Thinking about moving to Barranquilla? This is everything you need — cost of living, visas, housing, healthcare, banking, and what life actually looks like on the ground. Honest, up-to-date, written by people who live here.

Start here

Before you book a flight: read these three. If they don’t excite you, Barranquilla isn’t your city.

Essential

Cost of Living: a real 2026 breakdown

Real rent, groceries, utilities, eating out — what a month actually costs.

Compare

Barranquilla vs Medellín vs Bogotá

Which Colombian city actually fits the life you want?

Day one

Your First Week: arrival checklist

The exact order: SIM, cash, address, groceries, then breathe.

Paperwork & Money

Visas for Colombia

M, R, V visas — which one fits your situation, how to apply.

Banking, Cash & Money

Opening a Colombian account, cards that work, ATMs, transfers.

Colombian Taxes

When you become a tax resident and what that means.

Path to Citizenship

Residency → naturalization, the long game for committed expats.

Housing & Neighborhoods

Housing & Renting

Finding an apartment without getting ripped off. Leases, fiadores, the real market.

The Estrato System

Colombia’s socioeconomic zoning — why it matters for your utility bills.

Neighborhood Profiles

Prado, Alto Prado, Villa Country, Riomar — where expats actually live.

Daily Life Setup

SIM Cards & Mobile Data

Claro vs Movistar vs Tigo, and the cheapest data plan that actually works.

Supermarkets & Groceries

Jumbo, Éxito, Carulla, Olímpica — and the local markets worth knowing.

Learning Spanish

Costeño slang hits different. Schools, tutors, and how to fast-track fluency.

Best Gyms

Where expats train — from Smart Fit to boutique CrossFit boxes.

Hiring Domestic Help

Fair salaries, what’s legal, what’s customary in Colombia.

Amazon to Colombia

Freight forwarders, customs, and what the real landed cost looks like.

Work & Community

Working Remotely

Internet quality, power reliability, timezones, and the nomad visa.

Coworking Spaces

The shortlist of places with fast wifi, AC, and good coffee.

Building a Social Circle

Where to meet people — locals and expats. The real groups and events.

Getting a feel for the city

Food: what to eat

Coastal Colombian cuisine — the dishes, the markets, the restaurants.

Nightlife Guide

Where Barranquilleros actually go out — from salsa halls to rooftops.

Dancing

Salsa, cumbia, champeta — and where to learn without embarrassing yourself.

Carnival

Why people time their move around it. What to expect, what to wear.

Still deciding?

Visit first.

The honest advice every expat gives: come for two weeks before you commit. See the neighborhoods, try the heat in March, eat the food, and feel whether the energy matches your life.

Explore the city →