Key Points
- Cuba set a new official exchange rate at 410 pesos per $1, near the street rate of about 440.
- Two stronger official rates remain, creating a three-tier system that can fuel inflation and favoritism.
- The shift lands amid power shortages and a tighter fuel squeeze after a Venezuela-linked tanker seizure.
For years, Cuba has lived with two economies at once: the one written into official policy, and the one families and businesses actually use to survive.
This week the government narrowed that gap by creating a third official exchange rate, starting at 410 Cuban pesos (CUP) per dollar and designed to move over time.
On paper, Cuba still keeps two stronger rates, 24 and 120 CUP per dollar, reserved for selected state uses described as “essential and strategic.”
In reality, the new 410 rate is the headline. It is the closest thing yet to an official acknowledgment that the street market — near 440 CUP per dollar at the time — has been setting the true price of money.
Cuba’s New “Third Dollar Rate” Is A Quiet Admission The System Broke. (Photo Internet reproduction)
The government sells the change as protection. Officials argue it gives exporters a more workable peso return for each dollar earned and offers households a safer, legal alternative to informal brokers. But the story behind the story is supply.
A rate only matters if people can actually access foreign currency through banks and exchange houses in meaningful amounts. Early guidance suggests buy–sell spreads around the reference rate, and any tight limits could leave the parallel market intact.
Cuba’s Dollar Crunch Sparks Social and Political Strain
The deeper risk is political. Multiple exchange rates create multiple classes of winners. Those who can access cheaper dollars can import, price, and profit in ways ordinary citizens cannot, even if the rules claim to be fair.
That dynamic often breeds the very corruption and price pressures authorities say they are fighting. All this is happening as Cuba’s energy crisis tightens the knot. Blackouts have become routine, tourism remains weak, and fuel supply is critical.
U.S. authorities recently seized the supertanker Skipper carrying roughly 1.8 to 1.85 million barrels of Venezuelan crude, a move Havana condemned as “piracy” and one that analysts warned could worsen shortages.
One widely cited average monthly salary, about 6,685 CUP, equals roughly $16 at the new rate. That is why a “technical” exchange-rate tweak can quickly turn into a social shock: it resets what a paycheck can buy.
Online reactions on X, Facebook, and Instagram captured the moment: relief that the state is finally speaking the street’s language, and fear that prices will now rise to match it. The new rate may be more honest. It is not yet a cure.