
Havana Club
Havana Club is Tegucigalpa's most established nightclub, occupying a two-story building on the south side of Boulevard Morazan near Colonia Palmira. The ground floor holds the main bar and a dance floor that fits roughly 200 people. Upstairs, a VIP section with booths overlooks the action below. The sound system is decent by Central American standards, pushing reggaeton, Latin trap, and cumbia through speakers that fill the room without overwhelming conversation at the bar. Weekend crowds start filtering in around 10:30 PM, and the place hits capacity by midnight on Saturdays. The door staff checks IDs and pats down for weapons, which in Tegucigalpa is a reassuring sign. Decor leans into the Cuban theme with exposed brick, vintage posters, and warm lighting that flatters the crowd. Most patrons are Honduran professionals in their 20s and 30s who've dressed up for the occasion.
What to Expect
A dark entryway opens into a ground-floor room with a long bar on the left and the dance floor in the center. The bass hits you before your eyes adjust. Groups of well-dressed Hondurans fill the booths around the perimeter, and the dance floor stays packed from midnight until closing. Upstairs is quieter, with table service and a balcony rail overlooking the main floor.
High energy on the dance floor, conversational at the bar. The crowd takes pride in being out and it shows in how people dress and carry themselves.
Reggaeton, Latin trap, cumbia, and bachata. The DJ occasionally drops English-language hip-hop or electronic tracks, but Latin beats dominate
Smart casual. Men wear jeans or chinos with collared shirts. Women dress up. Athletic wear and sandals won't get you past the door
Groups looking for the most reliable weekend nightclub experience in Tegucigalpa. Not a tourist spot; this is where local professionals go out
Cash (Lempiras) preferred. Some card terminals available but unreliable. Bring cash
Price Range
Cover 150-300 HNL, beer 50-70 HNL, cocktails 120-200 HNL, bottle service 1,200-2,500 HNL
Beer ~$2-3 / ~1.80-2.50 EUR. Cocktails ~$5-8 / ~4.30-7.20 EUR. Bottle ~$48-100 / ~43-90 EUR
Hours
Thu-Sat 9 PM to 3 AM
Insider Tip
Arrive before 11 PM to avoid the line on Saturdays. The upstairs VIP booths give a good view of the dance floor and come with faster service. Bottle service for a group of four runs about 1,500 HNL and saves money over individual cocktails.
Full Review
Havana Club sits on Boulevard Morazan in a building that's seen various iterations of Tegucigalpa nightlife over the years. The current incarnation has been running since around 2018 and has established itself as the go-to weekend spot for the city's young professional class.
The ground floor is where the energy lives. A long bar stretches along one wall, staffed by three or four bartenders who keep things moving on busy nights. The dance floor occupies the center, surrounded by high tables and booths that fill quickly after 11 PM. The music is relentlessly Latin: reggaeton and Latin trap dominate, with cumbia and bachata mixed in to keep the older crowd happy. The DJ reads the room well and knows when to shift gears.
Upstairs, the VIP section offers a different experience. Booths with bottle service overlook the dance floor through a glass railing. It's quieter, the service is faster, and the people-watching angle is excellent. A bottle of Flor de Cana or Johnnie Walker Black with mixers runs about 1,500-2,500 HNL, which splits reasonably among a group. The VIP booths fill by 11 PM on Saturdays, so arriving early matters.
Security is visible and professional. The pat-down at the door is thorough, and there's security inside as well. In a city where gun violence is a daily reality, this level of screening is welcome rather than annoying. The crowd is well-behaved; aggressive behavior gets you removed quickly.
As a foreigner, you'll stand out. Tegucigalpa doesn't get many tourists in its nightlife, and curiosity rather than hostility is the typical reaction. Speaking Spanish helps enormously. The bartenders speak minimal English, and the social interactions on the dance floor require at least conversational Spanish to go anywhere.
The Neighborhood
Havana Club is in the heart of Boulevard Morazan's nightlife strip, within walking distance of La Curva Sports Bar, Voodoo Lounge, and several restaurants. The Honduras Maya hotel is about 500 meters west. Stay on the boulevard and don't venture into side streets.
Getting There
Have your hotel call a radio taxi (Real Taxi: 2221-4000). The ride from most Tegucigalpa hotels takes 10-20 minutes depending on traffic. The club is on the south side of Boulevard Morazan in Colonia Palmira. Look for the signage and the line forming after 10:30 PM on weekends.
Other Venues in Boulevard Morazan

La Curva Sports Bar
Sports bar and grill that doubles as a nightlife spot on weekends. Multiple screens, draft beer, and a mixed crowd of locals and the occasional expat.

Baco Wine Bar
Upscale wine and cocktail lounge attracting Tegucigalpa's professional crowd. Quieter atmosphere, good drinks, and one of the safer spots to start an evening.

Voodoo Lounge
Dark-themed bar with cocktails and live DJ sets on weekends. Younger crowd that spills onto the sidewalk terrace late at night.

Factory Lounge
Two-level club with an open-air terrace upstairs. Electronic and reggaeton mix attracts university-age Hondurans on Thursday and Saturday nights.