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Study abroad in Colombia

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Colombia.

Capital

Bogota

Languages

Spanish

Academic Year

Many universities run Semester 1 from January/February to May/June and Semester 2 from July/August to November/December. Dates vary by institution.

Population

52,000,000+

Typical Budget

COP 2,500,000 - 5,500,000/month

Overview

Spanish immersion, strong city universities, Caribbean and Andean culture, and lower living costs than most North American or Western European destinations.

Country Overview

What student life feels like in Colombia.

Colombia works best for exchange students who want a serious Spanish-immersion semester rather than an English-speaking bubble. Bogota is the academic and political capital, Medellin is the easiest large city for daily mobility, and Barranquilla gives Colombia a Caribbean student-life angle through Uninorte.

Most undergraduate courses are taught in Spanish, so B1-B2 Spanish matters for academics, housing, healthcare, and social life. Safety is manageable in the main student districts when students follow local guidance, but it must be treated honestly: use university advice, avoid high-risk regions, keep valuables discreet, and use registered or app-based transport at night.

Quick answer: Colombia can be excellent for exchange students who want Spanish immersion, culture, business, social sciences and a high-energy Latin American semester. The key is choosing the right city and neighborhood, using university-backed housing guidance, understanding EPS/private-insurance requirements and taking phone, transport and nightlife safety seriously.

Country Framework

What shapes student life in Colombia.

Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.

Safety Snapshot

Main student districts in Bogota, Medellin and Barranquilla are workable for exchange students, but Colombia requires active safety habits: avoid displaying phones and laptops, use trusted transport at night, follow host-university neighbourhood advice, and avoid high-risk border/rural regions.

Editorial view of Colombia

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

61

Crime Index

High

World avg: 44.7

39

Safety Index

Be cautious

World avg: 55.3

32

Cost of Living

Very affordable

COP 2,500,000 - 5,500,000/month

Crime factors measured

General perception of crime levels Perceived safety during daylight and nighttime Concerns about specific crimes (mugging, robbery, car theft, physical attacks, harassment, bias-motivated incidents) Property crime severity (burglary, theft, vandalism) Violent crime severity (assault, homicide, sexual offenses)

Culture

Social Norms

  • Spanish ability changes the whole experience. Even if an exchange office speaks English, daily life, landlords, clinics, transport and most classes work mainly in Spanish.
  • Colombia is not one culture. Bogota, Medellin and Barranquilla differ in climate, accent, rhythm, food and social expectations.
  • People are often warm and helpful, but politeness is indirect. A soft no, delay or change of plan may be communicated gently rather than bluntly.
  • University life is social and campus-centred. Join orientation, buddy programmes and student clubs early; they are the easiest way to build a trusted circle.
  • Do not joke lightly about drugs, armed conflict or safety stereotypes. Students will appreciate curiosity, but tired narco-cliches land badly.

Food Culture

Arepa

Arepa

COP 3,000-10,000

Everyday staple that changes by region and works for breakfast, snacks or quick campus-area meals.

Student hack:

Ask which version is typical in your city; paisa, coastal and Boyacense arepas feel different.

Ajiaco / menu del dia

Ajiaco / menu del dia

COP 12,000-28,000

Practical student lunch around Bogota and university districts: soup or full set lunch depending on the place.

Student hack:

Look for weekday set lunches near campus before paying tourist-area prices.

Bandeja paisa

Bandeja paisa

COP 22,000-45,000

Filling Antioquia-associated plate and a useful way to understand Medellin food culture.

Student hack:

Share it or treat it as the main meal of the day; it is not a light pre-class lunch.

Dos and Don'ts

Do

  • Learn basic Colombian Spanish before arrival and ask classmates about local expressions by city; accents and slang change fast between Bogota, Medellin and the Caribbean coast.

  • Greet people before asking for help: a simple 'buenos dias', 'buenas tardes' or 'hola, como estas' makes daily interactions smoother.

  • Use university orientation, buddy programmes and class groups as your first trusted network before relying on random online advice.

  • Share live location with a friend for late returns, first housing visits and unfamiliar weekend trips.

  • Plan your campus commute in daylight during week one, including the safest walking segment between station/stop and classroom.

  • Ask before taking photos of people, neighbourhoods or community projects; some areas welcome visitors but not casual photography.

  • Keep small cash for buses, markets and backup transport, but use cards/apps where practical and split money between pockets.

Don't

  • Do not display phones, laptops, watches or jewellery on the street; keep devices away from open car windows, bus doors and crowded platforms.

  • Do not hail informal taxis at night; use registered taxi queues, hotel/campus recommendations or ride-hailing options that local students trust.

  • Do not assume all areas of Bogota, Medellin or Barranquilla have the same safety profile; ask by neighbourhood, time of day and route.

  • Do not joke lightly about drugs, armed conflict, guerrillas or narco stereotypes; those topics are personal, political and exhausting for many Colombians.

  • Do not improvise rural, border or late-night intercity travel alone; check university advice, official park status and recent route conditions.

  • Do not expect English to solve housing, clinics or bureaucracy; bring translated documents and practise the Spanish phrases you need for appointments.

Lifestyle & Travel

Bogota museums and Monserrate

Bogota museums and Monserrate

Bogota Year-round; start in daylight

Academic-capital culture, altitude and city geography in one practical weekend route.

Learn more
Medellin metro and Metrocable circuit

Medellin metro and Metrocable circuit

Medellin Year-round outside peak commute

The clearest way to understand the valley, integrated transport and why housing location matters.

Learn more
Caribbean Barranquilla route

Caribbean Barranquilla route

Barranquilla and Puerto Colombia Dry months; manage heat

Riverfront, Caribbean history and coast show a Colombia very different from the Andes.

Learn more
Cartagena heritage weekend

Cartagena heritage weekend

Cartagena Dry season; book early

Historic Caribbean city with high tourist demand; plan accommodation and heat rather than improvising.

Learn more
Coffee-region trip

Coffee-region trip

Armenia, Pereira or Manizales region Check rain and farm access

A slower landscape-and-food trip that adds rural context to an urban exchange semester.

Learn more
Tayrona coastal trip

Tayrona coastal trip

Magdalena Check park closures, heat and health advice

Major Caribbean nature trip requiring official park status, transport and sun/heat planning.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Barranquilla Carnival
hype

February or March; dates vary

Barranquilla Carnival

Barranquilla

Caribbean culture dance major event

Huge city event with changed transport, crowds and high accommodation demand. Use official schedules and trusted groups.

Feria de las Flores
hype

Usually August

Feria de las Flores

Medellin

flowers parades city culture

Medellin's signature cultural season. Check the municipal programme because routes and dates change.

Bogota International Book Fair
medium

April-May; verify dates

Bogota International Book Fair

Bogota

books universities culture

Major publishing and ideas event with talks, university participation and crowded Corferias transport.

Rock al Parque
hype

Dates announced annually

Rock al Parque

Bogota

live music public festival groups

Large public music festival. Confirm entry rules, weather and the return route before going.

Blacks and Whites Carnival
hype

Early January

Blacks and Whites Carnival

Pasto

regional culture parades travel

Distinctive Andean carnival far from the main exchange cities; plan flights or road travel carefully.

Campus welcome weeks
medium

January-February and July-August

Campus welcome weeks

Host universities

buddies clubs orientation

The safest and fastest way to build trusted contacts, learn campus services and join student groups.

Travel Tips

  • Ask host university staff before travelling to rural or border regions.
  • Use flights or reputable intercity buses for longer trips and avoid overnight improvisation.
  • Check yellow fever recommendations for jungle, Amazon, Orinoco, national park or some Caribbean rural travel.

Benefits & Scholarships

Personalize this layer

Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.

Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.

If you are coming to this country

Grants, discounts, and student support you can unlock once you study here.

Host university services and student ID

Incoming exchange

Your host university ID is the practical key for libraries, sports, campus events, cafeterias, exchange orientation, clubs and some local student discounts.

Typical amount

Usually included in enrolment; discounts vary

Duration

Exchange semester/year

Apply when

Activate during orientation week

Who it is for

Exchange students enrolled at a Colombian host institution.

How to unlock it

Collect or activate the student ID through the host university after enrolment.

Often stackable with

Campus clubs Library access University health or wellbeing services

Host universities

Official source

City transport cards

Daily commuters

TuLlave in Bogota and Civica in Medellin reduce daily transport friction and make it easier to combine bus, BRT, metro, tram or cable routes depending on city.

Typical amount

Pay-as-you-go fares; student discount rules vary locally

Duration

As needed

Apply when

Set up in week one

Who it is for

Students using public transport regularly in Bogota or Medellin.

How to unlock it

Buy and register the city card through official points or app guidance, then test the campus route before classes.

Often stackable with

Offline maps Campus commute rehearsal

TransMilenio / Metro de Medellin

Official source

Exchange tuition waiver

Bilateral exchange

Many bilateral exchange agreements mean you pay tuition to your home university, not the Colombian host. This is not automatic for every programme, so verify the agreement before budgeting.

Typical amount

Often host tuition waived; housing/living costs still paid by student

Duration

Approved exchange period

Apply when

Before nomination/application

Who it is for

Students nominated through an official exchange agreement.

How to unlock it

Confirm nomination, tuition status and excluded fees with both universities in writing.

Often stackable with

Home university grants Campus ID benefits

Home and host university exchange offices

Official source

Beca Colombia for foreign students

Foreign applicants

ICETEX's Beca Colombia is the main official scholarship route aimed at foreign citizens for postgraduate study, Spanish language and academic mobility calls. It is more relevant to degree/postgraduate or formal mobility applicants than a short informal visit.

Typical amount

Varies by call; check official ICETEX terms

Duration

Depends on scholarship modality

Apply when

Annual/periodic calls; verify current convocatoria

Who it is for

Foreign citizens applying under the open ICETEX call and meeting programme-specific requirements.

How to unlock it

Apply through the official ICETEX call, not through informal agencies.

Often stackable with

Host university admission Visa planning

Useful either way

Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.

Reciprocity and mobility grants from your home side

Funding check

For many exchange students, the most realistic funding is not Colombian public aid but Erasmus+, home-university mobility money, government travel grants or regional scholarships from the sending country.

Typical amount

Varies by home programme

Duration

Usually exchange period

Apply when

Often before host acceptance letter arrives

Who it is for

Students nominated from partner universities who need help with flights, insurance or living costs.

How to unlock it

Ask the home international office for Colombia-specific mobility funding before applying for the host visa.

Often stackable with

Exchange tuition waiver Private insurance

Home university / sending-country agencies

Official source

Culture, museums and student pricing

Culture savings

Museums, festivals and cultural venues often offer student pricing or free-entry windows, but eligibility can depend on age, local ID, student card or event rules.

Typical amount

Discounts/free windows vary by venue

Duration

Event or semester-based

Apply when

Check before each visit

Who it is for

Students who actively check official venue pages before booking.

How to unlock it

Carry your university ID and confirm eligibility on the official venue or festival page.

Often stackable with

Campus clubs City festival calendars

Museums, city cultural agencies and event organisers

Official source

Visa Requirements

Difficulty: Moderate
Visa-exempt nationalities Up to 180 days
Official source

Short-stay entry / student-related permit at entry

Colombia's Foreign Ministry states that the V Student Visa is not required when the stay does not exceed 180 calendar days for eligible visa-exempt students. Carry admission letter, accommodation details, proof of funds, insurance and return/onward travel evidence.

Fee: COP 0 Entry process plus any required migration registration Usually up to 90 days initially, extendable up to 180 days where eligible
All nationalities Over 180 days or when visa required
Official source

V Student Visa

Used for in-person, virtual or distance education, academic exchange, internships and other approved study activities. Requires admission/enrolment proof, financial solvency and health insurance valid in Colombia.

Fee: USD 37 Up to 30 calendar days after visa study fee payment, plus time for additional documents if requested Up to 2 years, depending on approved activity

Application Checklist

9 steps
  1. 1
    Check whether your nationality is visa-exempt and whether your exchange is 180 days or less.
  2. 2
    Confirm with the host university whether you should enter as a short-stay student or apply for a V Student Visa before travelling.
  3. 3
    Keep your admission letter, proof of funds, insurance, address in Colombia and return/onward ticket accessible at entry.
  4. 4
    If you hold a visa valid for more than 3 months, register and apply for a Cedula de Extranjeria within 15 calendar days after entering Colombia or after visa issuance if already in Colombia.
  5. 5
    Use only official Cancilleria and Migracion Colombia websites for visa, Check-Mig and migration procedures.
  6. 6
    Confirm whether your nationality and duration require visa steps before travel.
  7. 7
    Ask about Migracion Colombia and Cedula de Extranjeria guidance if your stay is long enough.
  8. 8
    Carry admission letter, insurance proof, accommodation address and onward/return evidence if requested.
  9. 9
    Keep digital and printed copies for arrival/admin processes.

Regional Variations

High-risk border and rural areas

Health & Healthcare

Emergency: 123
Usual exchange route: Private/university-approved insurance
Visa health proof: Insurance required for V Student Visa
Best first step: Ask host international office

How It Works

Colombia's health system is organised around the SGSSS and EPS insurers, but exchange students are not automatically covered just because they enrol at a university. For most short exchange stays, the practical route is private international student or travel insurance accepted by the host university and valid in Colombia. The V Student Visa route also asks applicants to show health insurance coverage, so treat insurance as part of immigration readiness, not an optional add-on.

Student Needs

Before arrival, confirm whether your host university requires a minimum coverage amount, repatriation coverage, Spanish-language certificate, EPS-style local plan or a specific clinic network. Carry policy documents in English and Spanish, save the nearest clinic to your housing and campus, and ask the international office which hospitals international students normally use. Do this in week one, not when you are already sick.

Emergency vs Clinic

For life-threatening emergencies call 123. For non-urgent illness, minor injuries, prescriptions, mental-health support or sexual-health questions, start with the university health service if available, then use a clinic or telemedicine route listed by your insurer. Private clinics in major cities are usually easier for insured international students than trying to navigate public coverage on a short stay.

Public Coverage Notes

  • Regular long-stay residents may have different affiliation pathways, but short exchange students should not assume automatic EPS/public coverage.

  • Private clinics are usually the smoother route for insured international visitors in Bogota, Medellin and Barranquilla.

  • Yellow fever vaccination may be recommended or requested for Amazon, Orinoco, national park, jungle or some Caribbean rural travel, but it is usually not the core issue for urban study stays.

  • Spanish-language support varies; keep insurance details, allergies, medication names and emergency contacts accessible offline.

University Plans

  • Uniandes and other host universities typically publish exchange fact sheets or arrival instructions with insurance expectations; follow the host rule even if your home university has a lighter minimum.

  • Campus health services can help triage minor issues and tell you which clinics students commonly use, but they do not replace an insurance policy.

Private Coverage

  • Check hospitalisation, emergency care, outpatient visits, mental health, prescriptions and repatriation before buying the policy.

  • Keep the insurer's assistance phone/WhatsApp saved and test how to request authorisation for a clinic visit.

  • If you plan Tayrona, Amazon, Orinoco or rural Caribbean travel, review vaccine and heat/dehydration advice before booking.

Emergency

Call 123 or go to an emergency department

Use this for serious injury, severe symptoms, violence, traffic accidents or situations where waiting for campus support is unsafe.

Non-urgent

Campus health service, insurer telemedicine or covered private clinic

Best for routine illness, prescriptions, tests, minor injuries and referral questions.

Travel health

Check vaccine and park/region advice before rural or jungle trips

Urban study in Bogota, Medellin or Barranquilla is different from Amazon, Orinoco, Tayrona or remote rural travel.

Emergency

123

EXTRA: Culture Shock & Apps

Moderate Culture Shock Expected

This destination may feel different from Western campus routines. The apps and advice below are high-impact setup items for everyday student life.

WhatsApp
Critical

Main channel for housing, class groups, plans and coordination with local students.

Tip: Use a recognizable name and separate official groups from informal chats.
Google Maps offline
Critical

Useful for arrival, routes and neighborhoods when signal fails or routes are unfamiliar.

Tip: Download Bogota, Medellin or Barranquilla maps before moving alone.
TransMiApp / TuLlave
Critical

Key setup for Bogota and TransMilenio/SITP routes.

Tip: Buy TuLlave and test your campus route before the first day of class.
Metro de Medellin / Civica
Recommended

Useful in Medellin for metro, metrocable, tram and integrated buses.

Tip: Ask whether Civica makes sense for your stay length and neighborhood.
Cabify / Uber / DiDi
Recommended

Common options for night routes or areas where walking is not ideal.

Tip: Confirm pickup at a safe point and share the route when late.
Rappi
Recommended

Common for food, pharmacy and errands during the first weeks.

Tip: Use it as support, not as a replacement for learning campus-area services.

Cities to Explore

Bogota

Bogota

Colombia's academic capital: high-altitude, intense, museum-rich and best for students who want serious Spanish immersion and a dense university ecosystem.

Open City Guide
Medellin

Medellin

Colombia's easiest big city for exchange daily life: metro-connected, warmer, social and a strong fit for EAFIT students.

Open City Guide
Barranquilla

Barranquilla

Caribbean Colombia for exchange students: hot, social, culturally distinct and anchored by Uninorte's unusually strong incoming-student support.

Open City Guide