Brazil's Third Habanos Regional Edition Has Arrived — And It's a Brand-Maker
There are cigars that fill a portfolio slot, and then there are cigars that reshape a market. Brazil's third Habanos Regional Edition, the La Gloria Cubana Série Brasil No. 3, firmly belongs in the second category. More than a limited release to satisfy collectors, this campana-sized figurado doubles as a formal introduction of the entire La Gloria Cubana brand to the Brazilian market — a detail that makes it far more significant than its modest batch size might suggest.
The third Habanos Regional Edition dedicated to Brazil has finally hit the market. Presented the previous year during Habanos Night, the new La Gloria Cubana Série Brasil No. 3 is now available at the main shops throughout the country. For the Brazilian cigar community, a group that has watched each previous Edición Regional sell out quickly, the arrival of this release caps a period of anticipation that began at a gala event in late 2025.
The Cigar Itself: Specs, Vitola, and What Makes It Distinctive
The La Gloria Cubana Série Brasil No. 3 is a campana size with a 52 ring gauge and 140 millimeters in length. For the uninitiated, a campana — sometimes rendered as "bell" — belongs to the broader figurado family, sharing its tapered, pyramidal profile with some of the most celebrated cigars in the Cuban canon. This vitola, known as campanas in Cuban factories and new to the La Gloria Cubana brand, is the same format used for the Bolívar Belicosos Finos and the San Cristóbal de La Habana La Punta. The shared vitola with those two iconic sticks is more than a technical footnote — it immediately places the Série Brasil No. 3 in distinguished company and gives smokers a useful reference point for the burn characteristics and draw resistance they can expect.
The new Edición Regional comes in the same pyramid vitola as used for the Bolívar Belicosos Finos. What that means in practice is a cigar with a pointed, tapered cap that requires a precise cut and rewards a deliberate pace. The tapering concentrates heat differently than a parejo, producing a more nuanced interplay between filler and binder early in the smoke before the ring gauge opens toward its fullest expression in the final third. It is a format that punishes impatience and pays dividends to anyone willing to let the cigar find its rhythm.
Packaging and Production Numbers
The new release is a campana size measuring 52 by 140mm and comes in a limited series of 6,000 individually numbered boxes. The Série Brasil No. 3 is sold in boxes of 10. At 6,000 boxes of ten, the total production run stands at 60,000 cigars — a respectable figure for a Regional Edition, though one that will be absorbed quickly by a premium market that already burned through its two predecessors. It retails for approximately 285 reais, which works out to around €49 per box. At that price point, it sits within reach of the serious aficionado while remaining exclusive enough to carry genuine collector appeal. The cigar features the standard La Gloria Cubana Band B, accompanied by a Regional Edition band identifying Brazil.
The Habanos Night Reveal: How Brazil Found Out
On Wednesday, October 8th, 2025, Emporium Cigars, the exclusive distributor of Habanos in Brazil, hosted the third edition of Habanos Night Brazil with a glamorous gala dinner. Around 360 guests gathered for this exclusive event, including Habanos enthusiasts, industry figures, and influencers. The scale of the event — nearly four hundred people drawn from multiple countries for a single product reveal — underlines how seriously Emporium Cigars has invested in building Havana cigar culture in Latin America's largest economy.
Attendees from Brazil, Costa Rica, Spain, Chile, and Argentina had a lot to celebrate at a dinner filled with musical attractions, and were among the first to see the new Habanos Regional Edition dedicated to the country. Among the evening's many attractions, the importer also organized a special charity auction of two lots containing cigar humidors and special spirits, bringing something of the atmosphere of the Habanos Festival Gala Dinner to South America. Attendees received a sample box of two Série Brasil No. 3 cigars in a beautiful case reminiscent of those distributed during Habanos Festival evenings — a generous gesture that allowed guests to take the product home the same night it was announced.
The Habanos Night is an event organized by local distributors to promote Cuban cigars and Cuban culture around the world, and Emporium Cigars, the official local Habanos distributor, spared no effort to make this the best edition yet in Brazil. That ambition showed in the attendance figures and the international reach of the guest list, signaling that Brazil has grown into one of the more consequential markets within the broader Habanos global distribution network.
Why This Release Matters Beyond the Cigar
A Brand Makes Its Brazilian Debut
The logistical and cultural significance of this release extends well past a single limited production run. The cigar marks the introduction of the La Gloria Cubana brand in the Brazilian market, which now starts to be imported by Emporium Cigars, the official Habanos distributor to Brazil. Going forward, the brand will be available not only with the new "Exclusivo Brasil" release but also the other regular production vitolas of the brand. That distinction is crucial. Brazil's premium cigar buyers can now access the full La Gloria Cubana line — from its classic Médailles d'Or formats to the Série D robustos — through legitimate, officially sanctioned channels. The Regional Edition, in other words, has served as a strategic market-opening tool, using collector demand to build distribution infrastructure for an entire brand.
The release brings the La Gloria Cubana brand to Brazil, since it had not previously been imported by Emporium Cigars. The brand will now be available not only in the Regional Edition format but also across its regular portfolio. For anyone who has watched the slow, deliberate expansion of the Habanos portfolio into emerging markets, this is a familiar but effective strategy: anchor a brand's arrival with a scarce, prestigious release, create desire and brand recognition simultaneously, then satisfy that desire with regular production stock on an ongoing basis.
The Role of the Regional Edition Program
The Habanos Regional Edition series brings cigars specially produced at the request of local Habanos distributors and has become very popular among Cuban cigar enthusiasts and collectors. The releases come in limited production runs and feature special vitolas not found in the regular production portfolio of their brands. The program functions as a proving ground for both distributors and the market itself — a high-profile, controlled-scarcity event that tests the appetite of local aficionados and demonstrates a market's maturity to Habanos headquarters in Havana.
One of the defining characteristics of the Regional Edition series is that the cigars produced cannot come from the six Habanos Global Brands — Cohiba, Hoyo de Monterrey, H. Upmann, Montecristo, Partagás, and Romeo y Julieta — or Trinidad, since the series also serves the purpose of making the other brands in the Habanos portfolio more popular in international markets. This rule is by design. By deliberately excluding the headliners, Habanos forces distributors and consumers to engage with deeper, less-marketed names — La Gloria Cubana, El Rey del Mundo, Bolívar, San Cristóbal de La Habana — and build genuine appreciation for what those brands offer. It is brand development masquerading as a collector's program, and it works.
Brazil's Regional Edition History: A Market Coming of Age
To understand what the Série Brasil No. 3 represents, it helps to trace the arc of the Edición Regional program in Brazil from its beginning. Brazil has already had two Habanos Regional Editions: the first presented in 2013, the Bolívar Redentores, and the second presented in 2021, the El Rey del Mundo Série BN2 Brasil — both already sold out.
The Bolívar Redentores (2013)
The first Brazilian Regional Edition was launched in 2013 under the Bolívar brand. The Bolívar Redentor, measuring 52 ring gauge by 115mm, came in a limited series of 2,000 numbered boxes of 25 cigars. By any standard, 2,000 boxes is a modest print run, and the sell-out of the entire allocation reflects both how hungry that early market was and how little Habanos and Emporium Cigars had yet tested Brazilian demand. The Redentores has since become a bona fide collector's piece, with boxes appearing occasionally in secondary markets at significant premiums over their original retail price.
The El Rey del Mundo Série BN2 Brasil (2021)
The second Habanos Regional Edition dedicated to Brazil hit shelves in 2021. The Série B No. 2 Brasil, measuring 52 ring gauge by 135mm, was released under the El Rey del Mundo brand, which had recently begun distribution in the country. The deliberate parallel to the current release is unmistakable: just as the El Rey del Mundo brand was brought to Brazilian consumers through the vehicle of a Regional Edition in 2021, La Gloria Cubana is receiving exactly the same treatment now. Emporium Cigars has developed a repeatable playbook — and given that both previous releases sold out entirely, there is no incentive to deviate from it.
"Since the El Rey del Mundo had just arrived at the Brazilian market, we chose the appeal of the Regional Edition Series to generate more interest and make the brand more popular among consumers. That's why we selected the factory vitola Edmundo, since the Montecristo Edmundo is already very popular here," said Fernando Teixeira, CEO of Emporium Cigars, the official Habanos distributor to Brazil. Teixeira's candor about the strategy is refreshing, and his logic applies with equal force to the current La Gloria Cubana release. The campana vitola chosen for the Série Brasil No. 3 is similarly calibrated for impact — it is a shape with a strong track record in the Bolívar and San Cristóbal lines, familiar enough to generate confidence while being genuinely new to the La Gloria Cubana catalog.
Emporium Cigars later repackaged the final batch of 3,000 sticks of the El Rey del Mundo release into 150 humidors of 20, an inventive move that extended the life and collectibility of that release well past its original box format. Whether a similar strategy materializes for the Série Brasil No. 3 remains to be seen, but the precedent exists.
La Gloria Cubana: The Brand Behind the Band
La Gloria Cubana is a name that carries substantial weight among serious Habanos smokers but has historically flown under the radar compared to the flagship brands. Founded in 1885, the brand built its reputation on medium-to-full-bodied cigars with a consistently earthy, leathery character — a profile that tends to deepen considerably with age. Its Regional Edition history is actually quite extensive, with prior releases produced for the United Kingdom, Cuba, Switzerland, the Netherlands, the Asia Pacific region, the Caribbean, France, and the Balkans, among others. An earlier La Gloria Cubana Regional Edition for the United Kingdom featured a special band alongside a numbered varnished semi boîte nature box of 10 cigars, with only 2,040 produced, a 2008 release.
The brand's relative obscurity outside of core Habanos markets has been a function of distribution gaps rather than product quality. Sophisticated smokers who have encountered La Gloria Cubana in its home market or in well-stocked European shops often rank it among the most underrated names in the Habanos stable. Its arrival in Brazil — one of the fastest-growing premium cigar markets in the Americas — via a collector-grade Regional Edition creates the strongest possible first impression.
What This Means for the Market and Collectors
With 6,000 boxes in total worldwide allocation for a single market, the Série Brasil No. 3 will not linger on shelves. The two previous Brazilian Regional Editions are both fully sold out, and the collector community surrounding Habanos Regional Editions has grown considerably in the years since the Bolívar Redentores appeared in 2013. Anyone who followed the velocity at which the El Rey del Mundo BN2 disappeared will approach this release with appropriate urgency.
Beyond the immediate collectibility, the release has long-term implications for how Cuban cigars are perceived and distributed in Brazil. The presentation of Regional Edition releases has traditionally been extended to all major Brazilian cities — primarily São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Brasília, Belo Horizonte, Curitiba, and Porto Alegre — where aficionados can savor what is considered the world's best tobacco. That geographic reach ensures the brand doesn't remain a São Paulo phenomenon but finds genuine roots across the country's fragmented and geographically vast premium retail landscape.
The decision to pair the Regional Edition launch with the full La Gloria Cubana catalog introduction also makes excellent business sense for Emporium Cigars. Collectors who buy the Série Brasil No. 3 and find themselves impressed with its campana profile and La Gloria Cubana's characteristic flavor signature are natural candidates for the regular production line — the Médailles d'Or No. 4, the Série D No. 4, the Glorias range. The limited release becomes a permanent recruitment tool, converting one-time buyers into brand loyalists.
The Broader Edición Regional Picture
Brazil's third Regional Edition arrives at a moment when the program as a whole continues to demonstrate remarkable vitality worldwide. From Scandinavia to the Middle East, from Western Europe to Latin America, Regional Editions remain a worldwide success, with Habanos distributors competing informally to bring fresh vitolas, new brands, and increasingly ambitious event concepts to their markets. The program has become a reliable indicator of a market's health and sophistication — countries that secure multiple editions are demonstrably proving their aficionado base is deep enough to absorb limited stock and generate the promotional energy Habanos values.
Brazil, with three editions now under its belt and each one sold out, has firmly established itself in that tier. The eight-year gap between the first and second editions, and the roughly four-year gap between the second and third, suggests a cadence of roughly every three to five years — which means Brazilian smokers looking for the fourth edition can start watching the calendar, and start wondering which other underrepresented Habanos brand might be heading their way next.
For now, the La Gloria Cubana Série Brasil No. 3 stands as the most ambitious and strategically significant of Brazil's three Regional Editions, notable not just as a fine smoke in a classic shape but as the vehicle by which an entire brand has arrived in one of the Western Hemisphere's most dynamic cigar markets. That's a lot of weight for a 140mm campana to carry — and from everything in La Gloria Cubana's track record, it is more than up to the task.
