Most cigar smokers are never going to walk the PCA floor. It is a trade show — built for manufacturers, retailers, and the people who move product through the industry. But every smoker feels its impact. The cigars you find on your tobacconist’s shelf in the months ahead, the boutique brand that suddenly gets some room, the limited edition your lounge gets excited about — it all starts here. PCA 2026 just wrapped in New Orleans, and the show had something to say about where this industry is headed.
- PCA 2026 ran April 17–20 at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, drawing 262 exhibiting companies, over 2,540 retailers from more than 970 accounts, and 5,945+ total attendees.
- The dominant trend on the floor was value presentation — limited editions, new vitolas, sampler packs, and packaging designed to give retailers something to talk about and smokers something to want.
- The show’s energy signaled an industry still investing in growth and innovation, despite ongoing tariff and regulatory headwinds. PCA 2027 heads to Las Vegas.
THE SHOW BY THE NUMBERS
PCA 2026 was a strong showing by any measure. The Premium Cigar Association reported 262 exhibiting companies on the floor, with over 2,540 retailers representing more than 970 retail accounts walking through. Total attendance crossed 5,945 across the four days. Tens of thousands of samples were distributed, hundreds of new cigars and accessories were previewed, and millions of dollars in orders were placed. The PCA called it a successful close — and the numbers back that up.
PCA 2026 — BY THE NUMBERS
WHAT I SAW ON THE FLOOR
There is a rhythm to PCA that repeats every year, and once you understand it, you start reading the floor differently. Retailers come to see what is coming, place orders, and build the relationships that determine what ends up on their shelves. Boutique labels get a chance to introduce themselves alongside the major names. Larger companies test ideas they would not risk in a more public setting. And for those paying close attention, the show tells you a great deal about how the industry is thinking about the next twelve months.
I walked the floor with Ritesh Patel, owner of Single Malt Cigar Bar in Nashville, and watching him work the show was a reminder of how these decisions actually get made. He moved methodically — booth to booth, thinking about what would fit his humidor, what his customers would respond to, and what would give his shop an edge. That is where the buying decisions happen. Not in a press release. On the floor, in conversation, with a cigar in hand.
You can see which brands are leaning into limited editions, which are testing new packaging, and which boutique labels might finally get their shot to break out.— NORM FARRAR, THE CIGAR FOSSIL
THE TRENDS WORTH WATCHING
PCA never feels static, and 2026 was no exception. The dominant theme this year was value presentation — the way brands package and position a cigar to convey something worth paying for. Limited editions, anniversary releases, new vitolas, small-batch trial runs, and sampler packs all pointed toward the same goal: give the retailer a story to tell, and give the smoker a reason to reach for something new.
That thread ran across the floor. Black Label Trading Company, La Aurora, Casada, Miami Cigar, Luciano, Drew Estate, Cavalier Geneva, Casa Carrillo, Rocky Patel, Altadus, and A.J. Fernandez were among the brands showing new directions in packaging and presentation. The common denominator was cigars designed to stand out on a shelf and feel special in the hand — not just smoke well.
Sampler packs deserve a specific mention. They have become a serious retail tool. For newer smokers, a sampler is a lower-commitment entry point into a brand’s range. For retailers, it simplifies the introduction. If that first experience lands, the smoker comes back for singles, then boxes. The brands that understand this are using samplers deliberately, not just as a convenience item.
WHY THE SHOW STILL MATTERS
There is always a question in the digital age of whether a trade show like PCA still carries the same weight it once did. The answer, based on what I saw in New Orleans, is yes — and for reasons that have not changed. Relationships are still built in person. Decisions about what makes it onto a shelf are still made face-to-face. The cigar business runs on trust and conversation in a way that is hard to replicate through a screen.
PCA also functions as a signal. When attendance is strong, when the floor is packed, when brands are showing up with new ideas rather than retreating to safe ground — that is the industry telling you something. Despite the tariff pressure coming out of Washington, despite the regulatory uncertainty that has followed the premium cigar market for years, the companies that showed up in New Orleans were not pulling back. They were pushing forward.
PCA 2026 was the kind of show that makes you feel good about the long-term health of the premium cigar market. The numbers were strong. The energy on the floor was real. And the trends — value presentation, samplers, limited editions, new vitolas — point to an industry that understands its customers and is investing in giving them reasons to stay engaged. What starts in New Orleans in April ends up in your humidor by fall. Pay attention to what comes out of this show.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Common questions about PCA 2026, the show floor, and what it means for the cigar industry.
