Isla de la Juventud, island and municipio especial (special municipality) of Cuba, in the Caribbean Sea. It is bounded to the northwest by the Canal de los Indios and on the north and northeast by the Gulf of Batabanó, which separate it from the mainland of western Cuba. A 1904 treaty recognizing Cuba’s sovereignty over the island was finally ratified by the United States in 1925. The capital of the special municipality is Nueva Gerona.
Juventud is the largest member of the Canarreos Archipelago. The northern part of the island is an undulating plain of pine forests and savannas, of sandy and rocky soils, with a few low mountains up to an elevation of 944 feet (303 metres) above sea level.
The main activities are fishing, truck farming, and citrus growing; grapefruit production predominates and is the basis for the economy of the island. The National Reformatory, a prison, is located a few miles from the island’s main town, Nueva Gerona. The section south of Lanier Swamp is small, rocky, and isolated, inhabited only by a few fishermen and charcoal makers. Kaolin and marble are extracted on the island. Area 934 square miles (2,419 square km). Pop. (2002) 86,557; (2012 prelim.) 84,263.