Landing Point · US United States
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| GTMO-1 | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-06-18 through 2026-06-25 - live ICMP round-trip time via our monitoring probes. Recomputed daily. ✓ No anomalies detected in the monitored period.
| Probe | Location | Samples | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| #6410 own probe | Sao Paulo BR | 6 | 115.8 ms |
| #6487 own probe | Singapore SG | 6 | 234.4 ms |
| #1005627 | control probe | 4 | 41.1 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 4 | 172.6 ms |
| #1015563 own probe | Saint Petersburg RU | 3 | 138.6 ms |
| #6427 own probe | Sydney AU | 1 | 381.5 ms |
| #1016031 own probe | Kyiv UA | 1 | 141.1 ms |

Dania Beach is a city in Broward County, Florida, situated within the Miami metropolitan area on the southeastern coast of the United States. As a submarine cable landing point, it serves as the U.S. terminus for one submarine cable system connecting the United States to Cuba. This positions Dania Beach within a narrow but significant bilateral corridor across the Florida Straits.
The single cable landing here, GTMO-1, links Dania Beach directly to Cuba, establishing a short-distance international connection between the two countries. Florida's southeastern coast has long functioned as a natural geographic gateway toward the Caribbean and Latin America, and Dania Beach's role as a landing point reflects that broader spatial logic.
GTMO-1 is a submarine cable system measuring 1,528 km in length, with a ready-for-service (RFS) year of 2016, listed in draft status. The cable connects Dania Beach, Florida, in the United States to Cuba, forming a direct bilateral link between the two countries. GTMO-1 is the sole submarine cable system currently landing at Dania Beach.
Within the United States, Dania Beach hosts one submarine cable, placing it among the smaller landing points in a national submarine cable network that spans 113 cables across 160 landing points. Nearby Boca Raton, FL, and San Juan, PR, each host eight cables, while Hermosa Beach, CA, Kapolei, HI, and Myrtle Beach, SC, each host five, illustrating the considerably greater cable density at other U.S. coastal nodes. Dania Beach ranks in the top 69% of U.S. landing points by cable count, reflecting its more specialized rather than large-scale role in the national submarine cable landscape.
Dania Beach functions as a single-cable terminus rather than a multi-cable hub, with GTMO-1 providing the sole international submarine link from this location to Cuba. The cable's 1,528 km length is well below the U.S. average cable length of 4,957 km, underscoring that this is a short-haul, bilateral corridor rather than an intercontinental route. The connection it supports is geographically direct, spanning the relatively narrow distance between the Florida coast and Cuba.
In the broader submarine cable graph of the United States, Dania Beach represents a point of concentrated, single-destination connectivity. While larger U.S. landing points aggregate multiple international routes and serve diverse regional corridors, Dania Beach's profile is defined entirely by its link to Cuba via GTMO-1, making it a dedicated node within the U.S.–Cuba segment of the Western Hemisphere submarine cable network.
View actual submarine cable routing from Dania Beach, FL, United States - with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
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