The Camacho Limited Edition 2025 marks a new chapter for the Camacho brand, replacing the long-running Liberty Series that had become a staple of Camacho’s annual lineup since its debut in 2002. While the Liberty cigars were known for celebrating themes of American pride and patriotism, the Limited Edition 2025 shifts the focus toward a broader showcase of craftsmanship and high-quality tobacco blending. This move signals Camacho’s intent to evolve its image beyond its classic Americana roots while continuing to highlight bold smoking experiences that the brand has long been known for.
Visually, the Limited Edition 2025 stays true to Camacho’s assertive design language, featuring strong color contrasts, metallic accents, and the brand’s recognizable shield logo. The presentation aims to strike a balance between modern flair and the rugged, no-nonsense personality Camacho has built its reputation on. By retiring the Liberty name, Camacho seems to be positioning this series as a more globally focused release—one less tied to national identity and more centered on blending mastery and innovation.
At the core of that approach is a tobacco selection that leans heavily into quality and refinement. The Camacho LE 2025 features a Mexican San Andrés wrapper, a Honduran binder, and a filler composed of Dominican and Honduran tobaccos. Together, this blend is crafted to deliver a balanced profile that still carries Camacho’s signature strength and intensity.
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Camacho Limited Edition 2025 Breakdown
- Wrapper: Mexican San Andrés
- Binder: Honduras
- Filler: Dominican Republic | Honduras
- Factory: Diadema Cigars de Honduras, S.A. (Honduras)
- Production: Limited Edition (N/A)
- Vitola: 6″ × 52 (Toro)
- Price: $17.50 (MSRP)
Appearance
The Camacho LE 2025 makes a strong first impression with its dark, oily Mexican wrapper that glows with a deep chocolate and slightly reddish hue under the light. The leaf has a smooth texture in hand, is tightly rolled, and displays only a few pronounced veins. Construction feels solid throughout—firm but not rock-hard—which stands in slight contrast to the lifted edges of the wrapper on the roll. It’s not enough to be concerning, but it is noticeable. The band is smaller than most of the core-line labels outside of the Master Built Series. It looks premium and has a refinement to it. Aromas from the wrapper are rich and savory, offering barnyard, cedar, earth, cayenne pepper and a faint hint of sweet cocoa. The foot delivers more sweetness, balanced by a sharp, almost sour note I can’t quite put my finger on.
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Smoking Experience
After a clean cut, the cold draw opens up with just the right amount of resistance. Initial impressions bring roasted cashew, cocoa powder, cedar, and a light chili-pepper zing that tingles on the lips. There’s an underlying creaminess here that rounds out the sharper edge.
From the first draw, this cigar charges forward with a bold, flavorful opening. Dense clouds of smoke coat the palate with charred oak, espresso bean, and black pepper spice. Behind that initial blast, there’s a developing sweetness of roasted cashew and salted caramel that softens the edges and brings a welcomed balance. The retrohale pushes roasted coffee, white pepper, and a faint molasses note—not sweet but more sharp and slightly bitter. The draw is just how I like it, with a slight resistance but free flowing. Flavor sits firmly in the medium/full range, while strength is medium and body hovers at medium-full.
Now well past first-light impressions, a dark chocolate-covered almond note joins the profile, along with baking spices that help balance out the charred woodiness and black pepper. Each puff shows something different at this point. One moment, dry oak and espresso lead the dance; the next, a buttery/nutty sweetness of roasted almonds and cocoa. There’s also a subtle minerality creeping in, giving the profile a bit more texture. Retrohales are smooth yet sharp, showing black tea, baking spice, and charred cedar with a healthy pepper backbone. The ash falls in a solid chunk at this point, and the burn is slightly wavy but requires no touchup. Flavor is medium/full, strength is medium, and body is medium/full.
As I find myself halfway through the Camacho Limited Edition 2025, I see a distinct drop in complexity in the cigar. Sweetness is falling away, leaving a very earthy and woody core of flavors that are supported by heavy black pepper. There’s no longer the same shifting of flavors as before—now it’s hardwoods, coffee grounds, and enough pepper spice to make my tongue tingle. The retrohale is a little more complex, as it delivers sharp white pepper, oak char, and a savory smokiness that’s almost meaty in nature. Flavor and strength hold steady and the body loses a half step to medium-plus.
The band of the toro removes easily, with no damage to the cigar. The wood notes at this point waver back and forth from dry walnut to freshly sharpened pencil. There is a tangy, bittersweet note that is an oddly pleasing mix of molasses and dark chocolate. It manages to cut through the wood and pepper, bringing back the balance the cigar lost through the middle. The retrohale is getting spicier, now only delivering musky wood and lots of black and white pepper (which limits how much I can handle without tearing up). At this point, I have to touch up the burn line—if left any longer, it’ll begin to canoe. The draw has not changed throughout the smoking experience, and the flavor, body, and strength have not moved.
The Camacho Limited Edition 2025 closes out with a firm hand and little subtlety. The final third is dominated by dry wood and black pepper that’s straightforward and unrelenting to the finish. There’s no sweetness to round it out, just a bold, gritty delivery of those same core flavors. It feels one-dimensional, relying entirely on strength and spice rather than depth or evolution. As the smoke tapers off, the body grows heavier and the profile more forceful, leaving an impression that’s more about intensity than balance.
Would I Smoke This Cigar Again?
Absolutely. The Camacho Limited Edition 2025 is a bold yet refined entry in Camacho’s limited-edition portfolio. It captures everything the brand stands for—strength, richness, and attitude—while showing off a level of composure that keeps it from being a one-dimensional powerhouse (at least, outside of the final push). The transitions from sweet nuttiness to charred spice and cocoa depth make it an engaging, flavorful ride from start to finish. Some Camacho limiteds have leaned a little too far into raw strength (in my opinion), but this one finds balance without losing its edge. It’s the kind of cigar that commands your attention yet rewards your patience. For fans of full-bodied blends that don’t sacrifice complexity, this release is worth tracking down.
- Cigar Dojo interviewed Camacho Product Manager, Jack Heyer, at the 2025 PCA trade show in New Orleans, where Camacho showcased the cigar for the first time.
- Currently, the Camacho Limited Edition 2025 ranks on Dojoverse as “100% Smokable,” placing in the top 32 percent of cigars on the all-time leaderboard.
- Flavor: Medium / Full
- Strength: Medium-Plus
- Body: Medium / Full
- Dry wood
- Roasted almonds
- Dark chocolate
- Molasses
- Black/white pepper
- Char
- Smoke Time: 1 hour, 55 minutes
- Pairing Recommendation: Italian espresso | Booker’s bourbon | Manhattan
- Purchase Recommendation: 5-pack to try, full canister if you’re a Camacho fan
Short Link:
- Rich and flavorful
- Complex transitions
- Thick smoke output
- Complexity fades (flavors become one-noted)
- Balance doesn’t maintain
- Pepper and wood overwhelm at the end



