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About Cartagena
Cartagena is the crown jewel of the Colombian Caribbean — a walled colonial city of impossible colors, horse-drawn carriages, and rooftop bars where you'll drink rum watching the sunset over the Caribbean Sea. It's one of the best-preserved Spanish colonial cities in the Americas, and unlike many historic destinations, it's actually alive: the streets inside the Ciudad Amurallada fill with cumbia music, flower vendors, and locals until midnight. Americans discovered this place hard over the past decade, which means prices have climbed, but Cartagena still delivers extraordinary value compared to any comparable Caribbean destination.
Flight prices are the reason Wildly.ai users love tracking CTG: nonstop flights from Miami routinely drop to $180-$250 round trip during shoulder season, and American, Spirit, and JetBlue all compete on the route. Once you land, you're looking at a destination where a nice hotel room in the walled city runs $120-$180/night, an excellent seafood lunch costs $12, and a cocktail on a rooftop with a wall view is $6. The city has genuinely upscale options too — Bocagrande has glitzy high-rises and the Rosario Islands are 45 minutes offshore for snorkeling — but the core draw is wandering those cobblestone streets without a plan.
The Old City (Centro Histórico) is compact enough to walk everything in a day but rich enough to occupy a week. Getsemaní, the neighborhood just outside the walls, went from rough-around-the-edges to the city's most interesting barrio — murals covering every surface, craft cocktail bars, and the best empanadas in the city. The tourist infrastructure is mature: English is widely spoken in tourist zones, Ubers work reliably, and the food scene has genuinely improved beyond just arroz con coco.
The main thing to understand before booking: Cartagena has two distinct seasons and the difference matters enormously. December through April is dry, sunny, and increasingly expensive — January carnival and Semana Santa in March/April bring massive crowds. May through November is rainier but dramatically cheaper, and most rain comes in short afternoon bursts rather than all-day downpours. The sweet spot most flight trackers miss is October and November — prices are at their lowest, rain is manageable, and the city feels like it belongs to locals again.
Best Time to Fly to Cartagena
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Track Cartagena flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Rafael Núñez Airport (CTG) is only 3 km from the Old City, making it one of the most convenient airport-to-center transfers in Latin America. Your best options: (1) Uber/InDriver — the fastest and cheapest option at roughly 15,000-25,000 COP ($4-6 USD) for a 10-15 minute ride to the walled city or Getsemaní; open the app before you exit arrivals. (2) Official yellow taxis at the taxi stand outside arrivals cost 25,000-40,000 COP ($6-10 USD) to Centro Histórico — agree on the price before getting in; drivers rarely use meters. (3) Walking is technically possible (20-25 minutes) but not advisable with luggage given the heat and traffic. Skip any fixed-rate shuttle services advertised inside the terminal — they charge $20+ and offer zero advantage over Uber.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The historic heart of Cartagena enclosed by 11km of Spanish colonial walls — this is where you want to stay if budget allows. Hotels like Casa San Agustín and Sofitel Legend Santa Clara occupy converted convents and colonial mansions, running $200-$500/night. Every street is a photo op, restaurants like Carmen and La Vitrola are steps away, and you can walk to everything including the Castillo San Felipe without needing transport.
Just outside the city walls, Getsemaní has rapidly become Cartagena's most interesting neighborhood — a working-class barrio turned boutique hotel and craft bar mecca without fully losing its soul. Stay at places like Selina Cartagena or Casa Lola for $50-$120/night and you're surrounded by the best street food, the wildest murals, and the most authentic plaza scene in the city (Plaza de la Trinidad fills with locals nightly). Walking distance to everything in the Old City.
The modern beach district south of the Old City — think Miami Beach circa 1985, with high-rise hotels, chain restaurants, and a long public beach that's actually swimmable. Marriott, Hilton, and Decameron all have properties here at $100-$200/night. It's convenient and comfortable but soulless compared to staying in the history — take a 15-minute taxi to the Old City for anything interesting. Best for families who prioritize beach access and pool time over atmosphere.
The quieter, less-tourist-saturated section of the walled city, San Diego sits northeast of the main tourist drag near the clock tower. Boutique guesthouses like Hotel Monterrey run $80-$150/night, and the streets feel slightly more residential. El Boliche and some of the best ceviche spots in the city are here. Good compromise between Old City atmosphere and slightly lower prices.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$12-15 dorm at Selina or Masaya Hostel in Getsemaní, $15 food (arepas $2, set lunch at a local comedor $5, empanadas $1 each), $5 transport (Uber rides), $15 activities (free city walks, Castillo San Felipe entrance is $6, beach is free)
$80-100 boutique hotel in Getsemaní or lower Old City, $35 food (breakfast at hotel $0-10, lunch $12, nice dinner $20-25), $10 transport (couple Ubers), $25 activities (island day trip, cocktails on a rooftop)
$250-350 suite at Casa San Agustín or Hotel Charleston, $60 food (breakfast included, lunch at La Cevichería $20, dinner at Carmen or El Cielo $40-60), $20 transport, $50-100 activities (private Rosario Islands charter, spa treatments)
What to Eat in Cartagena
Ceviche de camarones at La Cevichería (Calle Stuart #7-14, Old City) — Anthony Bourdain filmed here and the wait is worth it: tostones with shrimp ceviche in a lime-coconut broth runs about 28,000 COP. Go for lunch to avoid the dinner queue.
Arepa de huevo in Getsemaní — a fried cornmeal patty stuffed with egg, sold from street carts near Plaza de la Trinidad for 3,000-5,000 COP. A different universe from any arepa you've had at a Colombian restaurant in the US.
Langosta (whole grilled lobster) on Playa Blanca or the Rosario Islands — vendors grill them to order right on the beach for 35,000-50,000 COP ($9-12 USD). The price-to-quality ratio is genuinely hard to believe for Americans.
Sancocho de pescado at any no-sign comedor in Getsemaní — a dense coconut-fish broth stew served with rice and patacones (fried plantains) for 12,000-15,000 COP. Look for places with handwritten menus and plastic chairs, not tourist menus with photos.
Ron con Coca-Cola made with Ron Medellín Añejo at Café del Mar on the city walls at sunset — the rum itself ($3 a glass) is secondary to the ritual of watching the sun drop into the Caribbean from the top of the 16th-century fortifications with half the city doing the same thing.
Flying from the US to Cartagena
Airlines & Routes
- →American Airlines nonstop from MIA (Miami) — daily service, ~2.5 hours
- →American Airlines nonstop from JFK (New York) — seasonal service
- →Spirit Airlines nonstop from MIA (Miami) — budget option, watch for baggage fees
- →JetBlue nonstop from FLL (Fort Lauderdale) — solid mid-tier option with more legroom
- →Avianca via BOG (Bogotá) from multiple US cities including IAH, JFK, LAX, IAD
- →Copa Airlines via PTY (Panama City) from most major US hubs
- →Delta via BOG (Bogotá) from ATL (Atlanta)
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Cartagena is genuinely safe for tourists by Colombian standards but petty theft and scams are real. The main scams: (1) 'palenqueras' (fruit ladies in colorful dresses) who put their fruit basket on your head for a 'free' photo then demand $10-20 — just say no firmly; (2) aggressive 'tour guides' near the clock tower who latch onto you and demand payment for unrequested information — walk away immediately. For theft prevention: don't wear jewelry or expensive watches anywhere in the city; carry a cheap phone for navigation; keep your real cash in a money belt. Getsemaní is safe for evening walking, especially Plaza de la Trinidad, but avoid walking down dark side streets after midnight. The beaches at Playa Blanca attract vendors who will not stop approaching you — a firm 'no gracias' repeated twice usually works. Ubers are dramatically safer than hailing random taxis; use the app exclusively. The Old City and Bocagrande tourist zones have significant police presence and are among the safest tourist areas in Colombia.
Book your Rosario Islands day trip through a local WhatsApp contact rather than through your hotel or a tour desk — the markup is 2-3x. Ask at your hostel or guesthouse for the number of a local lancha (boat) operator; a full day trip to Playa Blanca and the islands with snorkeling runs 60,000-80,000 COP ($15-20 USD) booked directly versus $60-80 through hotel packages. Also: the best time to walk the city walls is 6-7am — you'll have them almost entirely to yourself, the light is extraordinary for photos, and the temperature is actually comfortable before the heat sets in.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Cartagena?
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Do US citizens need a visa to visit Cartagena?
Visa requirements for Colombia vary. US citizens should check the latest entry requirements with the US State Department before booking.
How long is the flight from the US to Cartagena?
Flight duration to Cartagena depends on your US departure city. Set a price alert and check your preferred route for exact times.
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