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Cuba Dispatch
12JUN

CADECA opens cash dollar remittance windows

3 min read
09:35UTC

Cuba's state exchange network announced on 7 April it would accept dollar remittances, chasing flows that have migrated to the informal banquero network.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Havana is dollarising remittances by necessity, not design, and the banqueros now have a state competitor.

On 7 April 2026 CADECA, Cuba's state exchange network, announced that its offices would begin accepting cash dollar remittances 1. Analysts at the Havana Consulting Group and the diaspora outlet CiberCuba attribute the move to an attempt by the Cuban state to recapture flows that have migrated to the informal "banquero" network, a web of more than 150 unlicensed hand-to-hand money-transfer operators serving Cuban households.

The underlying flows have collapsed on the formal side. Remittances are running 70 per cent below the 2019 baseline of roughly $3.7 billion, and more than 95 per cent of diaspora transfers now move through informal channels. Two specific shocks drove the collapse. Western Union reportedly suspended Cuba transfers in February 2025 after Orbit S.A., Cuba's designated remittance processor, entered the OFAC Cuba Restricted List. A further 1 per cent federal tax on cash remittances, legislated by the Trump administration, took effect on 1 January 2026. Against that backdrop, GAESA's formal remittance capture had already fallen to 4.13 per cent before the CADECA move.

What CADECA is offering is genuinely new. For most of the last decade Cuban retail banking has treated the peso as the only legitimate currency, with hard currency routed through the parallel MLC digital channel. Accepting cash dollars at state branches is a reversal of that policy, signalling that Havana values recaptured hard-currency flow above its previous dollarisation resistance. The test is short: the two to four weeks after 7 April should produce either an uptick in formal-channel volumes, visible in Havana Consulting Group or FIU estimates, or confirmation that the banquero network is now too embedded to displace. Either outcome is a material signal about the durability of Cuba's informal economy.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Cuban families abroad; mainly in Florida; send money home, but the official transfer companies like Western Union stopped operating because Cuba's designated payment processor was blacklisted by the US. Now 95 percent of that money flows through informal couriers known as banqueros. Cuba has now told its state exchange offices to accept cash dollars directly. The government wants to recapture some of that money for itself. Whether Cubans will trust the state to give them a good rate; instead of using the informal couriers who have no exchange-rate politics; is the open question.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The CADECA move is a structural reversal of the 2021 Tarea Ordenamiento monetary reform, signalling that the regime's hard-currency crisis is severe enough to override the ideological investment in peso-only retail.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    If CADECA sets non-competitive exchange rates, the banquero network retains its advantage and the state captures only the most risk-averse fraction of informal flows; an insufficient volume to stabilise state hard-currency reserves.

    Short term · 0.75
  • Opportunity

    If the CADECA move is accompanied by peso devaluation toward the informal rate, it creates a genuine competitive channel; Havana Consulting Group estimates this could recover $500-700 million annually.

    Medium term · 0.5
First Reported In

Update #1 · Cuba carve-out survives Venezuela oil easing

CiberCuba / Havana Consulting Group· 15 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
CADECA opens cash dollar remittance windows
The move is a structural dollarisation concession by a government that has spent a decade restricting the dollar at retail.
Different Perspectives
WOLA (Washington Office on Latin America)
WOLA (Washington Office on Latin America)
WOLA argues that sanctioning peso-paid Cuban officials has limited coercive bite because their personal holdings are not US-proximate, citing the Maduro Venezuela precedent: the head-of-state listing functions as a signal rather than a seizure, and the real operational weight of the 4 June package sits entirely in FAQ 1258's ownership-tree multiplier.
OCDH / Prisoners Defenders
OCDH / Prisoners Defenders
OCDH (Observatorio Cubano de Derechos Humanos, Madrid-based) documented 332 repressive actions in May and formally demanded an EU reparations fund for Cuban political prisoners. Prisoners Defenders' May census placed the count at a record 1,281 with one death in custody; both organisations argue the EU restrictive-measures track is the remaining lever after the US programme has exhausted institutional designations.
EU / Netherlands Foreign Affairs (Ollongren track)
EU / Netherlands Foreign Affairs (Ollongren track)
EU Special Representative Kajsa Ollongren received the OCDH Acuerdo de Liberacion in Brussels on 13 May demanding asset freezes and a victims' compensation fund for political prisoners. Madrid's hotel-sector stake and the Spanish chains' own exit decisions create a structural tension within EU policy between restrictive-measures pressure and commercial-engagement continuity.
China
China
China joined Russia in birthday solidarity to Raul Castro but has not moved a tanker to Cuba since the CUPET designation. Beijing's calculus resembles the post-PDVSA Venezuela calculation: barter or renminbi-denominated crude outside the US legal perimeter is technically available but requires absorbing secondary-sanctions risk Washington is deliberately signalling.
Russia
Russia
Moscow sent birthday solidarity to the indicted Raul Castro on 3 June but despatched no replacement cargo after the Sovcomflot Universal turned back on 26 May. Russia's practical support for Cuba is constrained by its own war economy and secondary-sanctions exposure under the same OFAC architecture it benefits from in the Ukraine context.
Cuban government / MINREX
Cuban government / MINREX
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla condemned the CUPET designation as 'further tightening the economic and energy blockade'; Diaz-Canel's standing public line is willingness for dialogue 'on equal terms' but political prisoners are explicitly off the table. Havana offers no new concessions after the personal listing.