Home Travel Guide Little Havana Miami Guide 2026 — Calle Ocho, Cuban Coffee, Cigars
Travel Guide Updated April 2026 ⏱ 5 min read

Little Havana Miami Guide 2026 — Calle Ocho, Cuban Coffee, Cigars

Little Havana is Miami at its most Cuban — dominoes slapped down in a park, $2 cortaditos pulled through a sidewalk window, cigars hand-rolled in front of you, and salsa spilling out of Ball & Chain until 3am.

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Quick Facts

ItemDetail
Main stripCalle Ocho (SW 8th Street), 11th-17th Ave
Cuban coffee$2-3 at the window
Walking tour$40-60, 2 hours
Food tour$65-95, 3 hours
Cigar (single)$8-25
Domino ParkFree to watch
Viernes CulturalesLast Friday of each month, 7-11pm, free

Little Havana took shape after the Cuban Revolution of 1959 when waves of exiles settled along SW 8th Street — known to everyone as Calle Ocho. The neighbourhood has remained the cultural heart of Cuban-American Miami for 60+ years, even as the demographic has broadened to include Nicaraguans, Colombians and Hondurans.

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Calle Ocho and Domino Park

Calle Ocho (SW 8th Street) is the neighbourhood's spine. The walkable core runs from about SW 11th Avenue to SW 17th Avenue — a six-block strip packed with cigar shops, cafes, galleries, restaurants and the famous park.

Maximo Gomez Park, universally called Domino Park, sits at SW 15th Avenue and 8th Street. A small fenced plaza lined with permanent stone domino tables. The elderly Cuban men playing there — many of them in their 80s and 90s, many former exiles — are the defining image of Little Havana. Watching is free and welcomed. Don't photograph people's faces without asking; wide shots of the space are fine.

  • Maximo Gomez Park: SW 15th Ave & 8th St, free
  • Players must be 55+ to sit at the tables
  • Busiest play: weekday afternoons 2pm-6pm
  • Next door: Cuban Memorial Plaza with a Bay of Pigs monument
  • Walk of Fame: pink stars on the sidewalk honouring Latin celebrities
The "Calle Ocho Walk of Fame" runs along 8th Street with stars for Celia Cruz, Gloria Estefan, Willy Chirino and dozens of other Latin artists and baseball players. Star #1 (Celia Cruz) is at 1600 SW 8th Street.

Cuban Coffee and the Window Ritual

The ventanita — a walk-up sidewalk window pouring Cuban espresso all day — is the single most authentic Little Havana ritual. It costs $2-3, takes 90 seconds, and is how actual Cubans start their morning and get through their afternoon.

  • Cortadito ($2-3) — sweet espresso with steamed milk, the default
  • Colada ($3-5) — a small Styrofoam cup of sweet espresso with 4-6 tiny thimble cups, meant to share
  • Cafe con leche ($3-4) — milky breakfast version
  • Pastelito ($2-3) — Cuban pastry, guava/cheese/meat
  • Croqueta ($1-2 each) — ham or chicken, eat standing at the window
VentanitaNotes
Versailles (3555 SW 8th)The most famous, unofficial Cuban-American political HQ
La Carreta (3632 SW 8th)Versailles's sister, slightly quieter
Cafe La Trova (971 SW 8th)Michelin-recognised, fancier
Old's HavanaFull restaurant plus window
El Exquisito (1510 SW 8th)Locals' favourite, cheapest
At the ventanita, order at the window, pay first, wait for your coffee to arrive hot. No tables. Stand, drink, continue walking. Three cortaditos in an afternoon is normal.

Cigar Shops and Rollers

Several Calle Ocho shops have in-house torcedores — hand-rollers — working at small wooden benches in the front window. Watch the whole process and buy a fresh-rolled cigar without leaving the store.

  • El Titan de Bronze (1071 SW 8th) — the best-known, 6+ rollers at peak, cigars $8-20
  • Cuba Tobacco Cigar Co (1528 SW 8th) — smaller, more personal, Padilla family since the 1880s
  • Guantanamera Cigars (1465 SW 8th) — cheaper singles, good for gifts
  • Little Havana Cigar Factory (1501 SW 8th) — tourist-friendly with demonstrations

Under US law, Cuban-grown tobacco is still restricted — all cigars sold in Little Havana are rolled in Miami from Nicaraguan, Dominican or Honduran leaf in the traditional Cuban style. A genuine hand-rolled Miami cigar is $8-25 for a single or $160-450 for a box of 20-25.

A cigar-roller demonstration is free to watch. Buying something afterwards is the normal reciprocity even if it is a single for a friend.

Ball & Chain and Live Music

Ball & Chain (1513 SW 8th) is the biggest live-music venue in Little Havana. The building has been a club since 1935 — Count Basie, Billie Holiday and Chet Baker played here in the 1940s-50s. Closed for decades, reopened in 2014 with live Latin music, Cuban cocktails and a pineapple-shaped outdoor stage.

  • Open: Mon-Thu 12pm-12am, Fri-Sat till 3am, Sun till 12am
  • Music: live Cuban, salsa, Latin jazz — two sets per night
  • Cover charge: usually none before 8pm, $10-20 on peak weekend nights
  • Mojitos: $12-16, rum flights $18-28
  • Dress: casual, no flip-flops after 9pm

Other music stops: Hoy Como Ayer (2212 SW 8th) leans traditional Cuban son; Cafe La Trova has some of Miami's best cantineros behind the bar with live jazz on weekends.

Arrive at Ball & Chain around 7pm for the early set — no cover, seats at the bar, dancers warming up. The 10pm set is packed and loud.

Azucar Ice Cream and Food Stops

Azucar Ice Cream (1503 SW 8th) — Cuban-American ice cream in flavours impossible to find elsewhere. Owner Suzy Batlle named every flavour after a Cuban cultural icon.

  • Abuela Maria — guava, cream cheese, Maria cookies (the #1 seller)
  • Platano Maduro — sweet fried plantain
  • Cafe con Leche — Cuban coffee flavour
  • Cuatro Leches — dulce de leche, condensed milk, evaporated milk, fresh cream
  • Scoop: $6.50; sundae: $11-14

For a sit-down meal, Versailles is the obvious classic (ropa vieja $22, lechon asado $26, breakfast cafe con leche + tostada $7), but the no-frills spot locals actually rate is El Exquisito at 1510 SW 8th — same Cuban menu, $16-22 mains, less waiting.

Viernes Culturales and Tours

Viernes Culturales — Cultural Fridays — transforms Calle Ocho on the last Friday of each month from 7pm to 11pm. Galleries open late, salsa bands play on the sidewalks, food trucks line the streets and street performers fill the park. Free.

For most visits, a guided tour unlocks things you would walk past. Options:

TourLengthPrice
Little Havana Walking Tour2 hours$40-55
Food & Culture Tour (tastings included)3 hours$75-95
Cigar & Cocktail Tour3 hours$85-110
Private guided tour2-3 hours$180-280
The best first-time Little Havana afternoon: Versailles ventanita coffee at 2pm, walk east to El Titan de Bronze for a cigar demo, watch dominoes at Maximo Gomez Park, ice cream at Azucar, end with Ball & Chain's 7pm live set. Three hours, zero missing pieces.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Little Havana worth visiting?

Yes — it is Miami's most distinctive neighbourhood and a cultural must-see. A 3-hour afternoon covers the walkable core of Calle Ocho between 11th and 17th Avenues.

How much is a Cuban coffee in Little Havana?

$2-3 for a cortadito (sweet espresso with milk) at a sidewalk window, or $4-5 for a colada (tiny cups to share with friends). Cash or card at most ventanitas.

Is Domino Park free?

Yes — Maximo Gomez Park (everyone calls it Domino Park) is free to enter. You can watch the elderly Cuban regulars play dominoes daily. Technically you need to be 55+ to play at the tables.

Where is the best cigar shop on Calle Ocho?

El Titan de Bronze (1071 SW 8th St) and Cuba Tobacco Cigar Co (1528 SW 8th) both roll cigars in front of customers. Singles $8-25, boxes $160-450.

Is Ball & Chain a tourist trap?

It is touristy, yes, but also genuinely good live Latin music every night with a historic pedigree (Count Basie and Billie Holiday played here in the 1950s). No cover before 8pm most nights.

What is Viernes Culturales?

Cultural Fridays — the last Friday of every month, Calle Ocho hosts a street festival from 7pm to 11pm with live music, street performers and open galleries. Free.

How do I get to Little Havana from South Beach?

Uber ($18-28, 20-30 min) is easiest. No direct transit. Driving is fine; parking on side streets off Calle Ocho is mostly free.