What is a corona cigar?

Quick answer

A Corona is a classical cigar vitola measuring roughly five and a half inches by forty-two to forty-four ring, considered by many traditionalists to be the truest test of a blend.

A Corona is a classical cigar vitola of roughly five and a half inches in length by forty-two to forty-four ring gauge. Among traditionalists, the Corona is considered the reference shape against which a blender’s intentions can be most honestly assessed: the relatively thin ring gauge produces a higher wrapper-to-filler ratio in each puff, which means the wrapper’s character shows more clearly than it does in a thick-ringed Robusto or Churchill.

For most of cigar history, the Corona was the industry default. The shift toward thicker rings (Robusto’s fifty, Toro’s fifty-two, Gordo’s sixty plus) is a relatively recent development, driven by changing consumer preferences and the lower cost-per-stick of larger sizes. Returning to a Corona after years of Robustos can be a quiet revelation; the smoke is cooler, the burn is faster, and the wrapper is more present.

Notable Coronas worth a try: the Cohiba Siglo II, the Hoyo de Monterrey Coronas, the Padrón 1964 Anniversary Corona, and the Tatuaje Reserva K222.

For more on how vitola changes a cigar’s character, see The Anatomy of a Cigar.

Last Reviewed on 2026-05-04

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More FAQs

How long does it take to smoke a cigar?

The time a cigar takes is set largely by its vitola. A small Petit Corona runs around thirty to forty-five minutes. A Robusto (five by fifty, the most common size)

What humidity should my humidor be at?

The traditional rule is seventy-seventy: seventy percent relative humidity at seventy degrees Fahrenheit. It is a serviceable rule that has been in print since well before any of us started