Gay resort cuba

➤ Gran Muthu Rainbow Hotel - Adults Only | Ciego de Ávila

The first LGBT hotel in Cuba. The five-star Gran Muthu Rainbow Hotel is located on Playa Playuelas, Cayo Guillermo, a well-known earthly paradise where everyone connects with innateness, away from the ordinary to unwind and recharge. At Muthu Rainbow guests can make their dreams come factual by having exceptional moments and enjoying exciting LGBT events. The Gran Muthu Rainbow Hotel, of exotic style and comfort in equivalent measure, offers 248 rooms divided into standard, junior suites and suites. All rooms have a colorful decoration with stunning views of the pool and the sea, and are furnished with amenities to provide guests a lasting and comfortable remain and relaxation.


Guests will enjoy every afternoon a different gastronomic adventure, with the most select dishes and a unusual personalized attention. Grant yourself be surprised by the diverse gastronomic options offered at the Asian, buffet, Cuban, gourmet, international, Spanish tapas restaurants and in the lobby bar. The Muthu Rainbow Hotel has prepared a complete entertainment program for guests to enjoy the leading of Cuban identity in an unbelievable

A VARIED GASTRONOMIC EXPERIENCE

Enjoy a other gastronomic adventure daily, with choose lip-smacking dishes. The resort features 7 dining options and 4 bars.

CAYO GUILLERMO'S RENOWNED WHITE SAND

Cayo Guillermo is known for its long stretches of white sand and clear, shallow waters. The hotel is just 3 km from Playa Pilar at the western end of Cayo Guillermo.

TOP ENTERTAINMENT

The Gran Muthu Rainbow Hotel has a complete entertainment program, so you can enjoy the best of Cuban culture in an incredible environment.

PERFECT FOR THE LGBTQ2+ COMMUNITY

The Gran Muthu Rainbow Hotel is the country’s first hotel aimed at the LGBTQ2+ community. Staff has received awareness training from the Cuban National Center for Sex Learning (CENESEX).

All inclusions & facilities

Our inclusions:

  • À la carte dining*
  • 24-hour drinks*
  • Aerobics, tennis, volleyball
  • Dance lessons, aqua-aerobics
  • Non-motorized water sports*
  • Nightly entertainment, theme parties, karaoke
*Restrictions apply/subject to availability.

All room categories include:

  • Balcony or terrace
  • King‑size bed or two ¾ beds
  • Bathroom, shower only
  • A/C
  • Flat screen satellite TV

    Cuba's first gay hotel reopens as human rights deteriorate

    Will Grant

    BBC News, Cayo Guillermo, Cuba

    Getty Images

    As members of the press arrived for a government-organised tour of a luxury hotel on the Cuban beach resort of Cayo Guillermo, they were greeted by a dance troupe in fishnet tights and high heels.

    Above the entrance, the rainbow flag, the international symbol of gay movement, fluttered in the heated Caribbean breeze.

    The Rainbow Hotel, described as Cuba's first LGBTQ hotel, reopened in December.

    While guests enjoyed the five-star service by the pool or a walk along the pristine sands, Cuba has not always been so welcoming to the queer community. In the first part of communist public figure Fidel Castro's rule, lesbian men and women were sent to work camps for supposed "re-education".

    Of course, since those shadowy days, attitudes on the island have markedly improved. The Cuban government and MGM Muthu Hotels, the company behind the Rainbow Hotel, say it exemplifies that change in attitude.

    Getty Images

    A joint undertaking between Muthu Hotels and Gaviota, Cuba's military-run tourism company, the Rainbow Hotel was p

    Introducing the Telegrafo Hotel La Habana

    Spain’s Axel Hotels has opened a Havana property that it says makes it a pioneer in a city that it says is undergoing a apparent shift in attitudes.

    Axel’s hotels are constructed to make LGBTQI+ travellers feel at home and the company now has 18 properties, 16 of them in Europe, another in Miami, and the Telegrafo Hotel La Habana, its first in the Caribbean.

    The adults-only, 63-room Havana hotel opened in historic Old Havana in 2022, becoming the first in the city to primarily cater to the LGBTQI+ community.

    “We understand that it’s not for everyone,” Telegrafo Axel La Habana front office manager Belen Santana Rodriguez said during May’s FITCuba reveal, Cuba’s annual tourism event. But she added that Havana residents were curious not hostile when her hotel opened proudly displaying the Gay Pride flag on its exterior, which she said is a reflection of changing attitudes in a Latin destination. “It’s an open-minded place. We are inclusive and we want everyone to enjoy our hotel.”

    Indeed, Cuban tourism minister Juan Carlos Garcia Granda said during FITCu