Quick answer
Authentic Cuban culture — Calle Ocho, the best Cuban food in the US, cafecito windows, domino parks. One of the most affordable neighborhoods in Miami at $1,600–2,000/mo for a 1BR. Not gentrified. The trade is less walkability and older building stock, but the cultural density is real and irreplaceable.
Neighborhood Guide · 2026
Little Havana, Miami
Authentic Cuban culture — Calle Ocho, the best Cuban food in the US, cafecito windows, domino parks. One of the most affordable neighborhoods in Miami at $1,600–2,000/mo for a 1BR. Not gentrified. The trade is less walkability and older building stock, but the cultural density is real and irreplaceable.
Miami Housing Costs — 2026
Median 1BR rent
$2,200/mo
Median 2BR rent
$3,100/mo
Median home price
$635K
Avg utilities
$180/mo
City-wide medians. Little Havana rents may vary above or below depending on building vintage and unit type.Full Miami breakdown →
Other Neighborhoods in Miami
Compare Little Havana with other popular areas.
Wynwood
World-famous street art, galleries, boutique hotels — Miami's creative hub. Heavily photographed, which means weekend crowds are real. 1BRs run $2,400–2,800/mo; you're paying for the aesthetic. Best for people who work in creative industries or want to be near the art scene.
Coconut Grove
Lush, leafy, bohemian — oldest neighborhood in Miami. Slower pace than Brickell, with mature trees and a marina. 1BRs $2,000–2,400/mo. Attracts families and people who want less density. The quiet here is genuine — it's a different city from South Beach.
Brickell
Financial district, high-rises, the most walkable urban core in Miami. The Brickell City Centre gives it actual street-level retail. 1BRs $2,600–3,200/mo. Best for finance workers and remote workers who want NYC-style density without NYC prices — though the gap has narrowed significantly.
South Beach
Art Deco architecture, beach access, nightlife, and consistent tourist foot traffic. If you want the Miami postcard lifestyle, this is it. 1BRs $2,500–3,000/mo. Best for people whose social life centers on nightlife and beach proximity; less suited for families or anyone wanting quiet.
Design District
Luxury retail, architecture, upscale dining — more of a shopping destination than a residential neighborhood. Small residential population. Premium for the address.
Edgewater
Between Wynwood and Brickell, waterfront, mostly newer construction high-rises. Slightly below Brickell prices at $2,200–2,700/mo for a 1BR. Good walkability to Wynwood. A practical choice for people who want Brickell-adjacent living without paying Brickell prices.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Little Havana a good neighborhood in Miami?
Authentic Cuban culture — Calle Ocho, the best Cuban food in the US, cafecito windows, domino parks. One of the most affordable neighborhoods in Miami at $1,600–2,000/mo for a 1BR. Not gentrified. The trade is less walkability and older building stock, but the cultural density is real and irreplaceable.
What is the rent in Little Havana, Miami?
Miami citywide median 1BR rent is $2,200/mo. Little Havana pricing varies from the city average depending on building age, proximity to transit, and in-unit amenities. Studio units in Miami often run 15–20% below the 1BR median.
What is Little Havana in Miami known for?
Authentic Cuban culture — Calle Ocho, the best Cuban food in the US, cafecito windows, domino parks. One of the most affordable neighborhoods in Miami at $1,600–2,000/mo for a 1BR. Not gentrified. The trade is less walkability and older building stock, but the cultural density is real and irreplaceable.
How does Little Havana compare to other Miami neighborhoods?
Little Havana is one of 7 notable neighborhoods in Miami. Other options include Wynwood, Coconut Grove, Brickell.
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