Bogotá is enormous. Pick the wrong neighborhood and you'll spend your stay stuck in traffic. Here's the honest breakdown for long-stay foreigners.
Click to jump straight to the detailed breakdown of any neighborhood.
| Neighborhood | Price (1BR) | Safety | Walkability | Transport | Restaurants | Nightlife | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chapinero | $700–$1,400 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Excellent | Excellent | Great | Best | Expats, nomads, all stays |
| Usaquén | $900–$2,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Excellent | Moderate | Upscale | Moderate | Families, executives, long stays |
| Zona Rosa | $1,000–$2,200 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Excellent | Excellent | Best in city | Excellent | Corporate, business travelers |
| La Macarena | $600–$1,200 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Good | Moderate | Creative | Moderate | Artists, creatives, foodies |
| Chico Norte | $800–$1,800 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Good | Good | Good | Limited | Corporate, financial district |
Chapinero is where most foreigners end up on their first Bogotá stay — and where many return. It's walkable, well-connected, full of excellent cafés and restaurants, has the strongest international community, and sits roughly in the middle of the city making it practical for meetings across Bogotá. It's also home to the city's LGBTQ+ scene, which gives it a notably open and diverse atmosphere.
The main sub-areas are Chapinero Alto (quieter, hillside, more expensive), Chapinero Central (busier, the commercial spine of Carrera 13), and Zona G — a dense restaurant strip that rivals anything in South America.
Usaquén is what Bogotá's elite chose when they moved north to escape the center. A former colonial village with its own plaza mayor, cobblestone streets, antique Sunday market, and a concentration of high-end restaurants and boutiques that would fit comfortably in any European capital.
It attracts senior diplomats, corporate executives on extended assignments, and families relocating to Bogotá for 1+ years. It's quiet, residential, very safe, and significantly more expensive than Chapinero. Less nightlife, more quality of life.
Zona Rosa is Bogotá's international commercial district — Andino mall, El Retiro mall, corporate headquarters, upscale hotels, and a concentration of restaurants and bars that makes it the city's premium dining and nightlife destination. It's loud, energetic, and expensive.
Living here puts you in the center of Bogotá's international business world. The tradeoff is noise (especially weekends), high rents, and a more transactional feel than Chapinero or Usaquén. Perfect for shorter business stays; less ideal for a quiet 6-month remote work stint.
La Macarena is the neighborhood Bogotanos are protective of — they don't want too many people to find out about it. Adjacent to the national park and Cerro Monserrate, it's a walkable, bougainvillea-draped neighborhood of independent galleries, creative restaurants, boutique cafés, and a genuine community feel.
It's smaller than Chapinero, has fewer furnished apartment options, and is slightly less safe than the northern neighborhoods. But for anyone who values authenticity, culture, and Bogotá's creative scene over convenience and nightlife, it's the best neighborhood in the city.
Default choice for most expats and digital nomads. Central location, walkable, excellent transport.
Relocating with family, senior professional, want peace and a village-in-a-city atmosphere.
Short corporate stay, foodie, nightlife is important, convenience over character.
Not your first Bogotá trip, want the real city, value art and independent restaurants over convenience.
Working in the financial district daily. Maximise proximity to corporate offices and minimise commute time.
Staying 6+ months, want local prices, don't mind less nightlife and fewer expat connections.
RentiHome lists furnished apartments across Chapinero, Zona Rosa, Usaquén, and La Macarena. Monthly stays, no Airbnb fees.