About this cigar
Cohiba Siglo VI — tasting notes and pricing context
Launched in 2002 a decade after the rest of the Línea 1492, the Siglo VI was Cohiba's answer to demand for a larger, longer-smoking Siglo. The 5.9-inch Cañonazo is the biggest in the 1492 series and runs roughly 90 to 120 minutes if you draw slowly. The blend is unmistakably Siglo — lighter and more elegant than the Línea Clásica, with the cedar, honey and creamy butter signature — but the 52 ring gauge and Cañonazo shape (similar to a Toro Grande) push the smoke into a fuller register. First third opens with cedar and pastry; middle drifts into honey, butter and a touch of espresso; the last third earns the price tag with a long, sweet finish that rarely gets harsh.
Price spread across Europe is wider than most Cohiba SKUs because demand has crept up faster than allocation. Germany's Noblego runs roughly €1,850 per box of 25; Switzerland's Cigarmust posts CHF 2,100 (~€2,200 after FX); Sweden's Cigarrummet sits around SEK 19,500. The 15% spread between cheapest and dearest European retailer is meaningful in absolute terms — a €350 swing — and price-drop alerts on this SKU pay off.
Compare other Cohiba vitolas
- Cohiba Robustos — Robusto, ring 50
- Cohiba Behike 52 — Robusto Extra, ring 52
- Cohiba Siglo IV — Corona Gorda, ring 46
- Cohiba Espléndidos — Julieta No.2, ring 47
- Cohiba Siglo II — Marevas, ring 42
- Cohiba Medio Siglo — Petit Edmundo, ring 52
- Cohiba Magicos — Robusto Extra, ring 52
- Cohiba Siglo III — Corona Grande, ring 42
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