El Prado
Safest expat neighborhood
North only
Stay north of Calle 72
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Safe for daily expat life

The most common question from anyone considering Barranquilla: is it safe? The answer is nuanced — and that nuance is important. Barranquilla is absolutely safe for expats, medical tourists, and long-term visitors who stay in the right neighborhoods. It is not safe in certain southern areas. This guide gives you the honest, specific picture.

Short answer: Yes — if you stay in northern Barranquilla (El Prado, Riomar, Alto Prado, Villa Santos, Villa Country). These neighborhoods are as safe as comparable areas in any major Latin American city.

The Two Barranquillas: North vs South

Barranquilla is sharply divided between its northern and southern halves. The north — where all expats, medical tourists, and long-stay visitors live — is modern, clean, safe, and well-patrolled. The south includes high-crime areas that tourists and expats have no reason to visit. This is not unique to Barranquilla; the same north/south divide exists in Bogotá, Medellín, and most Latin American cities.

The practical rule: stay north of Calle 72, and you're in the safe zone. All RentiHome apartments are in the northern residential zone.

Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Safety Ratings

El Prado — ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ (Safest for Expats)

The most established expat and upper-class neighborhood. Tree-lined streets, luxury restaurants, excellent security. Home to many foreign diplomats and business executives. The safest area in Barranquilla for walking at night.

Riomar — ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Modern high-rise residential area in the far north near the Puerta de Oro convention center. Gated buildings, 24-hour security guards, excellent infrastructure. Very safe and well-maintained.

Alto Prado — ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Upscale residential area bordering El Prado. Wide streets, private security, low foot crime. Quiet at night, popular with Colombian professional families.

Villa Santos — ⭐⭐⭐⭐½

Mixed residential and commercial area. Generally safe, but stick to main streets. The restaurant and bar strip on Calle 93 is very popular and well-policed on evenings and weekends.

El Centro / Barranquillita — ⭐⭐½ (Avoid at Night)

The historic downtown area. Fine during business hours but should be avoided at night. Common pickpocketing. Not a tourist destination — visit only with purpose during the day.

South of Calle 72 — ⭐ (Avoid for Tourists)

Southern areas including Rebolo, La Chinita, and Simón Bolívar neighborhoods have significantly higher crime rates. Tourists and expats have no reason to go here.

How Barranquilla Compares to Other Colombian Cities

CitySafe expat zoneWalking at nightTourist targeting risk
Barranquilla (North)El Prado, RiomarGood in El PradoLow (less touristic)
Medellín (El Poblado)El Poblado, LaurelesGood in El PobladoModerate (very touristy)
Bogotá (North)Usaquén, ChapineroFair with careModerate
Cartagena (Old City)Getsemaní, BocagrandeFair in Old CityHigher (tourist hub)

Barranquilla's northern zone arguably has lower tourist-targeting crime than Medellín's El Poblado, because there are far fewer tourists — scammers go where the tourists are.

What to Actually Be Careful About

Even in safe northern Barranquilla, common-sense precautions apply:

  • Don't walk with your phone out in unfamiliar areas — phone snatching is the most common crime
  • Use Uber or InDriver rather than hailing street taxis — app-based rides are tracked and safer
  • Avoid displaying expensive jewelry or watches in public areas
  • Be cautious after midnight in bar areas — petty crime increases with late-night activity
  • Don't accept drinks from strangers in bars — scopolamine (burandanga) incidents, while rare, do occur
  • ATM safety: Use ATMs inside bank branches or malls, not street ATMs at night

What Long-Term Expats Actually Say

Expats who've lived in northern Barranquilla for months or years consistently report feeling safe in their daily routine. The most common sentiment: "It's like any big city — be aware of your surroundings, don't be careless, and you'll be fine."

Medical tourists staying for 4–6 weeks near Clínica Portoazul (which is in northern Barranquilla) rarely report any security incidents. The neighborhood around the clinic is residential, well-lit, and has active private security from the many apartment complexes.

Safety Infrastructure in Northern Barranquilla

  • Heavy CCTV camera coverage in El Prado and Riomar
  • Police presence and visible patrols in northern areas
  • Private security guards at most residential buildings (including all RentiHome properties)
  • Residential street gates in El Prado and Alto Prado
  • Active community WhatsApp groups among residents for real-time alerts

The US State Department Travel Advisory

Colombia is currently rated Level 2 ("Exercise Increased Caution") by the US State Department — the same rating as France, Germany, and Belgium. The advisory specifically notes that certain regions (Chocó, Norte de Santander, parts of Cauca) carry higher risk. Barranquilla and the Atlantic Coast are not singled out as high-risk areas.

📋 Perspective: The entire country of Colombia is rated Level 2, the same as dozens of European and developed countries. This is a general precaution-level advisory, not a warning against travel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Barranquilla safe for solo female travelers?
Yes, in northern neighborhoods with standard precautions. El Prado and Riomar are safe for solo women during the day and on well-traveled routes at night. Use Uber for late-night transport rather than walking alone after midnight. Barranquilla has a lower street harassment rate than many Latin American cities due to its less touristy character.
Is Barranquilla safer than Medellín?
Northern Barranquilla and El Poblado/Laureles in Medellín are roughly comparable for expat safety. Barranquilla may have a slight edge in the tourist-targeting category because it attracts far fewer foreigners — making expats less conspicuous targets. Medellín's overall infrastructure for foreign visitors is more developed, which cuts both ways.
Is it safe to walk around El Prado at night?
Yes — El Prado is the safest neighborhood in Barranquilla for walking at night. The streets are well-lit, there's an active restaurant scene, and private security from nearby buildings creates a constant presence. Keep standard urban awareness: don't be distracted on your phone, stay on main streets.
Are taxis safe in Barranquilla?
App-based taxis (Uber, InDriver) are safe — the ride is tracked, the driver is verified, and you have a record of the trip. Street taxis flagged on the road carry more risk (express kidnapping has been reported, though rarely). Stick to Uber or have your building reception call a trusted taxi company.
What's the emergency number in Barranquilla?
123 is the unified emergency number for police, ambulance, and fire in Colombia. For the National Police specifically: 112. Most major hotels and apartment buildings also have their own security lines — ask your host on arrival.

Stay in the Safe Zone — Northern Barranquilla

All RentiHome apartments are in El Prado and Riomar — northern Barranquilla's safest, most established neighborhoods.