Foreign Buyers
Clear answer on foreign buyer access in Cuba, including permanent residency, approved investment structures, and compliance limits.
Read the briefInvestment, legal, sanctions, tax, residency, tourism, risk, and due-diligence pages for Cuba property buyers.
Clear answer on foreign buyer access in Cuba, including permanent residency, approved investment structures, and compliance limits.
Read the briefA practical Cuba due-diligence checklist for title, seller capacity, licenses, sanctions, utilities, restoration, and exit risk.
Read the briefOFAC and Cuba Restricted List risk for buyers, brokers, developers, operators, and U.S.-linked investors.
Read the briefWhat foreign buyers should clarify about Cuban property taxes, notary steps, transfer costs, income reporting, and professional fees.
Read the briefHow to think about Cuban title, registry documents, seller authority, occupancy, and property-control risk.
Read the briefA realistic tourism-recovery thesis for Cuba real estate using 2025 visitor and hotel-occupancy data.
Read the briefPayment-path, currency, banking, documentation, and sanctions questions for Cuba property buyers.
Read the briefRental-license and guest-reporting basics for casas particulares, apartments, long-stay housing, and foreign tenant use.
Read the briefCommon deal-structure questions for Cuba: permanent residency, foreign investment, leasehold, operating agreements, and red flags.
Read the briefRisk-management framework for Cuba real estate: legal, sanctions, liquidity, infrastructure, tourism, operations, and exit risk.
Read the briefHow to budget Cuban property renovations with materials, labor, power, water, heritage, and contingency constraints.
Read the briefResidency and property questions for foreigners considering Cuba homes, rentals, business presence, and long-stay use.
Read the briefA scenario-based Cuba real estate outlook for 2026 focused on tourism, energy, sanctions, private activity, and restoration.
Read the briefThe realistic kicker for Cuba real estate: scarce architecture, depressed tourism, future policy optionality, and buyer preparation.
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