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Destinations in Colombia — where to go

Four completely different Colombias — the Caribbean, the mountains, the capital, and coffee country.

Colombia's four essential stops are Cartagena (colonial Caribbean city, 2–3 days), Medellín (mountain city, transformation story, digital-nomad hub, 3–4 days), Bogotá (capital, museums, altitude, 2–3 days), and the Coffee Triangle around Salento (coffee farms, wax palm valley, 2–3 days). A 12–14 day trip comfortably covers all four; 7–8 days means picking two.

Colombia is not one trip — it's at least four. A steamy colonial port city on the Caribbean, a mile-high capital in the Andes, a mountain city that's rewritten its own story in twenty years, and a green coffee-growing valley that looks like it was drawn by hand. Most first-timers try to cram all of it into ten days and end up exhausted; here's an honest read on what each place is actually like and how long it deserves.

Questions people actually ask

What's the best first-time Colombia itinerary?
Bogotá (2–3 days) + Medellín (3–4 days) + Cartagena (2–3 days) is the classic combination, and it fits a 10–12 day trip including travel days. Add 2–3 days in the Coffee Triangle (Salento) if you have 14+ days — it's an easy add between Medellín and the coast.
Which Colombian city should I skip if I only have a week?
If you're short on time, most travelers cut Bogotá before Medellín or Cartagena — it's the least essential of the three for a first trip, since its highlights (Gold Museum, La Candelaria) can be done in a single long day near the airport if you're connecting through anyway.
Cartagena or Medellín — which is better?
It depends what you want: see our full head-to-head comparison. Short version — Cartagena for colonial architecture and Caribbean beach time, Medellín for mountain scenery, nightlife, food, and a genuinely remarkable urban transformation story.