Medellín Travel Guide 2025: Best Things to Do, Eat & Stay Under $50/Day
You’ve probably seen Medellín flood your Instagram feed — rooftop bars, street murals the size of buildings, and a nightlife scene that doesn’t quit until 6 AM. But here’s the truth: Medellín in 2025 is so much more than the hype. It’s the city that reinvented itself from the world’s most dangerous to one of its most innovative — and for young travelers hunting authentic culture, insane food, and an unbeatable cost of living, it might just be the greatest city on Earth right now. This guide covers everything you need to know to plan the perfect trip.
The Basics
Why Every Young Traveler Is Choosing Medellín in 2025
Dubbed “The City of Eternal Spring” for its year-round 22–28°C (72–82°F) climate, Medellín sits in a lush Andean valley in Colombia’s Antioquia region. What makes it magnetic for the under-35 crowd isn’t just the weather — it’s the explosive mix of creativity, affordability, and energy that no other Latin American city quite matches.
Digital nomads, backpackers, weekend warriors from Bogotá, and international creatives have all landed here, turning El Poblado and Laureles into thriving hubs of coffee shops, coworking spaces, and rooftop terraces. The average daily budget for a comfortable trip? Between $40–$60 USD. That includes accommodation, three meals, transport, and a night out.
- One of the most affordable major cities in South America
- No jet lag issues from North America or Europe — similar time zones
- World-class food scene from $2 street meals to $15 fine dining
- Ranked among the Top 3 cities for digital nomads globally (2024–25)
- Vibrant street art, music festivals & a booming coffee culture
- Easy day trips to coffee farms, Guatapé lake & more
Where to Base Yourself
Best Neighborhoods in Medellín for First-Timers
Medellín’s barrios each have a wildly different vibe. Here’s how to choose your home base:
🌿 El Poblado — The Backpacker’s Playground
El Poblado is Medellín’s most popular tourist neighborhood and for good reason: it’s safe, walkable, packed with hostels ($10–20/night), and has a bar for every mood. Parque Lleras is the epicenter — buzzing on weekends with live music, street food, and people-watching that’s hard to beat. If this is your first visit to Colombia, start here.
🎨 Laureles — Where the Cool Kids Actually Stay
Savvy repeat visitors know Laureles is the real deal. More local, quieter, with incredible restaurants and coffee shops per square meter. The Avenida El Poblado strip here has excellent terrace restaurants. Airbnbs run $30–60/night for a full apartment. Highly recommended for stays over a week.
🏛️ El Centro — Raw, Real & Underrated
The downtown core. It’s chaotic, loud, and deeply authentic — exactly the way Colombia actually lives. Visit for the Plaza Botero (giant bronze sculptures by Fernando Botero), the Museum of Antioquia, and the famous Metrocable — but return to El Poblado to sleep.
📸 Photo by Unsplash — Free to use · El Poblado neighborhood, Medellín
Activities & Experiences
10 Best Things To Do in Medellín in 2025
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Ride the Metrocable to Santo Domingo 🚡 The cable car gondola over the hillside comunas is one of Medellín’s great symbols of urban transformation. The views over the city are stunning and the ride costs only $1 using a Civica card. A must-do even if you’re only in the city for 48 hours.
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Take a Graffiti & Street Art Walking Tour 🎨 Medellín’s murals tell the story of its transformation. A guided street art tour (book below via GetYourGuide) takes you through the best pieces with local context. Browse street art tours →
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Day Trip to El Peñol (Guatapé) 🏔️ Climb 740 steps to the top of the giant Piedra del Peñol rock for 360° panoramic views over the emerald reservoir. It’s Medellín’s top day trip, 1.5 hrs away. Book Guatapé tours →
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Visit Parque Arví by Metrocable 🌿 Take the gondola all the way to Parque Arví, a 16,000-hectare nature reserve above the city. Perfect for hiking, bird watching, and escaping the urban heat. Weekend market here is excellent.
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Explore Plaza Botero & Museum of Antioquia 🏛️ Over 20 oversized bronze sculptures by Fernando Botero line the plaza. Entry to the adjacent museum is just $3–6 USD and houses Latin American art across 30+ rooms. Totally worth it.
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Colombian Coffee Experience ☕ Colombia grows some of the world’s finest coffee. Do a cupping session or visit a nearby coffee farm — many operators run day trips from Medellín. Book coffee farm tours →
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Take a Bike Tour Through the Barrios 🚲 Several operators offer guided cycling tours covering neighborhoods you’d never find solo. Great way to meet other travelers and understand the city’s geography and history at once.
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Salsa Dancing at a Local Club 💃 You don’t need to know how to dance — just show up to Tango Bar or Son Havana and let the locals teach you. This is Latin America at its finest and absolutely free except drinks.
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Wander the Mercado del Rio 🛒 Medellín’s best food market features 100+ vendors from burgers to ramen to traditional bandeja paisa. Grab a cold Águila beer and graze your way through lunch. Located near Floresta metro station.
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Sunset Rooftop at Provenza, El Poblado 🌅 The upscale strip called Provenza in El Poblado has several rooftop bars. Drinks run $4–8 USD. Grab a spot by 5:30 PM on weekends before it fills — the Andes backdrop at golden hour is surreal.
📸 Metrocable — Unsplash (free to use)
📸 Colombian cuisine — Unsplash (free to use)
Food & Drink
Where to Eat in Medellín on a Budget 🍽️
Colombian food is hearty, affordable, and genuinely delicious. Here’s how to eat well without blowing your budget:
🥘 Must-Try Dishes
Bandeja Paisa is the regional king — a monster plate with red beans, ground meat, chicharrón, egg, plantain, and rice for about $5–8 USD. Arepas (corn flatbreads with cheese or egg) are the perfect $1 breakfast. Try a Caldo de Costilla (rib broth soup) if you want a hangover cure that actually works.
🍺 Best Budget Spots
Mercado del Rio
Food market hall with 100+ vendors. Budget $8–15 for a full meal + drink. Lively atmosphere, perfect for solo travelers.
Pergamino Café
Medellín’s most celebrated specialty coffee shop in El Poblado. A flat white is $2.50 and the baristas are passionate. Expect a queue on weekends.
Laureles Local Joints
The Avenida El Poblado strip in Laureles has unpretentious local restaurants where almuerzo (set lunch) costs $3–5 and comes with soup, main & juice.
Money & Budget
Medellín Daily Budget Breakdown 💰
Here’s what a realistic daily spend looks like for different travel styles:
| Expense | Budget Traveler | Mid-Range |
|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | $10–18 (hostel dorm) | $35–60 (private room) |
| Breakfast | $2–3 (arepas & juice) | $5–8 (café) |
| Lunch (almuerzo) | $3–5 (set menu) | $8–12 (restaurant) |
| Dinner | $5–8 (local place) | $12–20 (Laureles) |
| Transport | $1–2 (metro/bus) | $5–10 (Uber) |
| Activities | $5–10 (museums, cable car) | $20–40 (guided tours) |
| Nightlife | $5–10 (beers + entry) | $20–35 (cocktail bars) |
| Daily Total | $31–56 USD | $105–185 USD |
💡 Current exchange rate: ~1 USD = ~4,050 COP (Colombian Peso). Use an ATM in malls for the best rate. Avoid airport money changers.
Safety & Practical Info
Is Medellín Safe? + Practical Tips for 2025
Yes — Medellín is safe for tourists when you use common sense. El Poblado and Laureles are very safe neighborhoods during daytime and nighttime. Like any major city, certain areas require more caution, especially at night.
Safety Tips: Avoid El Centro after dark. Don’t flash expensive cameras or phones in crowded markets. Use Uber (works well in Medellín) rather than random street taxis at night. Stay in well-lit areas when walking back from nightlife.
🚇 Getting Around Medellín
The Metro de Medellín is clean, punctual, and cheap — a single trip is about $0.80–1.00 USD with a Civica card. It connects to the Metrocable lines for the hillside neighborhoods. Uber is widely available and affordable ($2–5 for most in-city trips). Avoid the informal taxis that approach tourists.
✈️ Getting to Medellín
Medellín is served by José María Córdova International Airport (MDE), about 35 km from the city. From the airport, take the official yellow taxi (fixed price ~$25–30 USD) or Uber. Direct flights operate from Miami, New York, Madrid, Panama City, and Bogotá.
📱 SIM Cards & Connectivity
Pick up a local SIM from Claro or Tigo on arrival at the airport. 10GB data plans run about $5–8 USD per month. The city has excellent mobile coverage. Most cafes and hostels have fast WiFi — digital nomads love this.
📸 Medellín’s famous street art murals — Photo via Unsplash (free to use)
Accommodation
Where to Stay in Medellín: Best Options by Budget
🏕️ Budget ($10–20/night)
Selina El Poblado is the digital-nomad darling — great vibes, fast WiFi, rooftop pool, and a party-friendly atmosphere. Casa Kiwi has long been the backpacker HQ for social travelers. Both offer dorms and private rooms.
🏨 Mid-Range ($40–90/night)
Airbnb apartments in Laureles and El Poblado give you a full kitchen, laundry, and local feel for $40–70/night. Hotel Dann Carlton Medellín is solid for couples wanting a proper hotel experience with a pool and breakfast.
💎 Splurge ($120+/night)
The Charlee Lifestyle Hotel in El Poblado is the city’s most stylish stay — rooftop infinity pool, cocktail bar, and design rooms that photograph beautifully. Worth the splurge for a night or two.
- Book Airbnb for stays over 5 nights — weekly discounts are generous (20–30%)
- El Poblado: best for nightlife access & meeting other travelers
- Laureles: best for long stays, local vibe & food scene
- Always check if AC is included — Medellín can be humid
Ready to Book Your Medellín Trip? 🇨🇴
Stop pinning it to your “someday” list. Medellín in 2025 is peaking — the crowds haven’t hit overtourism levels yet, the peso is favorable, and the city is more vibrant than ever. Book now and see why travelers keep extending their stays.
