Political context
Follow national and local sources in Cuba to compare coverage of government, elections, public policy, courts, diplomacy, and civic institutions. Use multiple outlets when reading politically sensitive stories.
Country facts
Capital
Havana
Population
Approximately 9.7 million
Official languages
Spanish
Currency
Cuban convertible peso, Cuban peso
Region
North America
Time zone
UTC-05:00
Internet domain
.cu
Calling code
+53
Why this country matters
Cuba, with Havana as a key national reference point, is part of the North America news region, where coverage often connects to trade, migration, tourism, public safety, local government, regional diplomacy, climate events, and economic ties across the Americas. Its population is listed as approximately 9.7 million, and news in Cuba is commonly read through Spanish sources. Because local reporting can reveal how national decisions affect communities, this page helps readers compare public-interest coverage, specialist reporting, and direct publisher links. The current directory includes 14 listed sources across Digital Media, News Agency, Local News, Newspaper. When reading fast-moving stories, compare several outlets and check publisher corrections, ownership disclosures, and primary documents where available.
Country overview
Cuba is covered here as part of the North America directory, with source discovery organized around language, outlet type, coverage level, and country context. The current directory includes 14 listed outlets across Digital Media, News Agency, Local News, Newspaper.
Follow national and local sources in Cuba to compare coverage of government, elections, public policy, courts, diplomacy, and civic institutions. Use multiple outlets when reading politically sensitive stories.
Business and economy coverage is best read beside general news because markets, trade, employment, public budgets, and household costs often shape the daily news agenda in Cuban convertible peso, Cuban peso.
Cuba sits within the North America news region. Regional comparisons with Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbadoshelp readers separate local developments from broader cross-border trends.
Readers commonly move between public broadcasters, commercial TV or radio, newspapers, online-only outlets, and social video clips. The directory favors direct links to publishers so readers can verify stories at the source.
News discovery for Cuba is organized around Spanish. Multilingual pages are especially useful for diaspora readers, researchers, travelers, and people comparing domestic and international framing.
Search by outlet name, city, region, language, category, or coverage type. The listed cards also expose tags such as national, local, business, public broadcaster, digital media, and news agency where available.
Quick editorial-style pointers to help readers choose where to start.
Best for breaking news
National / state digital media
Best business source
Independent / Cuba-focused
Best local source
Provincial / Holguin
Media landscape
Cuba's media environment can be read through national outlets, public or state-linked broadcasters where present, private publishers, local reporting, and digital-first sources. This page organizes available Cuba sources by language, category, and coverage level so readers can compare perspectives and verify stories directly with publishers.
News languages
How to read this page
Start with national and public-interest sources, then compare local, business, independent, and specialist outlets where listed. Check each publisher's own disclosures for editorial focus, ownership, and correction policies.
Regional and local notes
Regional and city-level news can be especially important for public services, courts, weather, infrastructure, elections, business conditions, and community reporting.
Browse recent headlines and source links for Cuba, organized by topic for quick reading.
14 outlets listed. Open this section when you want the complete directory.
Browse and filter the complete outlet list for Cuba.
Filter outlets by state/agency sources, independent/diaspora media, digital portals, provinces, economy/society, and culture/Caribbean coverage.
Search and filter the full Cuba outlet list in a compact directory view.
14 of 14 listings
www.14ymedio.com
Independent Cuba-focused digital newspaper covering politics, society, economy, civil life, opinion, culture, and migration.
www.acn.cu
Cuban news agency covering national institutions, provinces, society, culture, health, economy, and public information.
www.ahora.cu
Holguin provincial newspaper and digital outlet covering local government, society, culture, sport, and community news.
www.cibercuba.com
Diaspora-oriented digital outlet covering Cuba, Cuban communities abroad, migration, society, politics, and daily life.
www.cubadebate.cu
Cuban state digital outlet covering national news, politics, public policy, culture, sport, and commentary.
www.cubanet.org
Independent Cuba-focused outlet covering rights, civil society, politics, economy, culture, and local reporting.
diariodecuba.com
Cuba-focused independent and diaspora outlet covering politics, society, culture, rights, economy, and analysis.
www.granma.cu
Official newspaper of the Communist Party of Cuba covering government, politics, economy, culture, sport, and international affairs.
havanatimes.org
English-language and bilingual Cuba-focused digital publication covering news, opinion, culture, daily life, and regional context.
www.juventudrebelde.cu
Cuban newspaper covering national news, youth, politics, society, culture, sport, science, and public affairs.
oncubanews.com
Cuba-focused digital magazine and news outlet covering society, economy, culture, travel, opinion, and U.S.-Cuba relations.
www.prensa-latina.cu
Cuban news agency covering Cuba, Latin America, world affairs, politics, economy, culture, and diplomacy.
www.sierramaestra.cu
Santiago de Cuba provincial newspaper and digital outlet covering local news, government, culture, sport, and community affairs.
www.trabajadores.cu
Cuban labor newspaper covering workers, unions, economy, public services, society, culture, and national affairs.