I love numbers. Not because I’m an accountant — trust me, I’m not — but because when it comes to an industry I care deeply about, data tells a story that hype simply can’t. And this year’s story? It’s nuanced, it’s honest, and I find it more encouraging than the headline suggests.

TL;DR
  • The U.S. imported 429.8 million premium handmade cigars in 2025 — essentially flat versus 2024, and the fourth consecutive year above 400 million. That’s not a plateau, that’s a structural shift that wasn’t imaginable a decade ago.
  • Nicaragua now accounts for more than 60% of all premium cigar imports, shipping 258.4 million sticks. Honduras was up 11%, the Dominican Republic down 12%.
  • Flat from these heights is a foundation, not a warning sign. The pandemic boom normalized. The floor held. That’s actually the story.

According to the Cigar Association of America, the U.S. imported 429.8 million premium, handmade cigars in 2025. Essentially flat. Virtually unchanged from 2024. Not a boom. Not a bust. Just… steady. Some people will read that and shrug. I read it and think: that’s actually remarkable.

LET’S PUT THIS IN PERSPECTIVE

To understand why flat is fascinating, you need to remember where we came from. Before the pandemic, the U.S. was importing around 338 million premium cigars per year. Then something unexpected happened — people slowed down, stayed home, and rediscovered the simple pleasure of sitting outside with a good cigar. Imports exploded. By 2021, we hit 453.9 million. By 2022, a record 464.5 million.

Then the market normalized. And that’s okay. That’s what healthy markets do. What’s striking is that even after that correction, we’ve now logged four consecutive years above 400 million premium cigars imported into the United States. That’s not a pandemic bubble. That’s a structural shift in how Americans engage with premium tobacco.

WHERE THE CIGARS ARE COMING FROM

Nicaragua remains the dominant force, shipping 258.4 million premium cigars to the U.S. in 2025 — a modest 2% increase over the prior year. Nicaragua alone now accounts for more than 60% of every premium handmade cigar that crosses into the United States. That is staggering market concentration, and it speaks to the extraordinary tobacco-growing conditions in the Jalapa, Estelí, and Condega valleys.

The Dominican Republic shipped 93.7 million cigars, down 12% from 2024. Honduras came in at 74.5 million, up a strong 11% year over year. Together, these three countries account for virtually every premium handmade cigar smoked in America.

2025 IMPORT SNAPSHOT — CAA DATA

Total U.S. Imports429.8 Million
Nicaragua258.4M  ▲ 2%
Dominican Republic93.7M  ▼ 12%
Honduras74.5M  ▲ 11%
Year-over-Year ChangeEssentially Flat
Consecutive Years 400M+4 Years Running

FLAT DOESN’T MEAN FRAGILE

I want to push back on any reading of these numbers as a warning sign, because I think that misses the point entirely. The cigar market didn’t collapse after the pandemic boom. It settled. It found its floor, and that floor is 400-plus million handmade cigars per year — a floor that was unimaginable just six or seven years ago.

What we’re seeing is a maturing market. Consumers are getting more discerning, not less engaged. They’re buying fewer impulse purchases and more intentional ones. They’re reaching for cigars that mean something, that deliver a genuine experience. That’s a cigar smoker growing up, and I mean that as the highest compliment possible.

WHAT I’M WATCHING IN 2026

There are headwinds worth acknowledging. Tariff uncertainty rattled the supply chain earlier this year — imports spiked 29% in March 2025 alone as manufacturers and retailers front-loaded inventory ahead of potential trade disruptions. That kind of volatility creates short-term noise that can be hard to separate from long-term signal.

But the signal is clear: premium handmade cigars have earned a permanent, meaningful place in the American consumer’s life. The numbers, sourced directly from the Cigar Association of America’s annual import data, back that up year after year.

Flat is not failure. Flat, from these heights, is a foundation.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Four consecutive years above 400 million. A maturing consumer base that’s getting more selective, not less engaged. A floor built on real demand, not pandemic novelty. The cigar market didn’t just survive the boom — it kept most of the gains. I’ll take a rock-solid foundation over a sugar rush any day.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Common questions about the 2025 import numbers and what they mean for the cigar market.

How did cigar imports change in 2025?+
The U.S. imported 429.8 million premium handmade cigars in 2025 — essentially flat versus 2024. That marks the fourth consecutive year above 400 million, a level that was unimaginable before the pandemic.
Which countries export the most cigars to the U.S.?+
Nicaragua leads by a wide margin, accounting for over 60 percent of all premium cigar imports. The Dominican Republic and Honduras are second and third. Cuba remains excluded under the U.S. embargo.
Why is a flat import number considered a good sign?+
Because the floor is 400-plus million cigars — a level that was unimaginable just six or seven years ago. Four consecutive years at that level signals a structural shift in American cigar culture, not a pandemic bubble.
What happened to imports during the pandemic?+
Imports surged dramatically. The U.S. hit 453.9 million in 2021 and a record 464.5 million in 2022. The market then normalized, settling into the 400-plus million range — still far above pre-pandemic levels near 338 million.
Are tariffs affecting premium cigar imports?+
Yes. Tariff uncertainty drove a 29 percent spike in March 2025 imports as manufacturers and retailers front-loaded inventory ahead of potential trade disruptions. The longer-term impact will depend on how policy develops.
What was the breakdown by country in 2025?+
Nicaragua shipped 258.4 million cigars (up 2 percent), the Dominican Republic shipped 93.7 million (down 12 percent), and Honduras shipped 74.5 million (up 11 percent).
What does flat import growth mean for cigar smokers?+
It means the market is maturing rather than collapsing. Consumers are getting more selective, reaching for cigars that deliver a genuine experience rather than impulse purchases. That is a healthy development for serious cigar culture.
Norm Farrar, The Cigar Fossil
CCT · CST · CCST
40 Year Cigar Enthusiast
Podcast Host & Entrepreneur
ABOUT THE AUTHOR THE CIGAR FOSSIL

Norm Farrar is a four-decade cigar enthusiast, credentialed tobacconist (CCT, CST, CCST), and the founder of Blind Label Cigar. Known in the community as “The Cigar Fossil,” he’s logged enough smoke time to have serious opinions but still approaches every new cigar like the first one. Norm is an ecommerce entrepreneur, advising seven- and eight-figure Amazon sellers on brand building and growth. He’s also the host of Lunch With Norm, a top-100 Apple podcast, and The Marketing Misfits. When he’s not talking business, he’s talking cigars. Usually at the same time.