The best hotels in Haiti
Haiti has 8,000+ places to stay, and the gap between a great experience and a genuinely bad one is wider here than almost anywhere in the Caribbean. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Haiti
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Visa Lodge Hotel
Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince
Free cancellation & Pay later
Wahoo Bay Beach Resort
Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Roi Christophe
Historic Center, Cap-Haïtien
Free cancellation & Pay later
Club Indigo
Labadie Peninsula, Labadie
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Ibo Lele
Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kaliko Beach Club
Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis
Free cancellation & Pay later
Cormier Plage Resort
Cormier Beach, Cap-Haïtien
Free cancellation & Pay later
Hotel Montana
Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince
Free cancellation & Pay later
Moulin Sur Mer
Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis
Free cancellation & Pay later
Auberge du Picolet
Picolet, Cap-Haïtien
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Visa Lodge Hotel | Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince | $55–85/night | 6.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Wahoo Bay Beach Resort | Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis | $110–175/night | 7.9/10 | Most Popular |
| 3 | Hotel Roi Christophe | Historic Center, Cap-Haïtien | $130–195/night | 8.1/10 | Best Location |
| 4 | Club Indigo | Labadie Peninsula, Labadie | $275–380/night | 8.7/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 5 | Hotel Ibo Lele | Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince | $75–110/night | 7.2/10 | Best Value |
| 6 | Kaliko Beach Club | Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis | $125–190/night | 8/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 7 | Cormier Plage Resort | Cormier Beach, Cap-Haïtien | $145–210/night | 8.3/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 8 | Hotel Montana | Pétion-Ville, Port-au-Prince | $160–230/night | 7.6/10 | Business Pick |
| 9 | Moulin Sur Mer | Côte des Arcadins, Montrouis | $310–450/night | 9/10 | Top Rated |
| 10 | Auberge du Picolet | Picolet, Cap-Haïtien | $180–245/night | 8.5/10 | Hidden Gem |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Visa Lodge Hotel
A no-frills option in the Pétion-Ville district, which is the safest and most accessible part of the capital for travelers. Rooms are basic but clean, with reliable air conditioning and hot water. The small courtyard area gives you a quiet spot to eat breakfast away from the street noise. Staff are helpful with arranging local transport. Good for travelers on a tight budget who want a secure base.
Check Availability
Wahoo Bay Beach Resort
Wahoo Bay is one of the most established beach resorts on the Côte des Arcadins, about 60 kilometers north of Port-au-Prince. The beach is clean and the water calm, making it genuinely relaxing by Caribbean standards. Bungalow-style rooms face the sea and feel comfortable if not luxurious. The buffet meals are included on some packages and the food quality is above average for the area. A popular weekend escape for Port-au-Prince residents and visiting NGO workers alike.
Check Availability
Hotel Roi Christophe
Hotel Roi Christophe is housed in a colonial building in the historic center of Cap-Haïtien and carries genuine character that newer hotels lack. The courtyard with its fountain and mature trees is a calm retreat from the busy streets outside. Rooms are spacious with high ceilings and wooden shutters that open to garden or street views. The hotel is a short walk from the Cathédrale Notre-Dame and the central market. An ideal base for visiting the Citadelle Laferrière and Sans-Souci Palace.
Check Availability
Club Indigo
Club Indigo is a private beach resort on the Labadie peninsula, accessible only by boat from Cap-Haïtien. The setting is spectacular, with a crescent of clear turquoise water ringed by forested hills. Accommodation ranges from beachfront rooms to larger villa-style units, all finished to a high standard. Water sports, kayaking, and snorkeling are included in the rates. The seclusion is total and the infrastructure is the most reliable in Haiti, making it feel like a different country from the capital.
Check Availability
Hotel Ibo Lele
Ibo Lele sits on a hillside in Pétion-Ville with decent views over the city below. The pool is small but functional and one of the few budget options in Haiti that actually has one. Rooms are dated but maintained, and the on-site restaurant serves solid Haitian food at reasonable prices. Security is present around the clock, which matters a lot in this city. A reliable choice for the price range.
Check Availability
Kaliko Beach Club
Kaliko Beach Club occupies a stretch of white sand on the Côte des Arcadins and has a more intimate feel than its larger neighbor Wahoo Bay. The rooms are in small cottages along the beachfront and the grounds are well maintained. Snorkeling just off the beach is surprisingly good, with decent reef within swimming distance. Service is attentive and the bar operates until late on weekends. Better for couples than families given the layout.
Check Availability
Cormier Plage Resort
Cormier Plage sits on one of Haiti's most attractive stretches of beach, about 12 kilometers west of Cap-Haïtien. The property is small and quiet, with wooden bungalows arranged along the seafront under coconut palms. Meals are served at a beachside restaurant and the seafood is fresh and simply prepared. The bay is sheltered and ideal for swimming. It feels genuinely remote and peaceful, which is exactly what this place offers.
Check Availability
Hotel Montana
Hotel Montana is one of the most recognized addresses in Haiti, perched above Pétion-Ville with panoramic views of the city and bay. The property was rebuilt following the 2010 earthquake and now offers modern facilities including a solid conference center used by international organizations. Rooms are well appointed with consistent air conditioning and fast internet. The pool terrace is a strong draw in the evenings. Business travelers account for most of the clientele and the hotel caters clearly to that crowd.
Check Availability
Moulin Sur Mer
Moulin Sur Mer is the most polished resort on the Côte des Arcadins, built around a restored 18th-century sugar mill complex that gives the property real historical depth. The beach is well groomed, the pool is large, and the gardens are exceptionally maintained by Haitian standards. Rooms and cottages are decorated with local art and craftsmanship, which makes the interiors feel distinctive rather than generic. The restaurant focuses on Haitian cuisine done with care, using local ingredients well. This is the closest thing to a world-class resort experience currently operating in Haiti.
Check Availability
Auberge du Picolet
Auberge du Picolet occupies a restored colonial property on the Picolet peninsula just outside Cap-Haïtien, overlooking the bay. It is a small operation with only a handful of rooms, so the attention to guests is genuine and unhurried. The views from the terrace over the water toward the mountains are among the best in the north of Haiti. Breakfast is included and features local fruit and Haitian coffee that is worth waking up early for. Book well in advance as it fills quickly.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Haiti
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel. Here's what you need to know.
Port-au-Prince: Stay in Pétion-Ville, not the lower city
Pétion-Ville is not just a safer option. it's a genuinely better experience. The neighbourhood around Rue Grégoire and Place Boyer has good restaurants, art galleries, and guesthouses that have been running reliably for years. You're still only 20-25 minutes from the Iron Market (Marché de Fer) and Champ de Mars if you want to explore downtown.
Skip anything marketed as 'central Port-au-Prince' on budget booking sites. That usually means somewhere around Route de Delmas or lower Turgeau, where the infrastructure is unpredictable and security concerns are real. Pétion-Ville hotels in the $75-160/night range are the sweet spot here. Pay the extra $20 a night. It matters.
Cap-Haïtien: The history is worth the trip
Cap-Haïtien's historic centre, specifically the grid of colonial streets around Rue 24 and the seafront Boulevard du Capois, is one of the most underrated urban areas in the entire Caribbean. You can walk to the Cathédrale Notre-Dame in 10 minutes from most central hotels. The Citadelle Laferrière and Sans-Souci Palace at Milot are 25 km south, about a 45-minute drive.
Hotel Roi Christophe sits right in the heart of this. a converted 19th-century building that actually earns its location badge. From here you can reach the waterfront market in 5 minutes on foot. If you only have 3 days in Haiti, split them between this neighbourhood and a beach at Cormier. That's the itinerary we'd give a friend.
Côte des Arcadins: Haiti's beach strip, explained
The Côte des Arcadins is a 30 km stretch of coastline along Route Nationale 1, and the section around Montrouis is where the best hotels sit. Wahoo Bay, Kaliko Beach Club, and Moulin Sur Mer are all within a few kilometres of each other. The water is calm, the sand is real, and on a weekday you'll have long stretches practically to yourself.
Weekends change everything. Port-au-Prince families and expats fill up these resorts from Friday evening, and the vibe shifts from relaxed to lively. That's not a bad thing. the griot and beach barbecue scene on Saturday afternoon is genuinely fun. But if you're after quiet, come Tuesday through Thursday and you'll pay about 15-20% less too.
Labadie: The most private beach in Haiti
Labadie is on its own peninsula north of Cap-Haïtien, and the only way in is by boat. about 15 minutes across the bay from the Cap-Haïtien waterfront. That isolation is the whole point. Club Indigo controls most of the beach here, and it's set up to make sure guests actually stay and enjoy the place rather than disappearing for day trips.
Don't expect a town to explore or local restaurants down the road. There aren't any. What you get is one of the most intact beaches in the northern coast, calm water, and a resort that runs properly at $275-380/night. It's a specific kind of trip. and if it matches what you want, it genuinely delivers.
Transport in Haiti: what actually works
Tap-taps. the painted pickup trucks and minibuses. are the main form of public transport, and they run fixed routes for around 10-25 HTG per ride in Port-au-Prince. Practical for locals, confusing for first-timers. For hotel-to-airport or inter-city runs, private taxis or hotel-arranged cars are the realistic option. Expect $25-40 for a Port-au-Prince airport transfer.
For the Cap-Haïtien to Milot run (Citadelle visits), hire a driver through your hotel rather than negotiating on the street. you'll spend about $40-60 for a round trip with waiting time. Some hotels like Cormier Plage and Hotel Roi Christophe organise shared excursions for around $25-30 per person. That's the better deal if you're travelling solo.
What to eat near your hotel in Haiti
Haitian food is seriously good and doesn't get enough credit. Griot (fried pork), tassot (fried goat), and diri ak djon djon (rice with black mushrooms) are the dishes to find. In Pétion-Ville, the stretch of restaurants around Rue Lamarre and Rue Geffrard has everything from proper Haitian cooking to pizza for the homesick. Prices for a full plate at a local spot run $3-8 USD.
In Cap-Haïtien, the restaurants near Boulevard du Capois have the freshest seafood. lambi (conch) cooked in Creole sauce is the move. At beach resorts on Côte des Arcadins, the in-house restaurants are generally solid and not overpriced for resort dining. But wherever you're staying, ask the front desk where staff actually eat lunch. That's always the right answer.
Explore Haiti by city
We cover 3 destinations across Haiti. Pick a city for a dedicated hotel guide with neighborhoods, seasonal tips, and our vetted picks.
Haiti's best hotel regions
If you're short on time, start with Cap-Haïtien. The history is real, the beaches are close, and the hotel quality is the most consistent in the country. Côte des Arcadins is your best bet for a proper beach retreat without flying anywhere.
Port-au-Prince & Pétion-Ville 3 vetted hotels Haiti's capital on the hill. stay high, explore low.
Haiti's capital on the hill. stay high, explore low.
Pétion-Ville sits above Port-au-Prince at around 500 meters, and that elevation isn't just a geography note. it's the single most important factor in choosing where to stay. The streets around Place Boyer, Rue Grégoire, and Rue Lamarre form a neighbourhood with working restaurants, galleries, and hotels that have been operating consistently for years.
Downtown Port-au-Prince has things worth seeing: the Iron Market, Champ de Mars, the National Palace ruins, and MUPANAH are all real draws. But you visit them by day, then come back uphill. The three hotels we list here. Visa Lodge, Hotel Ibo Lele, and Hotel Montana. are all in Pétion-Ville for exactly this reason.
Hotel Montana sits on Rue Cardozo and caters heavily to NGO workers and international business visitors. Visa Lodge and Ibo Lele are better picks for travellers wanting something more personal. Budget for $55-230/night depending on what you need, and always check current conditions before travel.
Browse all Port-au-Prince & Pétion-Ville hotels → Côte des Arcadins 3 vetted hotels Haiti's beach coast. 90 minutes from the capital and worth every minute.
Haiti's beach coast. 90 minutes from the capital and worth every minute.
The stretch of coast around Montrouis is where Haitians who can afford it go to actually relax. The three properties here. Wahoo Bay Beach Resort, Kaliko Beach Club, and Moulin Sur Mer. sit within a few kilometres of each other on Route Nationale 1, and the quality difference between them is reflected directly in the price.
Moulin Sur Mer is the top-rated hotel in our entire Haiti list at a score of 9.0, and it earns it. The property sits on a former sugar plantation with 200-year-old mill structures still standing. It's $310-450/night, and yes, it's worth it for a special occasion or a genuine splurge. Kaliko and Wahoo Bay give you excellent beach access at $110-190/night.
The coral reef off Kaliko is accessible by snorkel directly from the beach. no boat needed. That's rarer than it sounds on this coastline. Come midweek for the best prices and quietest beaches. Weekends bring the Port-au-Prince crowd, which is fun but crowded.
Browse all Côte des Arcadins hotels → Cap-Haïtien & the North 3 vetted hotels Colonial history, mountain fortresses, and the best hotels outside the capital.
Colonial history, mountain fortresses, and the best hotels outside the capital.
Cap-Haïtien is Haiti's second city and, for travellers, arguably its most rewarding base. The historic centre around Rue 24 and Boulevard du Capois has a real working-city energy. fishermen at the port in the morning, vendors along the main streets, and architecture that makes you stop and look. The Cathédrale Notre-Dame is 5 minutes on foot from Hotel Roi Christophe.
Cormier Plage Resort and Auberge du Picolet are just outside the city proper. both are on the coast and both offer a quieter, more intimate stay than anything in Port-au-Prince. Cormier sits directly on the water at Cormier Beach, 12 km from the city centre. Auberge du Picolet is up on the Picolet promontory with views across the bay and a rating of 8.5.
The Citadelle Laferrière and Sans-Souci Palace at Milot are unmissable. It's a 45-minute drive from Cap-Haïtien, and the hike up to the Citadelle itself takes 45-60 minutes. Go early. by 10am the tour groups arrive. Your hotel can arrange a driver for $40-60 round trip.
Browse all Cap-Haïtien & the North hotels → Labadie Peninsula 1 vetted hotel Boat access only. and that's exactly the point.
Boat access only. and that's exactly the point.
Labadie sits across the bay from Cap-Haïtien, accessible only by a 15-minute boat ride from the city's waterfront dock. Club Indigo is the only significant accommodation on the peninsula, and it operates as a self-contained resort. Rates start at $275/night and run to $380 for the better rooms. It's not budget travel. but the isolation is the product.
The beach here is legitimately one of the finest on Haiti's northern coast. The water is clear, the sand is soft, and because there's only one resort operating, it never feels like a scene. Cruise ships do stop at the neighbouring beach (Royal Caribbean has a private terminal nearby), but Club Indigo's guests are separated from that entirely.
If you're combining Labadie with a Cap-Haïtien itinerary, spend 2 nights at Auberge du Picolet or Hotel Roi Christophe for the cultural side, then 2-3 nights at Club Indigo. That combination covers the north coast properly.
Browse all Labadie Peninsula hotels →Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Haiti.
Romantic
Cormier Beach, just outside Cap-Haïtien, is where you want to be. Small resort, private beach, and sunsets over the Windward Passage that don't need a filter.
Culture & History
Cap-Haïtien's historic centre around Rue 24 is the right base. you're 45 minutes from the Citadelle Laferrière and walking distance from 18th-century colonial streets that most people never see.
Family
Côte des Arcadins, specifically the Montrouis resort strip, works well for families. calm water, on-site dining, and enough space that kids aren't underfoot of other guests. Wahoo Bay Beach Resort is the most family-oriented of the three properties here.
Budget
Pétion-Ville in Port-au-Prince is where you get the most for the least. Visa Lodge at $55-85/night sits near Rue Lafleur Ducheine and gives you a functional, clean base without paying city-hotel prices.
Beach
Labadie Peninsula is the best beach experience in the country, full stop. Club Indigo has the sand, the water clarity, and the operational infrastructure to back it up. and at $275-380/night, it delivers on the price.
Foodie
Pétion-Ville's restaurant strip around Rue Lamarre and Rue Geffrard is Haiti's best concentration of quality eating. from Creole griot to fresh lanbi, within a 10-minute walk of the neighbourhood's main hotels.
How We Vetted These Hotels
Every hotel on this list went through the same evaluation. Here's exactly how we score them.
We reviewed 8,000+ options across the main regions of Haiti. We cut anything with misleading beachfront photos where the 'beach' turned out to be a concrete ledge, guesthouses charging boutique prices for broken air conditioning, and Port-au-Prince hotels marketing themselves as 'Pétion-Ville' when they're a 25-minute tap-tap ride away. We also dropped places that looked fine on paper but couldn't answer basic questions about security protocols. What's left are 10 hotels we'd actually book ourselves.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
Hotels that score below 8.0 don't make our list. Hotels can't pay for placement. We update scores every quarter based on new reviews. If a hotel's quality drops, it gets removed. Read more about our approach on the about page.
When to Visit Haiti: Season by Season
Hotel prices, crowds, and weather vary dramatically. Here's what to expect each season.
Peak Season (Dec-Mar)
This is when Haiti is at its most accessible and most alive. Carnaval in February draws huge crowds to Port-au-Prince and Jacmel. streets around Avenue Martin Luther King and the Jacmel seafront fill up weeks in advance. Hotel prices across the board jump 20-30% during Carnaval week, so book Cap-Haïtien or Côte des Arcadins options at least 6 weeks ahead.
Spring (Apr-May)
Prices drop by roughly 15-20% after Easter, and the crowds thin out fast. April is still dry enough in the north to visit the Citadelle comfortably. May brings the start of the rainy season, with afternoon showers that cool things down quickly. beach stays on Côte des Arcadins are still very workable in the mornings.
Rainy Season (Jun-Oct)
Hurricane season runs June through October, and Haiti sits directly in common storm tracks. That's the real risk. not just rain, but infrastructure disruption, road closures, and occasional flooding on Route Nationale 1. Prices at Côte des Arcadins resorts can drop to $110-150/night even at the better properties. Good value if you're monitoring forecasts closely and can be flexible.
Late Dry Season (Nov)
November is our favourite month to recommend. The hurricane season winds down, temperatures are comfortable, and prices haven't yet climbed to December peaks. Cap-Haïtien in November is particularly good. clear skies, the roads to Milot are dry, and you can visit the Citadelle without the January tourist rush. Hotels in the north run $130-245/night at this time.
How to Book Hotels in Haiti
Smart booking strategies that save money without sacrificing quality.
Book your Cap-Haïtien hotel before Carnaval du Nord
Cap-Haïtien hosts its own Carnaval separately from Port-au-Prince, usually in the weeks before Mardi Gras. The streets around Rue 24 and the Champ de Mars in the city fill up completely. Hotels like Hotel Roi Christophe and Cormier Plage sell out 8-10 weeks ahead. If you want to be there for it, that's when you need to move.
Always confirm your airport pickup is from Toussaint Louverture, not the domestic terminal
Port-au-Prince has separate arrival areas, and taxis line up differently at each. If you've arranged a hotel pickup, confirm the terminal and flight details 24 hours ahead. The drive from Toussaint Louverture International to Pétion-Ville takes 30-45 minutes in normal traffic, but Friday afternoon can push that to 75 minutes. Build in buffer time.
Midweek rates on Côte des Arcadins can save you 15-20%
Wahoo Bay, Kaliko, and Moulin Sur Mer all have noticeably lower rates Tuesday through Thursday. Port-au-Prince residents drive up on weekends, and resort pricing reflects it. A midweek stay at Kaliko Beach Club can run $125-155/night versus $160-190 on a Friday. Same beach, same rooms.
Use your hotel's car rather than street taxis for the Citadelle run
The road from Cap-Haïtien to Milot is 25 km and in variable condition. Hotel-arranged drivers know the route, have vehicles with decent clearance, and include wait time in the price. Expect $40-60 round trip through your hotel. Street taxis near Boulevard du Capois will quote less but may not have 4WD vehicles, which matters on the last stretch up to the fortress base.
Bring small USD bills for everything outside the resorts
Outside of the hotels listed here, USD in small denominations ($1, $5, $10) is the most practical currency to carry. Markets at Marché de Fer in Port-au-Prince and vendors along the Cap-Haïtien waterfront price in gourdes but will take dollars. Getting change on a $20 at a street stall is a real problem. Keep a roll of ones.
Don't book a 'beachfront' room without checking the actual satellite view
This is the single most common complaint we see from Haiti hotel reviews. Several properties market 'beach access' when they mean a shared sliver of rocky shore 10 minutes from the hotel. All three Côte des Arcadins properties in our list. Wahoo Bay, Kaliko, and Moulin Sur Mer. have direct sand access. If a hotel's address is in Montrouis but we haven't listed it, check the satellite view on Google Maps before you commit.
Frequently Asked Questions About Hotels in Haiti
Straight answers from our team after reviewing hotels across Haiti.
What's the safest area to stay in Port-au-Prince?
Pétion-Ville is your best option. It sits above the city at around 500 meters elevation, and neighbourhoods like Juvenat and Desprez have the most stable security track record. Avoid Martissant and Cité Soleil entirely. there's no hotel reason good enough to put you there. Budget at least $55-85/night for a decent guesthouse in Pétion-Ville.
How do I get from Toussaint Louverture International Airport to Pétion-Ville?
A private taxi from the airport to Pétion-Ville runs about $25-35 and takes 30-45 minutes depending on traffic on Route de Delmas. Don't try to negotiate tap-taps or motos at the airport if it's your first time. the price difference isn't worth the hassle. Ask your hotel to arrange a pickup in advance. It's worth the extra $5.
Is it worth staying in Cap-Haïtien vs. Port-au-Prince?
Honestly, Cap-Haïtien wins for most tourists. The city's historic center around Rue 24 and the waterfront is walkable, the Citadelle is 45 minutes away by road, and hotels here. like Hotel Roi Christophe. have a charm Port-au-Prince can't match right now. Port-au-Prince makes more sense if you're there for business or as a transit point. For leisure, fly or take the road north.
What's the best beach area in Haiti for a resort stay?
Côte des Arcadins, specifically the stretch around Montrouis, is the go-to. It's about 60-80 km north of Port-au-Prince on Route Nationale 1, roughly a 90-minute drive. Kaliko Beach Club and Wahoo Bay Beach Resort both sit right on the water here. Labadie, near Cap-Haïtien, is also excellent but harder to reach independently.
When is the best time to visit Haiti?
December through March is peak season: dry, temperatures around 25-28°C, and the roads are in better condition. February is particularly good. Carnaval brings incredible energy to the streets of Port-au-Prince and Jacmel. Hotel rates jump by 20-30% during Carnaval week, so book at least 6 weeks out if that's your target.
Do I need a visa to visit Haiti?
Most nationalities, including US, Canadian, and EU passport holders, don't need a visa for stays under 90 days. You'll pay a $10 tourist card on arrival, which is sometimes included in your airfare. Check with the Haitian Embassy or your airline before travelling. the rules have shifted in recent years and it's always worth confirming 2-3 weeks before you fly.
What currency should I bring, and can I use credit cards?
The official currency is the Haitian Gourde (HTG), but USD is widely accepted, especially at hotels and restaurants in Pétion-Ville and Cap-Haïtien. Most upscale hotels accept Visa and Mastercard, but keep $50-100 in small USD bills for markets, tap-taps, and local meals. ATMs exist on Route de Lalue and in Pétion-Ville, but availability is inconsistent, so don't rely on them.
Is it safe to travel to Haiti right now?
Haiti has genuine security challenges, and we won't sugarcoat that. The areas covered in this guide. Pétion-Ville, Côte des Arcadins, Cap-Haïtien, and Labadie. have a significantly better track record than Port-au-Prince's lower city districts. Check your government's travel advisory (UK FCDO, US State Department) within 2 weeks of travel, not 2 months. Things can change fast.
What's the price difference between Port-au-Prince and Cap-Haïtien hotels?
Cap-Haïtien often gives you more for your money. A mid-range hotel in the historic centre around Rue 24 runs $130-195/night, and you're getting colonial architecture, decent restaurants within a 10-minute walk, and proximity to the Citadelle. Equivalent quality in Pétion-Ville tends to run $75-160/night, but you're in an urban setting with fewer natural draws nearby.
Are there all-inclusive options in Haiti?
Club Indigo at Labadie is the closest to a proper all-inclusive setup, with rates from $275-380/night covering accommodation, meals, and use of the beach facilities on the Labadie Peninsula. Moulin Sur Mer and Kaliko Beach Club offer full-board packages too, though they're priced separately. For a proper beach retreat where you don't have to think about dinner, Labadie is the pick.
How far is Côte des Arcadins from Port-au-Prince?
About 60-80 km north on Route Nationale 1, which takes 90 minutes to 2 hours depending on traffic leaving the city. Friday afternoons are brutal. locals and expats both head up for the weekend, and the road through Arcahaie gets congested. Leave before noon on Fridays or go early Saturday morning. The drive itself is scenic once you clear the city sprawl.
What should I know about tipping at Haitian hotels?
Tips are genuinely appreciated and make a real difference. A standard tip for housekeeping is 100-200 HTG per night (roughly $1-2), and $3-5 USD for a restaurant server at a mid-range hotel is appropriate. At luxury properties like Moulin Sur Mer or Club Indigo, 10-15% on food and beverage is the norm. Don't leave tips in gourdes if you're at an upscale property. USD is preferred by staff.
Useful links for Haiti
Government & official sources only. No booking sites, no ads.
Ready to book Haiti?
We vetted the best — but there are thousands more. Browse the full selection and filter by dates, price, and neighborhood.
Browse all Haiti hotels