using the country-level cost index for Cuba here because a defensible city-level aggregate index is not available yet.
How does rent in Santiago de Cuba compare with New York City?
Rent in Santiago de Cuba is about 89% cheaper than the global benchmark (New York City). We are using the country-level cost index for Cuba here because a defensible city-level aggregate index is not available yet.
How expensive are groceries and restaurants in Santiago de Cuba?
Groceries in Santiago de Cuba are about 59% cheaper than the global benchmark (New York City), and restaurant prices are about 74% cheaper than the same benchmark. We are using the country-level cost index for Cuba here because a defensible city-level aggregate index is not available yet.
About Santiago de Cuba
Santiago de Cuba is the second-largest city in Cuba and the capital of its easternmost province, with a hotter, more Caribbean-feeling climate than Havana and a stronger Afro-Cuban and Haitian-descended cultural character. The local economy depends on the port, nickel processing in nearby Moa, rum, and state-managed tourism. Relocation is constrained by the same structural realities affecting the whole country: dual-currency complications now resolved into peso devaluation, chronic shortages of fuel, medicines, and food, frequent blackouts, and limited internet bandwidth. Spanish is essential. Foreign residency is possible but bureaucratic. Realistic mainly for Cuban diaspora with family ties or specific cultural and academic projects; not a practical general-purpose relocation target.
See the full breakdown — free
No password needed. Takes ~30 seconds.