thebespoketraveler
Colombia
BogotáCity Guide Volume 01
CITY GUIDE · 2026

Bogotá.

8,600 ft above sea level. Leo, El Chato, Latin America's most ambitious kitchen scene.
LA CANDELARIA · MONSERRATE · BOGOTÁ

Bogotá is the highest capital city in the Americas — 2,640 meters (8,660 ft) above sea level, perched on the Sabana plateau of the Colombian Andes. Founded by Spanish conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in 1538 on the ruins of the Muisca confederation’s sacred site, the city is now home to 8 million people and serves as Colombia’s political, financial, and cultural capital.

The altitude is the first thing the body learns.88°F in the lowlands becomes 65°F at 2,640m — Bogotá runs cool year-round, with no real summer or winter.

The luxury infrastructure is recent but credible. Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogotá (62 rooms in a 1946 restored Spanish-colonial mansion, the city’s most beloved luxury property), Four Seasons Bogotá (the modern 64-room sister property in the Zona Rosa financial district), Hotel B.O.G (the design-forward 55-room boutique on the same street). For ultra-luxury Colombia clients, Bogotá pairs as the cultural anchor before Cartagena’s UNESCO old town and the Caribbean coast.

“Bogotá is the altitude capital of the Americas. La Candelaria, the Gold Museum, sunset on Monserrate, dinner in Chapinero.”

The cultural anchors: La Candelaria (the colonial heart — 16th-century churches, Plaza de Bolívar, the original Spanish street grid), the Museo del Oro (Gold Museum, the world’s largest collection of pre-Columbian gold work — some 34,000 gold and tumbaga pieces among 55,000 objects, drawn from the Muisca, Quimbaya, Calima, and Tairona cultures), Monserrate (the 3,152m peak with a 1929 funicular and the city’s signature sunset view), and the dining scene in Zona G and Chapinero — where El Chato was named Latin America’s #1 restaurant in 2025 and Leonor Espinosa’s Leo built one of the continent’s most acclaimed kitchens.

The trip works as 3 nights. 90 days visa-free for US passports. Year-round 50–68°F at the city level (bring layers — Bogotá is cooler than most clients expect). Best windows December–February (driest) and July–August (mid-year dry stretch). Pair with Cartagena (~1.5 hr flight north for the Caribbean colonial city) and Medellín (~1 hr flight) for the full Colombian circuit.

All that being said — welcome to Bogotá. Let’s break it down.
— 01 —
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

Before you arrive.

The brief.
VISA · US PASSPORT Visa-free, up to 90 days. No application required for tourism. Passport must be valid for the duration of your stay. Entry is stamped on arrival at El Dorado (BOG); keep the stamp — you present it on departure. Extensions to 180 days/year possible through Migración Colombia.
BEST WINDOW December — February · July — August DRIEST:December — February MID-YEAR DRY:July — August AVOID:April — May · October — November (rainy seasons)
LANGUAGE Spanish. Bogotá Spanish is considered among the clearest, most neutral in Latin America. English is spoken at luxury hotels and top restaurants, less so on the street and with drivers. A few Spanish phrases go a long way — locals notice. We curate a custom phrase pack on request.
CURRENCY Colombian peso (COP). ~4,000 COP per $1 USD. Cards are accepted everywhere at your tier — hotels, restaurants, private cars. Carry some COP cash for the Usaquén market, taxi tips, and small purchases. Avoid street ATMs; draw cash inside hotels or malls. USD is not used day-to-day.
eSIM · DATA Roamless eSIM — activate before landing. Load data on demand, no contract, no SIM swap. Add ExpressVPN for digital privacy on hotel WiFi and public networks. 4G/LTE coverage is strong across the city; 5G is expanding in the north.
TAP WATER Safe to drink. Bogotá’s tap water comes from Andean páramo sources and is among the cleanest in Latin America — safe at the city level. Ice at hotels and restaurants is fine. Bottled water is available everywhere if you prefer.
NIGHTS 3 minimum. 5 ideal. Build a day to acclimatize to 2,640m before any hard exertion. Anything under 3 nights is a layover. Most clients pair Bogotá with Cartagena or the Coffee Triangle — built into the rhythm.
ALTITUDE · SOROCHE 2,640m (8,660 ft) — higher than Aspen. Altitude sickness (soroche) is real: shortness of breath, light fatigue, headache in the first 24 hours. Day 1 is gentle — no alcohol, hydrate 3L, coca tea on arrival (legal, locally normal). Discuss acetazolamide (Diamox) with your doctor if altitude-sensitive. Full protocol in §6.
MEDICAL & EMERGENCY Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá. Cra. 7 #117-15. Among the best hospitals in Latin America, English-speaking, 24/7. Clínica del Country (Cra. 16 #82-57) is the second top private option. Emergency: 123 (national line).

US Embassy Bogotá. Cra. 45 #24B-27. Tel: +57 601 275 2000. Keep all on file.
SAFETY · “NO DAR PAPAYA” Safer than its reputation — with rules. The northern zones (Zona G, Zona Rosa, Usaquén) and daytime La Candelaria are entirely safe for our clients. The local rule is no dar papaya — “don’t give papaya,” meaning don’t flash watches, phones, or jewelry on the street. Private car after dark; never hail a street taxi. Full codes in §7.
— 02 —
THE EXPERIENCES

1538 to today.

Bogotá was founded by the conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada in 1538, on the sacred plateau of the Muisca confederation — a civilization whose gold work gave the world the El Dorado legend. 2,640m of Andean altitude, Spanish-colonial bones, and a dining scene that just produced Latin America’s #1 restaurant. 4 experiences anchor this trip.

Bogotá splits north and south. La Candelaria is the colonial heart — the original 16th-century Spanish street grid, ochre and indigo façades, Plaza de Bolívar, the churches and museums, the weight of five centuries on cobblestone. It is daytime territory; you walk it, you don’t linger after dark. The north — Zona G, Zona Rosa, Chapinero, Usaquén — is where modern Bogotá lives: the luxury hotels, the world-class kitchens, the galleries and the quiet money. That’s where you sleep.

But you don’t come to Bogotá for any one neighborhood. You come for Monserrate at first light, when the cloud is still below you and the savanna stretches flat to the horizon. You come for the Gold Museum, room after room of pre-Columbian gold the Spanish never melted down. You come for the table at El Chato or Leo, where Colombian biodiversity is plated at a level the rest of the world only recently noticed. The reward of Bogotá isn’t the altitude. It’s what the altitude protects — a city that spent thirty years rebuilding, and is finally being seen.

MONSERRATE · 3,152M
MONSERRATE · 3,152M
— 01 of 04 · IMMERSIVE —
THE SUNRISE

Monserrate at first light.

the city’s spiritual high point — literally.

Monserrate is the mountain that watches over Bogotá — a sheer peak rising to 3,152 meters directly behind the old city. It was sacred to the Muisca long before the Spanish arrived. In 1650, a brotherhood secured permission from the archbishop to build a hermitage at the summit, dedicated to El Señor Caído — “The Fallen Lord.” It has been a pilgrimage site for nearly four centuries since.

You go up at dawn. By mid-morning the Andean cloud rolls in and the view closes; in the first clear hour after sunrise, the whole savanna lies flat and grey-gold below you, the city waking under a sheet of mist. Pilgrims still climb the path on foot — a Sunday devotion for Bogotanos. Most visitors take the funicular (built 1929, the first in South America) up and the cable car (1955) down, or the reverse. At 3,152m the air is thin; move slowly, especially in your first days.

The summit holds the sanctuary, a handful of restaurants, and a market lane of Andean crafts. But you come for the altitude and the light. Monserrate is where you understand Bogotá’s geography in a single glance — and why a city this high spent five centuries looking up at this peak.

HOW TO DO IT
WHEN
go early — cloud closes the view by late morning: 6:30–8amclearest skies, the savanna below — the window Sundaypilgrim crowds on the walking path 5–6:30pmsunset over the city lights (book the down-trip)
WHERE
Funicular/cable-car station, Cra. 2 Este, behind La Candelaria
BRING
layers and water — it is colder and thinner at the top
NOTE · EL SEÑOR CAÍDO The summit sanctuary houses the venerated 17th-century statue of El Señor Caído, the Fallen Christ — Bogotá’s most important religious pilgrimage. The mountain takes its name from the Catalan Montserrat near Barcelona, after the brotherhood that founded the 1650 hermitage in honor of its Black Madonna. Generations of Bogotanos have walked the path up as an act of devotion.
— 02 of 04 · CULTURAL —
THE OLD CITY

La Candelaria.

the colonial heart of Bogotá. Founded 1538. The original Spanish grid, walked on foot.

La Candelaria is where Bogotá began. When Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada founded the city in 1538, this is the ground he laid out — the colonial street grid still runs the way the Spanish drew it, ochre and cobalt façades, wooden balconies, churches that have stood since the 1500s. It is the historic core, dense with museums and plazas, and the one part of the city you experience entirely on foot.

The anchor is Plaza de Bolívar — the main square, ringed by the Catedral Primada (the current cathedral completed in 1823 on a site consecrated since 1539), the Capitolio Nacional, the Palace of Justice, and the colonial Casa del Florero where Colombia’s independence movement ignited in 1810. From the square, narrow streets climb toward Monserrate past the Botero Museum, the Gold Museum, and the writers’ cafés of the Chorro de Quevedo, the spot where the city is said to have been founded.

Go in daylight, with a guide who can read the layers — pre-Columbian, colonial, republican, modern — in a single block. By dusk, La Candelaria empties and the rule changes: this is a daytime quarter for our clients, and your car meets you at the perimeter.

HOW TO DO IT
WHEN
Morning to mid-afternoon. Museums close ~5–6pm. Leave before dark.
WHERE
Plaza de Bolívar · Cra. 7 corridor · Chorro de Quevedo.
ENTRY
The plaza and streets are free; museums charge modest fees (Gold Museum, Botero free).
WITH
A private historian guide — the district rewards context, not wandering.
PRIVATE CATEDRAL PRIMADA ACCESS Early-morning private visits to the Catedral Primada on Plaza de Bolívar, with a Colombian Church historian — before the square fills. Arranged for Sanctum members through partner contacts.
LA CANDELARIA · EST. 1538
LA CANDELARIA · EST. 1538
MUSEO DEL ORO · GOLD MUSEUM
MUSEO DEL ORO · GOLD MUSEUM
— 03 of 04 · CULTURAL AND HERITAGE —
THE COLLECTION

The Gold Museum and the Botero.

two world-class museums, walking distance apart, in one afternoon.

This is the cultural core of Bogotá — two collections most first-timers underestimate, both in La Candelaria, both walkable from Plaza de Bolívar.

Start at the Museo del Oro — the Gold Museum. It holds the world’s largest collection of pre-Columbian gold work: roughly 34,000 gold and tumbaga pieces among some 55,000 objects, drawn from the Muisca, Quimbaya, Calima, Tairona, and Zenú cultures. This is the gold the Spanish never got to melt down — the offerings, masks, and ceremonial pieces behind the El Dorado myth. The top-floor Offering Room, a circular vault that fills with light around a Muisca raft, is the single most powerful room in the city.

Walk ten minutes to the Museo Botero. In 2000, Colombia’s most famous artist, Fernando Botero, donated 208 works to the nation — 123 of his own unmistakable rounded figures, plus 85 by Picasso, Monet, Dalí, Chagall, Renoir, and Miró. Housed in a restored colonial mansion, free to the public, it is one of the finest small museums in Latin America and an effortless complement to the gold.

Two collections, one afternoon — the pre-Columbian depth and the modern master, the full cultural argument of Colombia in a few walkable blocks.

HOW TO DO IT
WHEN
Half-day · best from open (~9am). Both closed Mondays; Gold Museum free on Sundays.
ROUTE
Museo del Oro → Plaza de Bolívar → Botero Museum → Chorro de Quevedo.
ENTRY
Gold Museum: modest fee (free Sundays). Botero Museum: free, always.
PRIVATE AFTER-HOURS · MUSEO DEL ORO Private after-hours access to the Gold Museum with a senior curator — the Offering Room to yourself, no crowds. Arranged for Sanctum members through partner contacts.
— 04 of 04 · THE TABLE —
MARKETS & DINING

Usaquén, Paloquemao, and the table.

the Sunday market, the great food market, and the dining scene that just topped Latin America.

Bogotá’s fourth anchor is its produce and its plates — the thread that runs from the market stall to the tasting menu, and the reason the city is finally on the world’s food map.

Start on a Sunday in Usaquén, a colonial village absorbed into the north of the city. Its Sunday flea market (the Mercado de las Pulgas, roughly 10am–5pm) fills cobblestone streets around a quiet plaza — antiques, emeralds, Colombian crafts, coffee, and a strong brunch scene under the trees. It is the most relaxed morning in Bogotá.

For the real engine, go to Paloquemao — the city’s great wholesale food market, operating since 1946. More than sixty kinds of fruit at peak season, half of them you will not recognize: lulo, guanábana, mangostino, granadilla, uchuva. A guided early-morning fruit tour here is the best primer in the country for what Colombian biodiversity actually tastes like.

Then the table. The dining district runs through Zona G and Chapinero, and in 2025 it produced the headline: El Chato, chef Álvaro Clavijo’s restaurant, was named the No. 1 restaurant in Latin America. Down the same street, Leonor Espinosa’s Leo has spent two decades plating Colombia’s ecosystems course by course. This is no longer an underrated food city. It’s a destination one. (Full table in §4.)

HOW TO DO IT
WHEN
Usaquén market: Sundays ~10am–5pm. Paloquemao: daily, go early (~7–9am); winds down Sunday afternoon.
WHERE
Usaquén plaza (north) · Paloquemao (near La Candelaria) · Zona G / Chapinero (dining).
BOOK
El Chato and Leo book weeks out — concierge assistance essential.
WE ARRANGE
Private fruit-market tour with a guide, priority dining tables, a market-to-suite private chef.
USAQUÉN · SUNDAY MARKET
USAQUÉN · SUNDAY MARKET
A WORD ON · STREET TOURS

Skip the unregulated street tours.

Touts around La Candelaria and Monserrate sell cheap walking, “drug history,” and city tours on the spot. They are unvetted and uninsured, and the narco angle is exactly the chapter Colombians have spent thirty years moving past. Use a licensed private guide — same streets, real context, and the dignity the city has earned.

A WORD ON · LA CANDELARIA AFTER DARK

Don’t linger in La Candelaria at night.

The old town is rewarding by day and thins out fast after sunset, when petty crime rises on the quiet streets. The tourist-bar scene there isn’t worth the exposure. See it in daylight, then head north — Zona G, Zona Rosa, and Usaquén are where the good evenings are, and your car meets you at the perimeter.

A WORD ON · GRAFFITI BUS CROWDS

Skip the mass graffiti tours.

Bogotá’s street-art scene is genuinely world-class — but the large free/tip-based group tours move forty people at a time and turn it into a queue. A private guide on foot, ideally a working muralist, takes you to the same walls without the crowd — and can introduce you to the artists behind them.

— 03 —
WHERE YOU REST YOUR HEAD

Where you sleep matters.

Each earns its place differently — heritage, height, character.
01 · the colonial mansion
CURATOR’S PICK · FOUR SEASONS

Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogotá

— 62 rooms in a 1946 restored Spanish-colonial mansion. The city’s most loved property.

Originally built 1946 by Santiago Medina as his private mansion — converted to a hotel in 1989, taken over by Four Seasons in 2015. 62 rooms in restored colonial architecture — hand-painted ceilings, original mosaic floors, balconied courtyards. The most beloved luxury property in Bogotá, repeatedly named to Travel + Leisure’s “World’s Best Hotels.”

INSIDER ACCESS
  • Casa Medina Suite — 110 sqm, original 1946 master bedroom
  • Castanyoles — Spanish tapas + Colombian fine dining
  • Casa Medina Bar — sunset cocktails in the original library
  • Spa at Casa Medina — Colombian coffee + emerald-infusion rituals
  • Direct walk to Zona G dining district
  • 5-minute walk to the National Museum + Septima Avenue
02 · the modern sister
FOUR SEASONS · CONTEMPORARY

Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá

— 64 rooms · the modern Zona Rosa sister to Casa Medina.

Four Seasons’ second Bogotá property — opened 2015 in the Zona Rosa financial district, 10 minutes from Casa Medina. 64 rooms in contemporary architecture with floor-to-ceiling Andean-cordillera views. The right pick when the trip is business-led, or when the client wants modern over heritage.

INSIDER ACCESS
  • Premier Andes View Suite — east-facing, the cordillera in your window
  • Kuru — modern Asian-Colombian fusion, the ceviche-tasting
  • The Bar — long sunset list, fresh-fruit cocktails
  • Spa at Four Seasons — full hammam, signature Time Rituals
  • Direct access to Zona Rosa shopping + nightlife
  • 10 min to Casa Medina sister property
03 · the design boutique
DESIGN-LED · HOTEL B.O.G

Hotel B.O.G

— 55 rooms · design-forward boutique on the same Zona G corridor.

Boutique 5-star on Carrera 11 — the same Zona G corridor as Casa Medina. 55 rooms in a contemporary architecture program with strong design-led interiors. The rooftop bar Plataforma is one of the city’s best high-altitude sunset views. The right pick when the brief calls for design-forward rather than colonial-heritage.

INSIDER ACCESS
  • Penthouse Suite — top-floor terrace, panoramic Bogotá view
  • La Plataforma Rooftop — cocktail bar with the Andes backdrop
  • Restaurant B — Colombian + Mediterranean tasting
  • Spa B — Boutique scale, Colombian botanical protocols
  • 5 min walk to Zona G + Casa Medina
  • Heated indoor pool (rare in Bogotá — most pools are uncovered)
— HONORABLE MENTIONS — Three more to consider — solid properties, less critical to feature with a full card. Each fits a specific kind of stay.
FOR THE FRENCH-LUXURY STAY

Sofitel Bogotá Victoria Regia

102 rooms in the heart of Zona Rosa — the shopping-and-nightlife district. French savoir-faire with Colombian warmth, walking distance to the Parque de la 93 dining scene. The reliable Zona Rosa anchor.

FOR THE DESIGN-LED STAY

W Bogotá

168 rooms in Usaquén’s financial corridor, themed around the El Dorado legend — gold-chain curtains, an emerald-and-gold palette. High-energy, design-forward, with the city’s liveliest hotel bar. Best for travelers who want buzz over hush.

FOR THE INTIMATE BOUTIQUE

Casa Legado

A tiny family-run mansion-hotel in Chapinero, awarded a Michelin Key in 2025. A handful of rooms, residential feel, deeply personal service. Best when the brief calls for privacy and home over scale.

— 04 —
WHERE TO EAT

The continent’s new capital.

In 2025, Bogotá’s El Chato was named the No. 1 restaurant in Latin America. The Michelin Guide has not yet launched a restaurant selection in Colombia — but the world’s most respected ranking already crowned this city. Six tables, from the acclaimed rooms to the ajiaco of the abuelas.
THE ACCLAIMED

The world-stage rooms.

— ranked on Latin America’s 50 Best. Book weeks out.
CONTEMPORARY COLOMBIAN

El Chato

ORDER: the tasting menu · dinner

Chef Álvaro Clavijo’s contemporary bistro — named the No. 1 restaurant in Latin America in 2025, the first Colombian restaurant to take the top spot. Technique-driven plates built on seasonal Colombian produce: squid and mushroom tartare, coca-flour cake, fermentation throughout. The meal of the trip.

— Cl. 65 #4-76 · Chapinero Alto
LATIN AMERICA’S 50 BEST · No. 1 · 2025
COLOMBIAN BIODIVERSITY

Leo

ORDER: the Ciclo-Bioma tasting

Chef Leonor Espinosa’s twenty-year project — a tasting menu organized around Colombia’s ecosystems, sourcing little-known ingredients from rural communities through her FUNLEO foundation. Espinosa won the World’s Best Female Chef award; Leo is a fixture on Latin America’s 50 Best. Wine pairings by her daughter Laura.

— Cl. 65 Bis #4-23 · Chapinero
LATIN AMERICA’S 50 BEST · WORLD’S 50 BEST
THE BOGOTÁ INSTITUTION

Harry Sasson

ORDER: the grilled catch · the leg of lamb

Bogotá’s most established fine-dining name — chef Harry Sasson’s product-first kitchen in a glass-roofed mansion in Chapinero. Less avant-garde than El Chato or Leo, more reliable: this is where the city’s elite has eaten for years. The room to book when you want polish without a tasting-menu commitment.

— Cra. 9 #75-70 · Chapinero
THE NEIGHBORHOOD TABLES

Where the city actually eats.

— the rising rooms and the soul food. From tasting menus to the abuela’s ajiaco.
BISTRO · COCKTAILS

Mesa Franca

ORDER: the small plates + a house cocktail

Chef Iván Cadena’s relaxed Chapinero bistro — local produce, bistro technique, and one of the city’s best experimental bars. A regular on Latin America’s 50 Best. The right call for a looser, conversation-first dinner.

— Cl. 71 #5-44 · Quinta Camacho
TASTING MENU · A MANSION

Villanos en Bermudas

ORDER: the seven-course tasting

An art-filled converted mansion in Chapinero — a daily-changing tasting menu of sweet-savory surprises, preceded by a cocktail lounge. Made Latin America’s 50 Best in its very first year. Playful, ambitious, and one of the best-value high-end seats in town.

— Cl. 66 #4A-33 · Chapinero
LUNCH ONLY · LA CANDELARIA

Prudencia

ORDER: the weekly four-course lunch

A precise, casual lunch-only room in a colonial house in La Candelaria — chef Mario Rosero and Meghan Flanigan reinvent a four-course menu weekly, wood-oven bread from a sunlit dining room. The best meal to pair with a morning in the old town.

— Cl. 11 #2-43 · La Candelaria
AJIACO · THE BOGOTÁ DISH

La Puerta Falsa

ORDER: ajiaco santafereño + tamal · chocolate santafereño

Open since 1816 — Bogotá’s oldest restaurant, a tiny two-floor room steps off Plaza de Bolívar. The home of ajiaco santafereño, the city’s signature three-potato chicken soup with corn, capers, and cream. Pair it with hot chocolate and almojábana — the local ritual. This is the soul plate of the savanna.

— Cl. 11 #6-50 · La Candelaria
— PRIVATE CHEF · ARRANGED ON REQUEST —

Want a chef in your suite or villa?

For longer stays or special dietary protocols — recovery nutrition, performance macros, post-training meals — we arrange a private Colombian chef to cook in your suite or villa. Paloquemao market run included. Three meals a day or single dinners. Quietly handled.

REQUEST A CHEF
— 05 —
CLIMATE · TRANSPORT · TIMING

How the city moves.

Climate by month, the airport route, getting around the city, and the rhythm of Bogotá.
CLIMATE BY MONTH — BOGOTÁ · °F (°C)
JAN
45–66°
7–19°C
50mm
FEB
46–67°
8–19°C
65mm
MAR
47–67°
8–19°C
90mm
APR
48–66°
9–19°C
120mm
MAY
49–66°
9–19°C
115mm
JUN
49–66°
9–19°C
60mm
JUL
48–65°
9–18°C
50mm
AUG
48–66°
9–19°C
55mm
SEP
48–67°
9–19°C
75mm
OCT
49–66°
9–19°C
130mm
NOV
49–66°
9–19°C
110mm
DEC
46–66°
8–19°C
65mm
RECOMMENDED dry windows — Dec–Feb and Jul–Aug. Cool, clear, walkable at 2,640m altitude AVOID Apr–May and Oct–Nov rainy seasons — daily afternoon downpours
The temperature doesn’t change much month to month — Bogotá sits on the equator at altitude. What changes is the rain. And the cool surprises clients: it’s 50s at dawn, low 60s by mid-day, every day of the year. Pack layers.
AIRPORT · PRIVATE TRANSFER

BOG → city center.

El Dorado International (BOG). ~15km · 30–45 min from the city center depending on traffic. Two terminals; T1 international, T2 domestic and low-cost.

Private Transfer. Black car or Mercedes V-Class. Your driver meets you at the arrivals gate with a name card, handles bags and customs egress, straight to your hotel.

The same driver stays with you throughout your trip. Arranged through your hotel or directly through us.

GETTING AROUND

Once you’re in.

Private car and driver extends for the whole trip. Same driver every day, English-fluent, on call — your guy. Bogotá traffic is severe; a known driver is the difference between a 20-minute trip and a 70-minute one.

La Candelaria is for walking — the historic UNESCO district moves on foot, the cobblestones don’t tolerate fast cars. Step out, walk in, walk out, car picks you up at the perimeter.

Uber works in Bogotá (officially gray-zone, in practice ubiquitous). Useful for short hops in Zona G or Zona Rosa when your driver is parked elsewhere.

THE DAILY RHYTHM

What you’ll actually do in Bogotá.

5:30–7:00am
Exercise. Cerros Orientales hike from the hotel, or the pool. At 2,640m, day 1 is gentle.
7:30–9:00am
Breakfast. Hotel terrace — Andean chocolate, almojábanas, a strong Colombian coffee. Slow start.
9:00–11:00am
Monserrate. Funicular up to 3,152m for the panoramic view of the savanna before clouds close in.
11:00am–1:00pm
La Candelaria. The UNESCO historic district — Plaza de Bolívar, Museo del Oro (55,000 pre-Columbian gold pieces), the Botero collection.
1:00–2:30pm
Lunch. Zona G — Criterión or Harry Sasson. Or Andrés Carne de Res for the full Colombian theater.
2:30–4:30pm
The reset. Hotel spa, oxygen room if needed (altitude builds), or a slow read in the Four Seasons library.
4:30–6:00pm
Slow walk. Usaquén on Sunday for the flea market and colonial-square cafés. Quinta de Bolívar mid-week.
6:00–7:30pm
Golden hour. Drinks at the Four Seasons Casa Medina patio, or BLVD by Harry Sasson. A glass of Chilean red.
7:30–10:30pm
Dinner. Leo by Leonor Espinosa — the Andean tasting menu. Or El Cielo. Bogotá’s dining is a quiet world-class scene.
10:30pm–late
Quiet evening. Bogotá nightlife exists (Zona Rosa) but TBT clients rarely venture — the city is for slow tables, not late floors.
— 06 —
VACCINATIONS · HEALTH · KIT

What you actually need.

Required vs. recommended. What to pack.
VACCINATIONS

Required vs. recommended.

REQUIRED · DIRECT US ENTRYNone. 90 days visa-free for US passport holders.
RECOMMENDEDRoutine boosters (MMR, Tdap, flu). Hepatitis A + Typhoid for all travelers. Yellow Fever if you’ll continue to the Amazon / coffee region / Cartagena coast (not required for Bogotá city only).
OVERBLOWNMalaria prophylaxis — not needed for Bogotá at altitude. Rabies — only if working with animals.
PRE-TRIPTravel-medicine clinic 4–6 weeks pre-departure. Acetazolamide (Diamox) script for altitude-sensitive clients — discuss with your doctor. Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá is among the best hospitals in Latin America, English-speaking, 24/7.
THE ESSENTIALS

What to pack before you fly.

LAYERSBogotá is colder than every client expects. 50°F at dawn, low-60s by mid-day, dropping back into the 50s after sunset. Pack a merino base layer, a light shell, and a smart-casual sweater for restaurants.
ALTITUDE PROTOCOL2,640m above sea level — higher than Aspen. Diamox if your doctor signs off, coca tea on arrival (legal, locally normal), no alcohol day 1, hydrate 3L/day. The first 24 hours decide the trip.
EQUATORIAL SUNUV at altitude is brutal — the air is thinner, the rays are stronger. SPF 50 daily, even on overcast days. Sunglasses with UV400 rating. A hat for Monserrate.
POWER STACKType A/B plugs — same as US, 110V. Standard US chargers work natively. Roamless eSIM activates on arrival; ExpressVPN for the public WiFi at hotels and cafés.
FOR THE TRAVELER WHO TRAINS

How Bogotá affects the body.

ALTITUDE · PERFORMANCE2,640m drops VO2 max by ~15% on day 1. Plan light: gym, pool, slow walks. By day 3, the body acclimates and harder sessions become possible. Pro athletes use Bogotá as a training-camp altitude city for a reason.
SLEEP · JET LAGUTC-5 — same as NYC, identical to ET. No jet lag for US East Coast clients. From London: 5-hour shift, westward — manageable.
HYDRATION · DRY AIRAndean air is dry and thin. Dehydration creeps faster than you notice. 3L water daily, plus electrolytes — LMNT or Liquid IV — especially day 1–3.
GYMS & RECOVERYFour Seasons Bogotá and Casa Medina both have proper gyms. For serious training (Olympic platforms, sprint sleds), Bodytech and SmartFit chains have flagship locations near Zona G — we can arrange day passes and a Spanish-speaking trainer.
— 07 —
THE HARD TRUTHS

What we tell you that nobody else does.

The realities of Bogotá that shape how the trip actually feels. Honest framing first; everything else after.
PRIORITY · 01 THE ALTITUDE REALITY

2,640m. Higher than Aspen. Clients underestimate it.

Bogotá sits at 8,660 feet above sea level — higher than Aspen, higher than Cusco. The body feels it within the first hour: light-headedness, shortness of breath on stairs, a thicker quality to fatigue. It is real and it is universal.

What we do about it: day 1 is gentle — hotel, slow walks, no alcohol, 3L water. Diamox for altitude-sensitive clients (discuss with your doctor 2 weeks pre-trip). Coca tea on arrival — legal, locally normal, the Andean acclimation tool. Hard workouts and high-altitude side trips (Monserrate, Salt Cathedral Zipaquirá) wait until day 2–3.

PRIORITY · 02 THE COOL SURPRISE

It is not a warm city. Ever.

Clients fly into “South America” expecting warmth and pack accordingly. Bogotá is cool year-round — 50°F at dawn, low-60s by mid-day, every single day of the year. There is no summer.

The fix: layers. Merino base, light shell, a smart-casual sweater for dinner. Cartagena is the warm Colombia. Bogotá is the cool one.

SAFETY · ZONE BY ZONE

Bogotá is safer than the reputation. With rules.

The city has changed dramatically over the last 15 years. Zona Rosa, Zona G, Usaquén, and La Candelaria (daytime) are entirely safe for TBT clients. Outside these zones — and La Candelaria after dark — the rule is private car only, never walk alone.

The protocol: private driver door-to-door after sunset. No street-hailed taxis (use Uber or your driver). Phones tucked away on the street. Hotel safe for passports and excess cash.

TRAFFIC IS SEVERE

10 km can be a 70-minute drive.

Bogotá traffic is among the worst in Latin America. The pico y placa rotation (license-plate-based driving restrictions) compounds it. A trip from the airport to Zona G can take 30 minutes at 6am or 90 minutes at 6pm.

The fix: a known driver who reads the city, departures planned around the peaks (7–9am, 5–8pm), and a tolerance for the rhythm. La Candelaria, Zona G, and the Cerros are clustered enough that smart planning keeps the day flowing.

PRIVATE · HELICOPTER · COMMERCIAL

The ways you fly.

PRIVATE JET ARRIVALEl Dorado (BOG) has a dedicated FBO terminal (Aeropuerto Internacional El Dorado · VIP). Direct car transfer from the FBO to your hotel — no main terminal.
HELICOPTER CHARTERSFor Salt Cathedral Zipaquirá day trips, the coffee region, or transfers to Cartagena and Medellín when commercial doesn’t fit the schedule. Private helicopter (4–6 passengers).
COMMERCIAL · DOMESTICAvianca is the Colombian full-service standard, member of Star Alliance, business lounges and reliable schedules. LATAM also covers the country well.
AVOIDViva Air ceased operations 2023 — no longer an option. Wingo is low-cost only; TBT does not book.
COMMERCIAL · INTERNATIONALAvianca and American out of major US hubs (Miami, JFK, Dallas). Iberia and Air France from Europe. Direct flights from most US East Coast cities.
THE LOCAL CODE

What locals notice.

“NO DAR PAPAYA”The Colombian street rule, literally “don’t give papaya” — meaning don’t flash valuables, phones, expensive watches in public. Even in safe zones, a visible Rolex on the street is an invitation. Keep it on the wrist at hotel and restaurant only.
GREETINGS ARE WARM AND VERBAL“Buenos días / buenas tardes” before every interaction — taxi driver, restaurant server, hotel staff. Colombians notice when you skip it. A few Spanish words go a long way; English-only reads as cold.
NEVER MENTION PABLO ESCOBARThe narco-tourism conversation grates locals badly. Colombia has spent 30 years rebuilding past that chapter. The country is proud of coffee, Botero, Shakira, Gabo, Leo Espinosa, Egan Bernal. Lead with those.
TIPPING — 10% IS STANDARDRestaurants often add a 10% “servicio voluntario” — voluntary, but accept it unless service was poor. Drivers and guides: 10–15% in COP. USD tips are accepted but COP shows respect for the local economy.
DRESS UP FOR DINNERBogotá’s upper-end dining is more formal than US cities. Smart casual minimum at Leo, Criterión, Harry Sasson — jacket for men, no athleisure. Colombians dress well; the city notices.
— 08 —
WHAT WE DO BEHIND THE SCENES

The bespoke details.

Kinds of arrangements made before you land.
— 01 —
WE ARRANGE

Services not on any booking site.

Quiet logistics, set before you arrive.
  • PRIVATE CHEFIn your suite. Andean ingredients, Pacific seafood, recovery macros on request.
  • SALT CATHEDRAL ZIPAQUIRÁPrivate day trip — the underground cathedral carved into a salt mine, 50 km north of Bogotá. Driver, guide, lunch in the colonial square above.
  • COFFEE TRIPLETPrivate flight to the Coffee Triangle (Eje Cafetero) — Hacienda Bambusa or Hacienda Venecia, the working farms behind the world’s best beans.
  • EMERALD ATELIERPrivate session with a Bogotá emerald master in the Avenida Jiménez district. Source, cut, set — Colombia is the world’s emerald capital.
  • IN-SUITE WELLNESSMassage, breathwork, altitude-recovery oxygen sessions — sent to your hotel.
— 02 —
WE OPEN

Doors before opening hours. After closing.

Private access to the sites the public lines up for.
  • MUSEO DEL OROPrivate after-hours access with a senior curator. 55,000 pre-Columbian gold artifacts, no crowds, the room to yourself.
  • MONSERRATEDawn private funicular trip — 3,152m, the Andes opening below you, before the day’s clouds settle.
  • CATEDRAL PRIMADAPrivate early-morning visit to Bogotá’s 1571 cathedral on Plaza de Bolívar. With a Colombian Church historian.
— 03 —
WE ACCESS

Doors the city keeps closed.

Relationships built over years, opened for you.
  • LEO BY LEONOR ESPINOSACounter seats and the chef’s tasting menu — the Andean ingredient story Leo built over 20 years. Booked 6 weeks out.
  • PARTNER GMsFour Seasons Casa Medina + Four Seasons Bogotá GMs. Intros at check-in.
  • ANDRÉS CARNE DE RESPriority table at the iconic Chía location — Colombian theater, food and dance running into the early hours.
  • HOTEL UPGRADESQuietly arranged before arrival, not negotiated at the desk.
— 04 —
WE TRANSLATE

The fluent people behind every visit.

English-speaking fixers, on the ground, on your terms.
  • PRIVATE GUIDESBogotá historians, pre-Columbian art curators, coffee experts — matched to your interest, all English-fluent.
  • DRIVERSEnglish-fluent. Same driver every day of the trip — he knows the traffic before the apps do.
  • FIXERSFor complex needs — medical (Fundación Santa Fe), last-minute reservations, sensitive errands.
  • CULTURAL BRIEFSSent ahead of arrival, tailored to your itinerary — the Colombian context that makes a trip land.
— 09 —
THE SHAPE OF A BOGOTÁ TRIP

We don’t ship itineraries.

Bespoke means we build the rhythm around you, not the other way around. Here’s what we ask before we start.
HOW BESPOKE ACTUALLY WORKS

The other guides give you a day-by-day plan. We don’t. A bespoke trip starts with what’s true for you: your training schedule, your dietary protocols, your sleep window, the experience you’d fly for. You answer. We build.

— THE INPUTS —

What we ask before we build.

The questions that shape your trip more than any itinerary ever could.

  • 01.
    What time do you wake at home? Do you want to keep that here, or use the jet lag to shift earlier?
  • 02.
    Are you training during the trip? If so — what’s the schedule, what equipment do you need, and what climate adjustments matter?
  • 03.
    Any dietary protocol — macros, recovery nutrition, fasting window, allergens, religious or cultural restrictions?
  • 04.
    The one experience you’d fly for. Is it a meal, a place, a person, a quiet morning, something we haven’t mentioned?
  • 05.
    Density or quiet? Do you want a full city day, or the slow afternoon and the long lunch?
  • 06.
    Anniversary, milestone, recovery trip, work trip — what’s this trip for?
  • 07.
    Solo, couple, family, or group? Each shape differently.
— THE ANCHORS —

The moments we build around.

Not a checklist — a list of the kinds of anchors that often appear in a TBT-built trip.

  • Monserrate at first lightThe single most Bogotá-specific morning. The funicular up before the cloud, the savanna laid flat below, the 1650 sanctuary at 3,152m.
  • The world-stage mealUsually El Chato or Leo, sometimes both across two nights. The pacing of the trip orbits this dinner.
  • The museum afternoonGold Museum → Plaza de Bolívar → Botero, all in La Candelaria. Pre-Columbian gold and a modern master in one walk.
  • The slow resetThe midday window at altitude — spa, oxygen room, hotel library. The day Bogotá’s altitude teaches you to take.
  • The next-stop launchOne of the trips beyond the city — Cartagena, Medellín, Villa de Leyva, Salento and the Cocora Valley. Built into the trip if it fits.
— SANCTUM —

Tell us about you. We build the rhythm.

Sanctum members answer the 7 prompts above. We build the trip from there. Flights, hotels, drivers, restaurants, private chef, the Salt Cathedral day trip, the Gold Museum after-hours, all pre-arranged before you land. No template. No itinerary you didn’t ask for.

REQUEST A SANCTUM ROUTE

What Bogotá taught me.

⏳ Voice memo placeholder · §10 (Kafele) Kafele to record his personal reflection on Bogotá — the altitude, La Candelaria, sunset on Monserrate, the table. We slot the transcribed voice memo here exactly as recorded, replacing this note. No narrative is written until Kafele speaks it.
— Kafele
SANCTUM

Want Bogotá handled?

beyond the ordinary.

Sanctum members can request a custom Bogotá route — flights, hotels, drivers, restaurants, private chef, the Salt Cathedral day trip, after-hours at the Gold Museum — pre-booked, the whole rhythm of the trip mapped before you land.

REQUEST A ROUTE
— FROM BOGOTÁ · 5 TRIPS ACROSS COLOMBIA —

Bogotá is the launch pad.

A short flight or a scenic drive from the capital reaches five different versions of Colombia — the Caribbean walled city, the city of eternal spring, a colonial time capsule, the wax-palm coffee valleys, and a granite monolith over an emerald lake. Each gets its own dedicated guide. Or go solo and build your own way through them.

— 01 —
Cartagena
1.5 HR · FLIGHT · NORTH
The UNESCO walled city on the Caribbean. Colonial colour, warm sea, the coast.
— 02 —
Medellín
1 HR · FLIGHT · NW
The city of eternal spring. Reborn, design-led, Andean valley warmth.
— 03 —
Villa de Leyva
4 HRS · DRIVE · NE
A whitewashed colonial town with South America’s largest cobbled square.
— 04 —
Salento · Cocora
FLIGHT + DRIVE · W
The Coffee Triangle. The Cocora Valley’s 200-ft wax palms. Working coffee fincas.
— 05 —
Guatapé
FLIGHT + DRIVE · NW
The 650-ft Piedra del Peñol over a maze of emerald reservoirs.
thebespoketraveler · Bogotá · City Guide Volume 01 template v7

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