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7 Days in Colombia: Bogota, Medellin, or Cartagena?

Colombia Guides Published June 10, 2026

Seven days in Colombia is enough for a strong first trip, but only if you choose your route carefully. You can see Bogota, Medellin, and Cartagena in one week, but the smoother choice is usually two bases plus one domestic flight.

TL;DR: For most first-time visitors, the best 7 days in Colombia are either Bogota plus Medellin, Medellin plus Cartagena, or a fast Bogota-Medellin-Cartagena route with flights between every city. Do not plan long intercity buses unless your week is flexible. Colombia is bigger and slower to cross than it looks on a map.

Best 7-Day Colombia Route For Most First-Time Visitors

If you want a balanced first trip, choose Bogota and Medellin. This gives you history, food, museums, mountain views, better pacing, and less airport time than trying to force the Caribbean coast into the same week.

Route Best For Main Tradeoff
Bogota + Medellin Culture, food, city life, first-time pacing No Caribbean beach time
Medellin + Cartagena Warm weather, nightlife, Caribbean finish Less history and museum depth than Bogota
Bogota + Medellin + Cartagena Travelers who want a sampler Three flights or airport days in one week
Cartagena Only + Islands Short beach-focused vacations Not a full picture of Colombia

For a first Colombia trip, the biggest mistake is treating 7 days like a miniature 2-week itinerary. Pick what you want the week to feel like: Andean culture, spring-weather city life, Caribbean heat, or a fast overview.

Option 1: Bogota And Medellin In 7 Days

This is the best all-around route if you care about Colombia beyond the beach. Fly into Bogota, spend three nights there, then fly to Medellin for four nights before flying home or connecting onward.

Day 1: Arrive In Bogota

Stay in Chapinero, Quinta Camacho, Usaquen, or a well-reviewed part of La Candelaria depending on your style. Keep the first day light because Bogota sits at high altitude and many travelers feel it more than expected.

Day 2: La Candelaria, Museums, And Monserrate

Use your first full day for the historic center, the Gold Museum, the Botero Museum, Plaza de Bolivar, and Monserrate if the weather is clear. Go early for Monserrate, watch your phone in crowded areas, and use a ride app back if you stay out after dark.

Day 3: Food, Neighborhoods, Or A Day Trip

Choose between a food tour, coffee tasting, Usaquen, Chapinero restaurants, or the Salt Cathedral of Zipaquira. If this is your first time in Colombia, a slower city day is often better than adding a long day trip immediately.

Day 4: Fly To Medellin

Take a morning flight from Bogota to Medellin. The flight is short, but airport transfers can turn it into a half-day move, especially because Medellin’s main airport is outside the valley.

Day 5: Medellin Metro, Comuna 13, And Laureles Or Poblado

Use the metro to understand the city layout, then visit Comuna 13 with a responsible local guide. In the afternoon, explore Laureles for a calmer neighborhood feel or El Poblado if you want restaurants and nightlife close together.

Day 6: Guatape Or A Medellin City Day

Guatape is the classic day trip from Medellin: colorful streets, reservoir views, and the El Penol rock climb. If you dislike long day trips, stay in Medellin for Jardin Botanico, Plaza Botero, coffee, or a cable car ride toward Parque Arvi.

Day 7: Depart Or Add One Easy Morning

Keep your final morning flexible. Traffic, rain, and airport distance can make tight connections stressful, so avoid scheduling a major activity before an international flight.

Option 2: Medellin And Cartagena In 7 Days

Choose this route if you want a warmer, more vacation-like week. Medellin gives you the mountain-city side of Colombia, while Cartagena gives you Caribbean architecture, heat, islands, and an easier final few days.

  • Days 1-3: Medellin, with one day for Comuna 13 and one day for Guatape or a deeper city day.
  • Day 4: Fly to Cartagena and stay in the Walled City, Getsemani, or a quieter nearby area.
  • Days 5-6: Explore the historic center, Getsemani, San Felipe Castle, and choose one island or beach day.
  • Day 7: Depart from Cartagena or fly back to Bogota if your international ticket requires it.

Cartagena is hot and humid year-round. The official Colombia tourism weather guidance describes Colombia as a country without four classic seasons, with conditions changing more by altitude and region than by month. That matters here: Bogota is cool, Medellin is mild, and Cartagena can feel intensely tropical even in the evening.

Option 3: Bogota, Medellin, And Cartagena In One Week

You can visit all three in 7 days, but it is a sampler, not a relaxed trip. It works best if your international flights arrive in Bogota and leave from Cartagena, or the reverse.

Day Plan
1 Arrive in Bogota, easy dinner, early night
2 La Candelaria, Gold Museum, Monserrate
3 Fly to Medellin, evening in Laureles or El Poblado
4 Comuna 13, metro, local neighborhoods
5 Fly to Cartagena, sunset in the Walled City
6 Old City, Getsemani, San Felipe Castle, or islands
7 Depart from Cartagena or connect back to Bogota

This route needs domestic flights. Overland buses between these cities can be long enough to erase the advantage of a short trip. A cheap flight is often worth more than saving a little money and arriving exhausted.

Should You Choose Bogota, Medellin, Or Cartagena?

Choose Bogota If You Want Culture And A Better First Day In Colombia

Bogota is best for museums, food, history, coffee, and understanding the country before moving on. It is cooler than most visitors expect, so pack a jacket even if the rest of your trip is warm.

Choose Medellin If You Want The Easiest City Base

Medellin is the easiest city for many travelers to enjoy quickly. The weather is mild, the metro helps with orientation, and neighborhoods like Laureles and El Poblado make logistics straightforward.

Choose Cartagena If You Want Caribbean Energy

Cartagena is the obvious pick for colonial streets, Caribbean food, islands, and a more vacation-focused end to the week. It is also the place where heat, vendors, and tourist pricing are most noticeable, so plan your days early and keep afternoons lighter.

Safety Notes For A 7-Day Colombia Trip

Colombia requires practical caution, not panic. Official travel advisories from the U.S. Department of State and UK FCDO flag crime, demonstrations, and higher-risk regions, especially some border and remote areas. A normal Bogota-Medellin-Cartagena route stays on the tourist trail, but you should still travel deliberately.

  • Use ride apps or official taxi channels instead of hailing random street taxis late at night.
  • Keep your phone away from the curb and avoid walking with it exposed in traffic.
  • Do not resist if robbed; replaceable items are not worth escalation.
  • Avoid isolated viewpoints, empty streets, and poorly reviewed nightlife plans.
  • Check current advisories before adding rural routes, border crossings, or remote beaches.

What To Pack For 7 Days In Colombia

Pack for three climates if you visit all three cities. Bogota needs layers, Medellin needs light clothing plus a rain layer, and Cartagena needs breathable clothes, sunscreen, and patience for humidity.

  • Light jacket or fleece for Bogota evenings.
  • Comfortable walking shoes for hills, cobblestones, and long city days.
  • Small umbrella or packable rain jacket, especially in Andean cities.
  • Breathable shirts for Cartagena.
  • Copy of your passport and travel insurance details.
  • Day bag that closes securely in crowded areas.

When To Add More Time

Add more time if you want the Coffee Region, Tayrona, Salento, Minca, San Andres, or a slower Caribbean beach stay. Those places are worth visiting, but they do not fit cleanly into a 7-day first trip unless you cut one of the big cities.

If you have 10 days, add either the Coffee Region between Bogota and Medellin or extra coast time after Cartagena. If you have 14 days, Colombia opens up properly: Bogota, Coffee Region, Medellin, Cartagena, and Tayrona become realistic without turning every other day into a transfer.

For broader Colombia planning, keep WanderWallet’s guides and news open while you compare routes. If this Colombia week is part of a longer South America trip, the Argentina payments cheat sheet is a practical next read.

Sources Checked

Bottom Line

For most travelers, 7 days in Colombia should be two bases, not five stops. Choose Bogota and Medellin for the best first-trip balance, Medellin and Cartagena for a warmer vacation, or all three only if you are comfortable using domestic flights and moving fast.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is 7 days enough for Colombia?

Yes, 7 days is enough for a first Colombia trip if you choose two main bases or accept a fast three-city route. It is not enough for Bogota, Medellin, Cartagena, the Coffee Region, Tayrona, and islands in one comfortable trip.

Should I visit Bogota, Medellin, or Cartagena with one week?

For most first-time visitors, Bogota plus Medellin is the best balanced one-week route. Choose Medellin plus Cartagena if you want warmer weather and a Caribbean finish.

Can I visit Bogota, Medellin, and Cartagena in 7 days?

Yes, but you should fly between cities and expect a fast pace. The route works best if you arrive in one city and depart from another instead of backtracking.

Is it better to fly or take buses in Colombia for a 7-day trip?

For a 7-day trip, flying is usually better between Bogota, Medellin, and Cartagena. Long-distance buses can consume too much of a short itinerary.

What is the best order for a 7-day Colombia itinerary?

Bogota to Medellin to Cartagena is the cleanest order for many travelers because it starts with culture and altitude, moves to a mild city, and ends on the Caribbean coast.

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