Travel insurance
Travel insurance for Colombia
Short-trip cover for visits to Colombia: emergency medical, trip-cancellation, luggage, the usual travel-insurance stack. Designed for weeks-not-years stays.
Colombia turned itself into a serious nomad base over the last decade. Medellín leads on lifestyle (spring weather, coworking density, fast fibre), Bogotá runs the deepest specialist network at altitude, and Cartagena handles the coastal crowd. Private clinical quality is strong and cheap, but the trap most nomads fall into is treating a domestic prepagada like Colsanitas as real insurance. It isn't. It only works inside Colombia, and the V-type Digital Nomad Visa explicitly requires international cover.
What travel insurance covers in Colombia
Travel insurance is built for short trips (under 3 months), vacations, weekend trips, gig travel. The lines below are the base. Exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Colombia situation you care about.
What you get
- Emergency medical and dental
- Trip cancellation and interruption
- Lost or delayed baggage
- Travel-document theft
- Adventure-sport add-ons (some plans)
What it won't do
- Routine care, chronic-condition management
- Maternity, mental-health
- Trips longer than the policy's max (often 90 days)
Typical local costs in Colombia
What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Colombiaand between public and private facilities; these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.
| GP visit (private clinic, expat-friendly) | COP 100,000 to 250,000 ($25 to $65 USD) |
|---|---|
| Specialist consultation | COP 180,000 to 400,000 |
| Basic emergency room visit (non-admission, private) | COP 300,000 to 800,000 |
| One-night hospital stay (private, Fundación Santa Fe or Pablo Tobón Uribe tier) | COP 800,000 to 2,500,000 |
| Common procedure (e.g. appendectomy, private) | COP 15,000,000 to 40,000,000 |
| International health insurance from-price (32-year-old) | from around $60 to $110 USD/month |
Bogotá tends to run slightly higher than Medellín for equivalent private care, and Cartagena adds a moderate tourist uplift in clinics that cater to foreigners. Domestic prepagada plans (Colsanitas, Sura) are remarkably cheap compared to international cover, but again, they only work inside Colombia.
Healthcare in Colombia: what you're dealing with
Colombia's healthcare system runs on a contributory and subsidised split common across Latin America. The subsidised side is anchored by SISBEN, a means-tested registry. The contributory regime is managed through EPS (Entidades Promotoras de Salud), private intermediaries that handle public insurance for formally employed Colombians. The EPS system has had real funding pressure over the last few years, with several large EPSs intervened or wound down, which translates into long waits and rationed specialist access even for Colombians with formal coverage.
The way most middle-class Colombians and essentially all foreign residents get care is the prepagada: private supplemental insurance that runs alongside or instead of EPS. Colsanitas, Sura, and Compensar are the dominant names. A prepagada policy buys you fast access to top private hospitals, English-speaking doctors in the major cities, and a low monthly premium. The critical caveat: prepagada is domestic-only. It pays inside Colombia and nowhere else.
The private hospital network is genuinely strong. In Bogotá, Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá is JCI-accredited and consistently ranks among the best hospitals in Latin America. Clínica del Country and Clínica Reina Sofía round out the top tier. In Medellín, Hospital Pablo Tobón Uribe and Hospital Universitario San Vicente Fundación have serious clinical depth, and Clínica Las Américas and Clínica Medellín handle the bulk of expat care. Cali has Fundación Valle del Lili, which is internationally respected. Cartagena is thinner: solid for routine and emergency work, but anything complex tends to transfer to Bogotá or Medellín.
English availability is patchier than Mexico. You will find English-fluent specialists in private hospitals in Bogotá and Medellín, but it is not the default. Outside those two cities, assume Spanish. Mental health care in English is particularly scarce. INVIMA is the equivalent of the FDA, pharmacies are widespread, and most non-controlled prescriptions are easy to access.
What to watch out for in Colombia
- Colsanitas is not international cover. This is the single most expensive mistake nomads make in Colombia. A Colsanitas card does nothing for you in Panama, Peru, or back home. Layer it with international, or replace it.
- Altitude in Bogotá (2,640m / 8,660ft). High enough to affect people with cardiovascular conditions, severe asthma, or recent cardiac events. Acclimatise, and check whether your policy carves out altitude-related adventure activities in the Andes.
- Dengue in lowland regions. Cartagena, Santa Marta, San Andrés, the Amazon, and the Pacific coast all run active dengue seasons. Yellow fever vaccination is required for parts of the Amazon and the Pacific coast. Standard health cover handles treatment, but confirm there are no tropical disease exclusions.
- Scooter and motorcycle exclusions. Medellín and Cartagena have heavy moto culture, and many policies exclude two-wheel claims unless you hold a valid licence and wear a helmet.
- US cross-border specifics. If you are American and want US treatment as a fallback, only a true worldwide-including-US plan helps. Most LatAm-focused policies exclude the US or charge a heavy uplift, and Colombian prepagada does nothing across the border.
- Recommended medical evacuation cap of at least $250,000 to $500,000 USD, particularly if you spend time in Amazonas, the Pacific coast, or remote Andean regions where ground transfer to a tertiary hospital is slow.
- Security exclusions. Some policies restrict cover in specific regions, historically parts of the Pacific coast, the Catatumbo region, and parts of the Amazon basin.
FAQ
Colombia doesn't usually require visitors to carry travel insurance for short stays, but the moment something goes wrong it's cheaper to have it than to buy at the hospital. Check the visa-class requirements for your specific situation.
Premiums vary by age, plan and deductible far more than by country; the underwriting risk is priced, not the postal code. Use the "Typical local costs" table above to gauge what your insurance protects you from, then run a real quote to see your own number.
It depends on your situation — how long you're staying, your visa class, your age and health, and whether you want cashless treatment or are fine with reimbursement. Rather than push one plan, we match you against the options that actually fit a stay in Colombia: answer a few honest questions and see only what's relevant.
Yes. The visa explicitly requires international health insurance valid in Colombia for the full duration of the stay, with repatriation included. Domestic prepagada does not qualify. Most international plans produce certificates that meet the requirement.
No. EPS is tied to formal employment or registered residence in Colombia, so as a tourist you cannot enrol. Prepagada providers (Colsanitas, Sura, Compensar) generally require a cédula de extranjería, meaning you need M-type or R-type residency before they will sell you a policy.
In Bogotá, Fundación Santa Fe, Clínica del Country, and Clínica Reina Sofía. In Medellín, Hospital Pablo Tobón Uribe, Hospital Universitario San Vicente Fundación, Clínica Las Américas, and Clínica Medellín. In Cali, Fundación Valle del Lili. Cartagena handles routine and emergency care; anything complex tends to transfer inland.
Treatment for dengue and similar tropical illnesses is covered under standard medical benefits on most international plans. Confirm there is no tropical-disease carve-out, and check whether yellow fever vaccination is required for the regions you plan to visit.
Acute mountain sickness treatment in hospital is covered under standard medical benefits. The thing to watch is adventure-activity exclusions: trekking, climbing, and similar activities above set altitudes can be carved out unless you have an adventure add-on. Bogotá itself at 2,640m is generally fine, but Ciudad Perdida and high-altitude hikes deserve a second look at your policy.
Only on a worldwide-including-US plan, and the premium jumps significantly. Most LatAm-focused policies either exclude the US entirely or restrict it to short emergency-only periods. If US fallback matters to you, request a quote with US cover included before you buy.
Medellín has a substantial dental tourism scene with quality at a fraction of US prices. Quality varies by clinic, so vet carefully. Insurance generally does not cover elective dental work, so treat it as a cash-pay expense regardless of your policy.
Standard issue across international policies. Most either exclude pre-existing conditions outright or charge an uplift. Disclose honestly when you apply. Concealment invalidates the policy at claim time.
Yes, if your policy includes medical evacuation with a high enough cap ($250,000 to $500,000 USD is a sensible floor) and Colombia is not geographically excluded. Verify the evac limit and exclusion list specifically; defaults vary by carrier.
Private maternity care in Bogotá and Medellín is strong and far cheaper than the US. International policies typically apply a 10 to 12 month waiting period before maternity benefits kick in, so plan well ahead of conception.
Not really. There is no EHIC equivalent. Most EU and UK domestic policies cover emergencies only and reimburse slowly. Some expat-grade policies and US plans with international riders do work, but check geographic scope and direct-billing arrangements before relying on them.
Yes. International nomad plans commonly offer family plans. Pricing and dependent age limits vary, so include every family member on the quote from the start.
Other insurance for Colombia
Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Colombia.
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