Link to the patient information form and contact information

What you should know as a medical tourist


Passport

You must have a valid passport to enter Cuba. Canadian passport information is available at www.ppt.gc.ca.
Click here to access an online Canadian Passport.

Printable PDF passport application forms:

Adult

Child

(You will need to have Adobe Reader installed on your computer in order to view the PDF passport application forms.)
Click here to download Adobe Reader.

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Cuban Customs Regulations

Click here for more information on Cuban customs regulations.

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Transportation
Car Rentals

We have selected the best offers for car in Cuba. You can select your car and make a reservation, with the possibility of picking up and returning your car in rental offices throughout Cuba. The offers here are unique, with no minimum rental days and unlimited mileage. Booking with us will guarantee that your car is there when you arrive and will save you time and money.

Map of Cuba

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Currency

Click here for information on Cuban currency

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Time

The hour in Cuba is the same as the Atlantic coast of North America, also known as "Eastern Standard Time", or, by its abbreviations in English, EST.

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Weather

Click here for current weather information for Cuba



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Communications
Telephone

For international calls from Cuba you must dial 119+ country code (1 Canada)+ area code+ number

To call to Cuba, you must dial 011+country code(53Cuba)+area code(7 Havana)+number

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Electricity

Cuba uses 110-volt electricity. Most hotels use 220-volt electricity. Unless your appliance is dual voltage, you need to use a "converter" or a "transformer" to change the 220-volt electricity into 110-volt electricity. If your appliance is dual voltage, you can switch it to work on 220 volts, without a transformer or converter

Click here for where you can purchase transformers and converters

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Water

The water in Cuba is chlorinated and
clean. However, we recommend that you purchase bottle water available in any store, coffee shop, or bar.

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Safety

All Cuban cities are quite safe as they are relatively free from the well-known street dangers encountered in other countries. The Cuban people themselves and travelers can equally walk the cities´ streets day and night without having to be concerned about criminal behavior. Purse snatching and mugging are not unknown but are rare in the extreme and pose no problem for anyone with minimal street smarts. In major cities a friendly police officer can be found fairly quickly, and in tourist areas there is probably one on the next corner.

Care should be taken against pickpockets in crowded places like public buses, discos, bars and theaters. Still, few travelers to Cuba will likely experience anything more than the nuisance of an occasional peddler of artifacts or a young hustler wanting to be your guide.

Cuba is extremely safe by any world standards, and the average visitor has no reason to worry about personal safety on the streets, in the hotels, at the beaches or any other place a traveler might visit.

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