Quick answer: Cigars vary by wrapper color, shape and size, body strength, country of origin, manufacturing method, and price tier. A beginner picks a mild Connecticut wrapper in a robusto from the Dominican Republic, hand-rolled, under $10. An experienced smoker picks a full-body Habano or Maduro in a torpedo, Honduran or Nicaraguan, hand-rolled, over $20. The six dimensions intersect to fit your occasion.
Walking into a cigar shop for the first time can feel like walking into a wine cellar with no map. There are 200 brands. Each brand has 5 to 10 lines. Each line has 3 to 8 vitolas. Wrappers come in eight different colors. Bodies range from mild to full. Origins span half a dozen countries. The clerk asks what kind of cigar do you want?
and you have no idea where to start. Most new smokers default to whatever the clerk recommends and miss the chance to actually understand what they are looking at.
This is the umbrella reference. Read it once and the next visit to a cigar shop makes sense. Cigars vary along six dimensions, and once you know which dimension matters most for what you want, the choice becomes clear.
What Are the Main Types of Cigars?
A cigar can be described by six dimensions: wrapper color (Connecticut shade, Habano, Maduro, Cameroon, Sumatra, and others), shape and size (the vitola: Robusto, Toro, Churchill, Torpedo, Lancero, etc.), body strength (mild, medium, full), country of origin (Cuba, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, Honduras), manufacturing method (hand-rolled premium versus machine-made cigarillos), and price tier (under $5 budget through $100 plus ultra-luxury). The most popular combination in the US market is a Robusto vitola (5 x 50) with a Connecticut shade or Habano wrapper, hand-rolled, mild to medium body, in the $7 to $15 price range. Beginners typically start with mild Connecticut wrappers in Robusto or Corona size; experienced smokers move into Maduro or Oscuro wrappers in larger Toros and Churchills with full body. Each dimension has a deep-dive guide on cigarfinder; the rest of this page summarizes how the six dimensions interact.
Type by Wrapper
The wrapper is the most visible variable. Wrapper colors range from pale cream to nearly black, with corresponding flavor characteristics:
- Connecticut Shade. Pale, golden brown. Mild, smooth, cream and cedar. Beginner-friendly. Examples: Macanudo Cafe, Ashton Classic.
- Connecticut Broadleaf. Darker, richer, more leathery than Shade. Used in Maduro production.
- Habano. Reddish-brown. Spicy, peppery, full of flavor. Examples: Padron 1964, Aganorsa.
- Maduro. Dark brown to nearly black. Sweet, rich, often with cocoa and coffee notes. Fermented longer. Examples: Padron 1964 Maduro, Liga Privada No. 9.
- San Andres. Mexican-grown, dark and earthy with chocolate-forward sweetness. The leaf behind many modern Maduros. Examples: Foundation Tabernacle, Undercrown Maduro.
- Oscuro. Darkest. Bold, sweet, intense. Often confused with Maduro but darker.
- Cameroon. African-grown. Reddish-brown. Earthy, sweet, slightly spicy. Examples: Arturo Fuente Hemingway.
- Sumatra. Indonesian heritage. Medium-brown. Earthy and slightly sweet.
- Candela. Pale green. Grassy, sweet, mild. Once popular in the 1960s, now rare.
For a deep dive on wrappers, read understanding cigar wrappers.
Type by Shape and Size
Vitolas are the specific length-and-ring-gauge combinations. The most important standard vitolas:
- Petit Corona (4.5 x 42). 30 to 45 minutes. Compact, focused flavor.
- Robusto (5 x 50). 45 to 60 minutes. The most popular vitola in the US.
- Corona (5.5 x 42). 45 to 60 minutes. Classic Cuban shape.
- Toro (6 x 50). 75 to 90 minutes. Popular for full evening sessions.
- Churchill (7 x 47). 90 to 120 minutes. Long, refined, classic.
- Lonsdale (6.5 x 42). 60 to 90 minutes. Slim and elegant.
- Torpedo (6 x 52). 80 to 100 minutes. Tapered head concentrates smoke at the cap.
- Belicoso (5.5 x 52). 70 to 85 minutes. Shorter Torpedo style.
- Lancero (7.5 x 38). 60 to 90 minutes. Long and thin. Castro's preferred shape.
- Perfecto (varies). Tapered at both ends. Decorative and unusual.
For the complete vitola breakdown, read the cigar sizes guide.
Type by Body Strength
Body is the intensity and richness of flavor. Three primary categories:
Mild. Light cream and cedar. Approachable. Best for morning smokes or beginners. Examples: Macanudo Cafe, Ashton Classic, Oliva Connecticut Reserve.
Medium. More flavor evolution. Cedar, cocoa, light pepper. Most versatile. Examples: Romeo y Julieta 1875, Rocky Patel Vintage 1990, Drew Estate Undercrown.
Full. Bold, intense, with significant nicotine. Best after meals with a drink. Examples: Padron 1964 Maduro, Liga Privada No. 9, Camacho Triple Maduro. The strong cigars list covers full-body picks.
Beginners typically start mild, move to medium within 6 to 12 months, and try full-body after a year of regular smoking. The cigars for beginners guide covers entry-point picks.
Type by Country of Origin
Four main growing regions:
- Cuba. Smooth, refined, cedar/cream/coffee. Currently illegal to import to the US.
- Nicaragua. Bold, spicy, cocoa/pepper/earth. The most popular premium origin in the US market.
- Dominican Republic. Smooth, balanced, often used for milder cigars. Where many of the Cuban-legacy brands make their US versions.
- Honduras. Earthy, leathery, often medium-bodied.
For flavor differences across countries, read how tobacco tastes from different countries and the Cuban vs Nicaraguan cigars guide.
Type by Manufacturing Method
Two main categories:
Hand-rolled premium cigars. Long-filler tobacco bunched and rolled by hand. $5 to $30 each. Most premium brands (Padron, Fuente, Davidoff, My Father, Drew Estate). Better flavor, longer burn, higher price.
Machine-made cigars and cigarillos. Short-filler tobacco rolled at speed. $0.50 to $3 each. Cigarillos like Backwoods, Swisher Sweets. Faster burn, simpler flavor, lower price.
The cigar vs cigarillo guide covers the distinction in detail.
Type by Price Tier
- Budget cigars under $5. Foundation Charter Oak, AJ Fernandez New World, Brick House.
- Value premium $5 to $15. Macanudo, Romeo y Julieta 1875, Drew Estate Undercrown, Oliva Connecticut Reserve, Rocky Patel Vintage 1990.
- Premium $15 to $30. Padron 1964 Anniversary, My Father Le Bijou 1922, Liga Privada No 9, Davidoff Grand Cru.
- Luxury $30 to $100. Padron Family Reserve, Davidoff Aniversario, Opus X.
- Ultra-luxury over $100. Cohiba Behike (Cuban-made, sold abroad only) and Davidoff Oro Blanco, which lists around $500 per cigar.
For value picks, read the 9 best cigars for the money. All US-legal options are stocked across our partner retailers; we track active codes for Famous Smoke Shop and the broader premium cigar category.
How Do You Pick a Cigar for the Occasion?
The six dimensions intersect to fit specific occasions:
- First cigar ever: Mild Connecticut wrapper, Robusto, hand-rolled, under $10. Macanudo Cafe Hampton Court.
- Quick 30-minute smoke: Petit Corona, mild to medium body, any wrapper. Backwoods (cigarillo) or Macanudo Hyde Park.
- Long evening lounge: Churchill or Toro, medium-full body, Habano or Maduro wrapper. Padron 1964 Anniversary Toro.
- Special occasion / milestone: Premium tier, refined wrapper, hand-rolled. Padron Family Reserve or Opus X.
- Daily affordable smoke: Value premium $5 to $10, any wrapper, hand-rolled. AJ Fernandez New World, Drew Estate Undercrown.
- Outdoor / golf: Mild to medium, larger ring gauge for wind resistance, 90 plus minute burn. See best cigars for golf.
- Birthday gift: Match the recipient's experience level. See best cigars for a birthday.

