Welcome to Colombia Tourist Attractions, meet and love Colombia!
Welcome to Colombiatouristattractions.com! This is a website where you find information about the diversity of tourist attractions in Colombia. Here you can access detailed data on routes, how to get there, attractions, things to do, hotels and restaurants in the places you want to visit in this beautiful country. Colombia has beaches, badlands, jungles and snowy mountains, its variety of altitudes allows tourists to have different experiences, so we help you choose your next tourist destination to visit in Colombia.
Laguna Verde, Nariño (Green Lagoon)
This tourist destination is located in the municipality of Túquerres, this lagoon is part of the summit of the Azufral Volcano and is a popular destination for adventurous tourists in love with the unique landscapes. This lagoon is, in fact, green thanks to the concentration of sulfur in its waters [...]
Calima Archaeological Museum
The Calima Archaeological Museum was founded in 1981, has more than 2,500 pieces that have been rescued in more than 30 years of studies and scientific research on the indigenous communities that inhabited the lands of Valle del Cauca 10,000 years ago. Image taken from Inciva.gov.co How To Get to [...]
Paipa, Boyacá
Paipa is a municipality in the beautiful department of Boyacá. It is a town that keeps an important part of the independence history of Colombia, because it was there where the Battle of the Pantano de Vargas was carried out, this battle opened the doors for the Cry of Independence [...]
Matarredonda Park
Matarredonda Park is a natural and sacred refuge, this destination is located between the Santa Fe neighborhood in Bogota and the municipality of Choachí, so, if you are in the Colombian capital, this plan is right for you. This park is of enormous environmental importance, as it is the birthplace [...]
Las Hermosas National Park
Las Hermosas National Park is a highly important ecosystem, therefore, it is a protected area that houses a diversity of fauna and flora as well as hundreds of water sources. This park is a water regulator because the paramo and Andean forest ecosystems improve water quality. Image by Parquesnacionales.gov.co How [...]
Popayán
Popayán is the capital of Cauca, this municipality has taken great strength in terms of tourism, and is that Popayán is full of magical places in which nature makes visiting this place of Colombia leaves you breathless and with all the desire to return. In addition, the Colonial Historical Center [...]
Aguas Calientes Natural Reserve
The Natural Reserve of Aguas Calientes is located in the department of Cundinamarca, it is one of those little known places, but with an enormous beauty and with different plans. When we see its name we can get an idea of what this place is all about, in fact, thermal [...]
La Avispa Natural Reserve
La Avispa Natural Reserve is one of many places that, despite the armed conflict in Colombia, were uninhabited and forgotten. However, thanks to the signing of the peace agreement and dialogues with the guerrillas, the place has become a safe and attractive tourist destination for tourists in search of incomparable [...]
Salento, Quindío
Salento is the birthplace of Colombia's national tree, La Palma de Cera del Quindío. From this majestic municipality you can see the famous Cocora Valley, also, from there, tourists can access this unique landscape. Salento is a beautiful place, its houses and streets preserve the traditional colonial architecture and its [...]
Salto Bordones Waterfall
This imposing waterfall is located in the Puracé National Natural Park in Huila. It is one of the highest waterfalls in South America, are 400 meters high that are highly attractive to tourists, so the Salto Bordones has become a tourist destination not to be missed in the Huila. Image [...]
Salto el Sereno Waterfall
Salto el Sereno is a waterfall 20 meters high, it is a little visited place because tourists do not know its existence, its waters are crystal clear, it is something like a small natural paradise placed on earth for the enjoyment of humans, but also for their care and protection. [...]
Hornoyaco Waterfall, Mocoa
The Hornoyaco Waterfall is located in the municipality of Mocoa, in Putumayo. This waterfall is 55 meters high and is a tourist destination not to be missed by adventurers in search of the End of the World waterfall. Photograph by Elturismoencolombia.com How to get to Hornoyaco Waterfall, Mocoa? This impressive [...]
SANTA CRUZ DE MOMPOX
Mompox is a tourist destination whose historic center was declared World Heritage in 1995, in addition to being declared a national monument of Colombia in 1959. This wonderful place is located in the department of Bolivar, bordering San Fernando and Pinillos. Currently, Mompox is known as the Special, Tourist, Historical [...]
Neusa Reservoir
The Neusa reservoir is a great source of water supply for Cundinamarca, supplying the aqueducts of Cogua and Zipaquirá; in addition to supplying, other important functions are to control floods and regulate flows in the Neusa river basin in the dry seasons. The construction of this reservoir began in 1948, its [...]
According to data from the Colombian Association of Travel and Tourism (Anato), in Colombia there has been a constant tendency to increase the arrival of foreigners to our territory. While in 2007 the arrival of 1,195,000 foreigners was recorded, in 2016 this figure was 2,698,000, representing a growth of 126%, however, an even more notable positive increase was yet to come.
For 2017, thanks to political processes, advances in infrastructure and economic strength, international confidence was improved and the risk index in our country was reduced, which improved our image and led to a drastic increase in the visitor rate from abroad According to data from the Tourist Information Center of Colombia, based on DANE, during 2017 6.5 million foreigners entered Colombia, representing an increase of 28% compared to 2016 and more than 400% in Comparison with 2006, strong evidence of tourism growth and development as a product of the positive vision that the country manages. However, although tourism makes a considerable contribution to our economy in the commerce, gastronomy, hotel and transportation sectors, this contribution does not represent more than 5% of the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP). So, how many more located foreigners visit Colombia so that the tourism sector becomes the main provider of the country’s GDP?
Bogotá, Cali, Antioquia, Valle del Cauca, Bolívar, San Andrés, Santa Marta and Cartagena, the cities with the highest number of foreigners. The citizens of the United States were the ones who obtained our country most motivated by the search for unique landscapes, gastronomic variety, flora and fauna and the friendliness of the average Colombian. In addition, other countries that also contributed tourists were Brazil, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands and Australia, among many other visitors for whom Spanish was a foreign language.
Colombia is a country rich in culture with immense plurality of ethnicities, customs, musical rhythms, food and communities, each with its own linguistic diversity. The geographical conditions, the crops and the gastronomic offer produced by the different thermal floors make Colombia a country recognized worldwide for its privileged location with enviable tourism potential. However, due to the recent decades marked by the internal armed conflict, our country has been stigmatized and recognized abroad as a violent country and not recommended to visit by tourists from other parts of the world.
Fortunately, violence has been greatly reduced after the political processes that have led to demobilization and cessation of hostilities by some of the members who have been part of the conflict. The Peace Agreements agreed with the guerrilla of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in 2017 during the mandate of former President Juan Manuel Santos, have given us a positive impact as a society and progressively the perception that the people of the foreigners have about our country and our society, which in turn has been reflected in the opening of new opportunities directly related to tourism and the arrival of foreigners in our territory.
Such is the positive development that the Colombian State intends to make the tourism sector the main supplier of the country’s gross domestic product. The government of the current president Iván Duque (2019) that in his government plan has decided to implement a policy based on the Orange Economy, opens a new page of history for Colombians where art, culture and, especially, tourism , become an economic sector of great importance.
Colombia is a country that has 6 regions in which the Amazon region, the Andean region, the Caribbean region, the Insular region, the Orinoquía region and the Pacific region are located, in turn, these regions are divided into 32 departments each one with a geographical variety and a cultural diversity of its own. Simply move a few kilometers to any direction to find yourself in a new environment where the weather, customs and their inhabitants will be different compared to the starting point.
Colombia is considered one of the richest countries in linguistic diversity. Here, cultural plurality offers linguistic varieties where expressions, accents and lexicals manifest themselves in different ways, and in our country there are not only multiple changes in Spanish but there are also indigenous languages and native communities that have their own linguistic characteristics The level of linguistic differences throughout the national territory is such that even a Colombian native from Bogotá while visiting, for example, in Santa Marta may encounter language barriers and misinterpretations in the meanings given the accent, lexicon and level of informality of the Spanish language used in the northern part of Colombia.
In our country there are 68 native languages that, according to the last DANE census (2005), are spoken by approximately 850,000 people. However, in the country more than one hundred languages have died in recent years and 12 languages are in danger of extinction (UNESCO, 2012) because native speakers are less and less.