~$1,035
USD/month minimum pension income required (2026)
2 yr
Initial visa validity, renewable indefinitely
5 yr
Path to permanent residency (cédula de extranjería)

Colombia's pensioner visa — officially the Visa de Pensionado — is one of the most straightforward retirement visas in Latin America. If you receive a monthly pension or retirement income that meets the minimum threshold, the process is primarily documentary. This guide covers 2026 requirements, the complete document checklist, where to apply, and what life looks like after approval.

Good news for US retirees: Social Security income counts toward the income requirement. If you receive $1,035+ per month in pension, Social Security, 401k distributions, or any combination, you qualify. The income threshold is much lower than most people assume.

What Is the Colombia Pensioner Visa?

The Visa de Pensionado is a long-stay residency visa for people receiving a pension, annuity, or retirement income from any source — Colombian or foreign. It gives you legal residency in Colombia for 2 years at a time, with unlimited renewals, and creates a path to permanent residency after 5 years of continuous legal residence.

  • Validity: 2 years, renewable indefinitely
  • Allows you to live full-time in Colombia
  • Allows you to open Colombian bank accounts
  • Allows you to bring immediate family members (spouse + minor children) on dependent visas
  • Does NOT allow working for Colombian employers
  • Path to permanent residency: 5 years continuous residence → apply for Visa de Residente

2026 Income Requirement

You must demonstrate monthly pension/retirement income of at least 3× Colombia's monthly minimum wage. In 2026, this equals approximately $1,035 USD/month. This threshold adjusts annually with Colombia's minimum wage — check the current rate at cancilleria.gov.co before applying.

What Counts as Income?

  • US Social Security benefits ✅
  • Employer pension or defined benefit plan ✅
  • Military retirement pay ✅
  • 401k / IRA distributions (regular systematic withdrawals) ✅
  • Annuity payments ✅
  • Foreign government pension ✅
  • Multiple income sources combined ✅ (Social Security + pension, for example)

Required Documents — Complete Checklist

#DocumentNotes
1Valid passportMust have 6+ months validity; provide certified copy of all pages
2Proof of pension/incomeOfficial benefit letter showing monthly amount (SSA benefit verification letter, pension statement, etc.)
33 months bank statementsShowing deposits consistent with declared income amount
4Health insuranceMust cover Colombia; international travel insurance with medical coverage usually qualifies; or enroll in Colombian EPS after arrival
5Background checkFrom your country of residence for the past 3 years. US: FBI background check (or state-level). Must be apostilled.
6Online applicationCompleted at cancilleria.gov.co — Colombia's official visa portal
7Passport photosRecent, white background
8Document translationsAll non-Spanish documents require certified Spanish translation by an official Colombian translator

Step-by-Step Application Process

  1. Gather all documents — Allow 3–6 weeks to collect background checks, apostilles, translations.
  2. Get documents apostilled — US documents require an apostille from the Secretary of State in the issuing state, then certified Spanish translation by a colombian-registered translator.
  3. Create account at cancilleria.gov.co — Colombia's official foreign ministry visa portal. Navigate to "Visa de Pensionado."
  4. Complete the online application form — In Spanish. Use Chrome's translate feature or hire an immigration attorney.
  5. Upload all documents — Digital scans. File size limits apply — typically under 5MB per document.
  6. Pay the application fee — Approximately $55–75 USD (confirm current rate on official site).
  7. Wait for processing — Typically 3–15 business days, sometimes longer. Allow 4–6 weeks.
  8. Receive approval — You'll get an approval code. Enter Colombia and get the physical visa sticker at the port of entry.
  9. Register with Migración Colombia — Within 15 days of arrival, register at a Migración Colombia office in Barranquilla. Get your cédula de extranjería (foreigner ID card).

Cost Breakdown

ItemEstimated Cost
Visa application fee~$55–75 USD
FBI background check (US applicants)$18 + processing time
Apostille fees (per document)$20–30 per document
Document translation (certified)$50–150 per document
Immigration attorney (optional)$300–600
Annual health insurance$300–1,200 (age-dependent)
Total (DIY)~$300–600
Total (with attorney)~$700–1,200

Do You Need an Immigration Attorney?

Not required, but recommended for most applicants. The application is in Spanish, the document requirements have specific formatting rules, and a single rejected document requires resubmission which adds weeks. Colombian immigration attorneys typically charge $300–600 for the full pensioner visa process — money well spent to avoid delays. Ask in expat groups for current attorney recommendations in Barranquilla or Bogotá (application can be done remotely from any country).

After Approval: Life in Barranquilla

Once your visa is approved and you arrive, your first month in Barranquilla looks like this:

  • Register with Migración Colombia (mandatory within 15 days of arrival) — obtain cédula de extranjería
  • Open a Colombian bank account (Bancolombia or Davivienda work well for visa holders)
  • Enroll in Colombian health insurance (EPS) — optional but gives access to the national health system at very low cost
  • Find permanent accommodation — a furnished all-inclusive apartment for the first 1–3 months while you explore neighborhoods and decide on a longer-term arrangement

Frequently Asked Questions

Does US Social Security qualify for the Colombia retirement visa?
Yes. US Social Security benefits are explicitly accepted as qualifying income for the Visa de Pensionado. You'll need an official SSA Benefit Verification Letter showing your monthly benefit amount. If your Social Security alone exceeds ~$1,035/month, you qualify. If it's lower, you can combine with other pension or investment income.
Does Colombia tax foreign pension income?
This is a question for an international tax attorney, not a generic guide. The general framework: staying in Colombia more than 183 days per calendar year can trigger Colombian tax residency. However, Colombia has tax treaties with several countries and pension income treatment varies. Most US retirees remain subject to US taxes regardless. Get specific advice before committing to full-time Colombian residency.
Can my spouse get a visa too?
Yes. A spouse can apply for a dependent visa based on your pensioner visa. They'll need standard documentation plus marriage certificate (apostilled and translated) and proof of your approved visa. The dependent visa gives equivalent rights — full residency, bank account access, and the same path to permanent residency.
Can I still collect Medicare while living in Colombia?
Medicare does not cover healthcare outside the United States. You will need separate international health insurance or enrollment in Colombia's private health system. Private health insurance in Colombia ($150–400/month depending on age and coverage) is excellent value — covering most needs at a fraction of US healthcare costs.
How long before I can get permanent residency in Colombia?
5 years of continuous legal residence with a pensioner visa makes you eligible to apply for the Visa de Residente — Colombia's equivalent of permanent residency. This requires maintaining your qualifying income and a clean record throughout the period. Many long-term Barranquilla retirees pursue this path for the additional security and banking access it provides.

Retiring to Barranquilla? Start with 1–3 Months

Most retirees book a furnished apartment for their first 1–3 months while applying for their visa and getting settled. All-inclusive from $1,500/month — no lease commitment, no setup cost.