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GAESA
OrganisationCU

GAESA

Cuba's military conglomerate controlling ~60% of hard-currency trade; OFAC wind-down expired 5 June 2026.

Last refreshed: 1 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

What does the OFAC 50% ownership rule mean for businesses still dealing with Cuba?

Timeline for GAESA

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Common Questions
What is GAESA in Cuba?
GAESA is Cuba's military-run conglomerate controlling tourism, retail, and fuel imports. It handles most of Cuba's hard-currency trade and is subordinate to the Revolutionary Armed Forces.
Why is GAESA blocked from Venezuelan oil in 2026?
The US Treasury's 25 March 2026 licence permits Venezuelan crude sales to Cuban private-sector buyers only; GAESA and the Cuban state are explicitly excluded as part of EO 14380 pressure.Source: US Treasury
How does sanctioning GAESA cause Cuban power cuts?
GAESA manages Cuba's fuel import infrastructure. Blocking it from oil purchases without a private-sector alternative creates supply gaps that feed directly into the National Grid's generation deficit.Source: Havana Consulting Group

Background

GAESA (Grupo de Administración Empresarial S.A.) is Cuba's military-run conglomerate subordinate to the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR). Founded in the early 1990s as Cuba's economy opened to limited foreign investment, it controls the bulk of the island's hard-currency economy through subsidiaries spanning hospitality (Gaviota), retail (TRD), and import-export. Estimates suggest GAESA controls at least 60 per cent of Cuba's foreign-exchange revenues, making it both the target and the transmission mechanism of US sanctions pressure.

GAESA sits at the centre of US sanctions architecture in 2026. EO 14404 (1 May 2026) designated GAESA under [Cuba-EO] on 7 May; on 5 June OFAC's wind-down authorisation for foreign transactions with GAESA expired. Meliá dropped 15 of 34 Cuban hotels; Iberostar, Aston Hotels, and Blue Diamond followed. Visa and Mastercard suspended Cuban-issued cards. On 4 June OFAC issued FAQ 1258 extending secondary-sanctions exposure to any entity where GAESA, MININT, or MINFAR holds 50 per cent or more ownership. The 11 June designation of CUPET completed a sanctions architecture covering the military conglomerate, State Security, the presidency, and Cuba's entire oil import chain. The 18 June 2026 National Assembly reform ended GAESA's monopoly on diaspora remittance flows by authorising private exchange houses and last-mile payment agents. The legal opening carries an embedded trap: GAESA remains on the US SDN list, and any private payment channel routed through GAESA infrastructure inherits the same secondary-sanctions exposure that drove out Visa, Mastercard, and the Spanish hotel chains. The reform builds a private financial architecture on top of a sanctioned foundation.

On 23 June 2026 OFAC drove the campaign into GAESA's financial and logistics core, designating its finance Arm RAFIN, the cargo handler Almacenes Universales and the miner Geominera, alongside Cuba's main clearing bank Banco Financiero Internacional .

More questions
What is GAESA and why is it sanctioned?
GAESA (Grupo de Administración Empresarial S.A.) is Cuba's military-run conglomerate controlling roughly 60% of the island's hard-currency economy. The US explicitly blocks it from Venezuelan crude under the 18 March 2026 PDVSA authorisation and the 25 March Treasury licence.Source: US Treasury / Cuba Dispatch
Why can't Cuba's private sector replace GAESA's fuel imports?
Cuban private-sector buyers are permitted to purchase Venezuelan crude under the 25 March 2026 Treasury licence, but they lack the port terminals, logistics infrastructure, and capital to replace GAESA's scale. GAESA controls the bulk of Cuba's fuel import capacity.Source: Cuba Dispatch
Has the Florida congressional delegation succeeded in getting Cuba licences revoked?
No. The Florida delegation (Giménez, Díaz-Balart, Salazar) sent a revocation letter to OFAC on 11 February 2026 demanding all Cuba-related licences be revoked. More than 75 days later, as of 27 April 2026, Treasury had revoked zero licences.Source: Cuba Dispatch
What is GAESA and why is it being sanctioned?
GAESA is Cuba's military-run conglomerate that controls around 60 per cent of the island's hard-currency revenues. The US imposed targeted sanctions on GAESA via Executive Order 14404 because it dominates tourism, retail, and fuel imports, giving the Cuban military direct economic power.Source: event
Why did Meliá and other hotel chains leave Cuba in June 2026?
OFAC's wind-down authorisation for foreign firms transacting with GAESA expired on 5 June 2026. Continuing to operate GAESA-linked hotels would have exposed Meliá, Iberostar, Aston, and Blue Diamond to secondary sanctions on their broader US business.Source: event
Why did Visa and Mastercard stop working in Cuba?
Visa and Mastercard's correspondent banks withdrew from Cuba to avoid GAESA-linked sanctions exposure ahead of the 5 June 2026 OFAC Deadline. Without correspondent banking, neither network could process Cuban-issued card transactions.Source: event
How does sanctioning GAESA affect ordinary Cubans?
Because GAESA controls roughly 60 per cent of Cuba's foreign-exchange economy — including fuel imports, tourism revenues, and retail — sanctions on the conglomerate cascade directly to household electricity, food distribution, and the ability to use bank cards.Source: event
What is GAESA and why has the US sanctioned it?
GAESA is Cuba's military-run conglomerate controlling around 60% of hard-currency revenues. The US sanctioned it under EO 14404 in May 2026 because it is the primary financial engine of the Cuban state and armed forces.Source: background
Which hotels have left Cuba because of GAESA sanctions?
Following the expiry of OFAC's wind-down authorisation on 5 June 2026, Meliá announced it was dropping 15 of its 34 Cuban hotels. Iberostar, Aston Hotels and Resorts, and Blue Diamond followed in the same exit wave.Source: cuba-dispatch U6
What does the OFAC 50 per cent ownership rule mean for Cuba?
OFAC FAQ 1258 (issued 4 June 2026) extends US secondary-sanctions exposure to any company where GAESA, MININT, or MINFAR owns 50% or more, even if that company itself has no separate SDN entry. This significantly widens the set of Cuban enterprises foreign firms face legal risk dealing with.Source: cuba-dispatch U7
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