For almost five centuries, Cayo Largo del Sur interested no one: it was barely a tongue of sand and mangrove south of Cuba, without fresh water, without a town and with no permanent inhabitants beyond the turtles that came each year to lay their eggs on its beaches. Pirates and corsairs crossed it without stopping; the maps barely named it. And yet, that abandonment of centuries ended up being its greatest fortune: when Cuba looked toward tourism, it found here an intact paradise. Cayo Largo del Sur is one of the cays of the Canarreos archipelago, a long string of coral islets that stretches south of Cuba, between the main island and the Isla de la Juventud. Like so many Caribbean cays, for centuries it was a practically uninhabited place, a world of sand, mangrove, reef and open sea, a habitat for turtles, birds and iguanas, but with no permanent human settlements or resources to justify its colonization.
These waters south of Cuba, however, were not outside history. During the 16th to 18th centuries, the Caribbean was the scene of the passage of Spanish fleets laden with riches and, consequently, of the activity of pirates, corsairs and buccaneers who lay in wait for the galleons. The countless cays, shallows and channels of southern Cuba —including the Canarreos— offered ideal hideouts and refuges for these vessels, and the area became wrapped in tales of shipwrecks and treasures, part of the rich Caribbean pirate lore that also fed, not far away, the nearby Isla de la Juventud (the former Isla de Pinos, associated with pirate legends).
During all that time, Cayo Largo remained essentially pristine, frequented at most by fishermen and by the wildlife that inhabited it. Its beaches were still a natural sanctuary for the sea turtles that came to nest. That long stage of isolation and untouched nature would be, paradoxically, the cay's great asset when, centuries later, Cuba discovered in its sands a different treasure: that of tourism.
What for centuries made Cayo Largo a 'useless' place in the eyes of the colonizers —its lack of inhabitants, fresh water and exploitable resources— was, in reality, what preserved its greatest wealth: an extraordinarily well-preserved nature. The cay's beaches, of fine white sand, are among the most important sea turtle nesting areas in the region. Various turtle species come to its sands to lay their eggs, perpetuating a millennia-old natural cycle.
The neighboring islets are also home to notable populations of iguanas —like those that give Cayo Iguana its name— and abundant seabirds, among them pelicans. Underwater, the coral reefs surrounding the cay support a rich biodiversity of fish, corals and other species, favored by the transparency and warmth of these southern waters.
This natural richness has meant that, even with tourist development, conservation is a central value on Cayo Largo. There are programs and centers dedicated to protecting the turtles, and much of the surroundings is kept as a natural space. The visitor who arrives seeking dream beaches thus discovers that the cay is also a wildlife sanctuary, a place where the beauty of the landscape is inseparable from the fauna that inhabits it. Caring for that balance is the great challenge of a destination that bases its appeal, precisely, on its intact nature.
Unlike most Cuban destinations —colonial cities, historic towns, villages with centuries of life—, Cayo Largo del Sur lacks an urban past: its history as an inhabited place is, in essence, the history of its tourist development, which began in the last decades of the 20th century. When Cuba decided to promote sun-and-beach tourism as an economic engine, the cays of turquoise waters and pristine beaches appeared as an asset of enormous value, and Cayo Largo, with some of the best beaches in the country, became one of the first and most exclusive enclaves developed.
An airport (Vilo Acuña) was built that allowed access by air —the main way to reach the cay— and all-inclusive resorts were raised in front of the beaches, while the rest of the island remained a natural space. The model bet on rest, diving and nature tourism, taking advantage of the beauty of Playa Sirena, Playa Paraíso and the reefs, without the presence of towns or local life that does characterize other destinations.
Today Cayo Largo del Sur is a leading beach destination in the Cuban Caribbean, popular above all among those seeking tranquility, sun and sea, as well as among diving lovers. Its history, brief but singular, makes it a case apart within Cuba: a place where the past is not in monuments or squares, but in the nature that remained pristine for centuries and that today, conveniently preserved, is its main attraction.
Since its tourist takeoff in the late 20th century, Cayo Largo del Sur has established itself as one of the most exclusive sun-and-beach destinations in Cuba, especially appreciated by travelers from Canada, Italy and other European countries, who arrive on direct charter flights to Vilo Acuña airport. The cay is managed as an autonomous tourist enclave: administratively it forms part of the special municipality of Isla de la Juventud, but it functions almost like an independent island devoted entirely to the visitor.
The model, however, has not been without ups and downs. Dependence on international tourism makes the cay very sensitive to external crises: the COVID-19 pandemic, from 2020, halted the arrival of travelers and hit destinations like this one hard, as they lack any other economy. To this are added Cuba's own challenges in recent years —fuel shortages, supply difficulties and the complex currency situation— that affect the operation of the resorts and the visitor experience.
Environmentally, the underlying challenge remains reconciling tourist development with the preservation of the turtle nesting beaches, the reefs and the wildlife islets, which are, precisely, the asset that gives the destination its value. Cayo Largo del Sur thus enters the decades of the 21st century as what it always was from its birth: a fragile, isolated beach paradise, whose future depends on caring for the balance between the tourism that sustains it and the nature that makes it unique.