UTC-5
Same timezone as US Eastern — ideal for remote work
$1,200
Comfortable monthly budget for single expat
30 min
Drive to Caribbean beach from any expat neighborhood

Moving to a new country is logistically complex. Moving to Barranquilla specifically — a major Colombian city that relatively few expat guides cover thoroughly — can feel like solving a puzzle without the box lid. This checklist is built from what people who've actually done it wish they'd known in advance.

Organized into four phases: before you leave, arrival week, your first month, and ongoing. Work through it in order and you'll hit the ground running.

📌 Start here: The most common mistake is arriving without a furnished apartment arranged. Hotels are expensive and stressful as a base for relocation logistics. Having a proper home base from day one changes everything. WhatsApp us to arrange your apartment before you land.

Phase 1: Before You Leave (1–3 Months Out)

🛂 Visa and Entry

  • Determine your entry option: tourist stamp (90 days, free, most nationalities) or digital nomad visa (up to 2 years, requires application)
  • Check your passport — must have 6+ months validity at time of entry
  • US, Canadian, UK, EU citizens: no visa required for stays under 90 days. Tourist stamp is free on arrival.
  • Planning 6+ months? Apply for the Visa de Trabajador Independiente (digital nomad visa). Requires: employment contract, 3 months bank statements, health insurance, and ~$55 USD fee.
  • Research the 90-day extension process via Migración Colombia online if staying 3–6 months

🏠 Housing

  • Research neighborhoods: El Prado, Riomar, Alto Prado, and Villa Santos are the expat-friendly zones. See our neighborhood guide.
  • Book furnished accommodation for your first 1–3 months — gives you time to find long-term housing without pressure
  • All-inclusive furnished apartments (like RentiHome) include utilities, WiFi, professional pre-arrival cleaning — simplify your first months dramatically
  • Note: most unfurnished long-term rentals require a Colombian co-signer (codeudor) or 2–3 months deposit from foreigners

💊 Health

  • See your doctor 6–8 weeks before departure for recommended vaccinations: Hepatitis A/B, Typhoid for Colombia
  • Get a 90-day supply of any prescription medications — some drugs are available in Colombia, others are not
  • Purchase international health insurance covering Colombia: World Nomads, SafetyWing, or Cigna Global
  • Bring a printed medication list with generic (INN) names — Colombian pharmacies use generic names

💰 Money

  • Notify your bank of international travel to prevent cards being blocked
  • Get a Wise or Charles Schwab debit card — both reimburse international ATM fees
  • Bring $500–1,000 USD cash for the first week
  • Research the current USD/COP exchange rate — Colombia is primarily a cash economy for small transactions

Phase 2: Arrival Week

📱 SIM Card (Day 1 Priority)

  • Buy a local SIM at Barranquilla's Ernesto Cortissoz Airport (BAQ) — Claro, Movistar, and Tigo kiosks in arrivals
  • Claro has the best coverage in Barranquilla — strongly recommended
  • A 30-day plan with 10GB+ data runs ~$8–15 USD
  • WhatsApp is how Colombians communicate — set up immediately with your new Colombian number
  • Alternative: activate an eSIM before landing via Airalo or Holafly

🚗 Getting Around

  • Download Uber and InDriver before landing — both work excellently in Barranquilla
  • InDriver often has lower fares for longer trips — worth checking both
  • Taxis: negotiate fare before getting in — "¿Cuánto me cobra para [destination]?"
  • Motorcycle taxis (mototaxis): fast and cheap for short trips, widely used by locals
  • Do NOT drive a rental car in Barranquilla until you know the city — traffic is genuinely chaotic

🌡️ Adapting to the Climate

  • Barranquilla averages 30–34°C (86–93°F) year-round with high humidity — give yourself 1–2 weeks to adapt
  • Hydrate aggressively the first week — most people drink far less water than they need
  • Keep a refillable water bottle; use filtered or bottled water for drinking
  • AC is available in all modern apartments — don't try to tough out the heat initially
  • Rearrange your schedule: active things before 10am and after 5pm. Midday is for staying cool.

Phase 3: First Month

🪪 Legal and Administrative

  • Register with your home country's embassy or consulate in Colombia
  • If staying 90+ days: apply for tourist stamp extension via Migración Colombia online
  • Cédula de extranjería (foreigner ID card) required for stays 3+ months — apply at Migración Colombia
  • Research your tax situation: 183+ days in Colombia in a calendar year can trigger Colombian tax residency

🏥 Healthcare Setup

  • Identify a private clinic near your apartment — Clínica Portoazul (norte, JCI-accredited), Clínica General del Norte, and Clínica Reina Catalina are top private options
  • Private clinic consultations run $20–40 USD — much cheaper than US urgent care
  • Find a nearby pharmacy: Farmatodo and Cruz Verde are the main chains, open late
  • Save the address of the nearest emergency room

🛒 Groceries and Daily Life

  • Supermarkets: Éxito and Carulla (upscale), Jumbo (mid-range), D1 and Ara (budget value)
  • Fresh produce: Local mercados (markets) are dramatically cheaper than supermarkets
  • Delivery: Rappi is Colombia's Uber Eats/DoorDash/Instacart equivalent — works for food, groceries, pharmacy, and more. Essential app.
  • Hardware/home: Homecenter (Colombia's Home Depot equivalent)

🗣️ Spanish

  • Barranquilla's costeño Spanish is fast and accented — harder initially than Medellín's paisa dialect
  • Key phrases to learn immediately: "habla más despacio" (speak slower), "no entiendo" (I don't understand), "¿cuánto cuesta?" (how much does it cost?), "¿dónde está...?" (where is...?)
  • Your Spanish will improve dramatically within the first month through daily immersion — even basic Spanish goes a long way

Phase 4: Building Your Life in Barranquilla

🤝 Community and Social Life

  • Facebook groups: "Expats in Barranquilla" and "Barranquilla Expat Community" are active
  • InterNations Barranquilla chapter hosts regular events
  • Getting integrated with Colombian social circles (not just expat circles) makes for a much richer experience — barranquilleros are genuinely welcoming

🏫 Schools for Families

  • Top bilingual schools: Colegio Karl C. Parrish (US curriculum), Colegio Anglo Colombiano, Colegio Abraham Lincoln
  • Contact schools 6+ months before desired start date — enrollment applications require advance planning
  • Monthly tuition: $400–1,200 USD depending on school and grade level

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to feel settled in Barranquilla?
Most expats report feeling comfortable and settled after 4–6 weeks. The first two weeks are typically the hardest — climate adjustment, language confusion, administrative tasks. By month two, most people have a routine, know their neighborhood, and have made initial social connections. By month three, it genuinely feels like home.
What is the biggest mistake expats make moving to Barranquilla?
Underestimating the heat and failing to properly air-condition their living space. Barranquilla's climate is non-negotiable at 30–34°C year-round. You need good AC, constant hydration, and an adjusted daily schedule. The second biggest mistake: paying Airbnb prices for a furnished apartment when direct booking saves 20–30%.
Can I drive in Barranquilla as a foreigner?
Legally yes — your home country license is valid during your tourist stay. Practically: Barranquilla traffic is chaotic. Uber and InDriver are cheap and abundant. Most expats don't bother with a car for the first 6 months. If you do drive, an international driving permit alongside your home license is advisable.
Is it hard to make friends in Barranquilla as a foreigner?
Barranquilleros are famously warm and welcoming. The city's people have a strong reputation for being outgoing and social. The smaller expat community compared to Medellín means you're more likely to form genuine local friendships rather than defaulting to expat bubble socializing. Spanish proficiency helps significantly but isn't required to start.
How much should I budget for my first month in Barranquilla?
Budget $2,000–2,800 for your first month. This is higher than your ongoing monthly budget because of one-time setup costs: SIM card, initial grocery stock, household items, any deposits, and the learning curve of navigating a new city. From month two onward, a comfortable lifestyle runs $1,500–2,200/month for a single person.

Start Your Barranquilla Move Right

Move in on day one to a fully-furnished, all-inclusive apartment. No setup stress, no utility surprises, no Airbnb fees. From $1,500/month.