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Foreign property ownership

Can a foreigner buy property in Colombia?

Foreigners can own residential property outright (100% freehold) in their own name, with the same rights as citizens and no general restrictions. Purchases are completed by public deed before a notary and registered at the local land registry.

Before you buy in Colombia, always:

General guidance only — rules change; confirm the current position with a qualified local lawyer.

Our free ownership checker and the Overseas Property Playbook walk through how foreign ownership works step by step — the questions to ask and the traps to sidestep.

What it costs to buy in Colombia

One-off costs are modest, typically around 2-3%: registration and notary fees (often split with the seller) plus legal fees of about 1%. Title checks matter, so use a good local lawyer.

Where foreigners tend to buy in Colombia

Medellin (El Poblado, Envigado, Laureles) for its spring climate and large expat scene, the coffee region around Pereira and Armenia, the Caribbean coast at Santa Marta and Cartagena, and cooler Bogota.

Healthcare and everyday life

Colombia's healthcare is well rated and affordable: residents can join the public EPS system, and private prepaid plans (medicina prepagada) and top hospitals in Medellin and Bogota cost far less than in the UK. Good cover is inexpensive at most ages. Much improved and welcoming, though city street-smarts still pay; Spanish is essential with limited English, and driving is on the right.

Thinking seriously about Colombia?

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Everything on Colombia

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