78 Best Restaurants in Colombia

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We've compiled the best of the best in Colombia - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Café San Pedro

$$$ | Centro

This restaurant's main attraction is its location on Plaza San Pedro Claver, since some tables have beautiful views of the eponymous church. Although it serves Colombian fare with a particular focus on seafood, this restaurant's eclectic menu also includes dishes from Thailand, Italy, and Japan. In the evenings there are few better spots for people watching if you manage to grab one of the outside tables for a drink or dinner.

Plaza San Pedro Claver, 30–11, Cartagena, 130001, Colombia
5-664–5121
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Cafetería Romana

$$

Reminiscent of a 1960s-era diner, this unpretentious neighborhood favorite in La Candelaria serves a good selection of sandwiches. Stop here for a typical Colombian breakfast—hot chocolate with cheese and bread.

Av. Jiménez No. 6–65, Bogotá, 111711, Colombia
1-334–8135
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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Caffé Lunático

$$$
Set on a lovely and generally calm Getsemaní street, this funky café dominated by a graffitti mural serves the tastiest breakfast in town. Try the arepita lunática for one of the best examples of the local breakfast classic. It's also an excellent choice for tapas in the evening. Ingredients are of notably good quality, and the Spanish owner-chef reliably impresses with a short menu that shows off some inventive and remarkably well-executed dishes ranging from a watermelon gazpacho with avocado and a shrimp brochette, to a corvina tiradito with banana and lemongrass, to a more traditional grilled octopus. All around, Lunático offers great value for the quality of the food.
Calle Espiritu Santo 29–184, Cartagena, 130001, Colombia
5-660–1735
Known For
  • Evening tapas menu
  • Brunch with 2 hours of free mimosas
  • Great value

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Casa San Isidro

$$$$

Specializing in masterfully prepared seafood and white-glove service, Casa San Isidro would be worth the trip for the location alone. Perched 2,000 feet over Bogotá on top of the Cerro de Monserrate and accessible only by cable car, you'll dine fireside as a pianist provides the soundtrack. The French-influenced menu includes plenty of local dishes---a wide range of ceviches, Amazonian yellow catfish, and tropical blue crabs---to keep things interesting. Be sure to leave by midnight, Cinderella, before the last cable car returns to the streets below.

Casa San Pedro Restaurant

$$$
A bright, relatively modern space set inside a colonial building, the menu at this local hot spot focuses on Mediterranean-Italian cuisine. The house favorite is the Grana Padano pasta a la rueda, where house-made linguine is finished with a vigorous toss in a hollowed Parmesan wheel and your choice of topping is added. The thin-crust pizzas are among the best in town. The staff is attentive, the outdoor patio is great on a sunny day, and they are pet friendly.
Calle 12 #10–96, Villa de Leyva, 154001, Colombia
312–330–7734-mobile
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Casa Vieja

$$$

Offering typical Colombian dishes, Casa Vieja is known for the quality of its ajiaco, a hearty Andean potato stew with chicken, corn, cilantro and a local herb called guasca. Dinner in this Belle Époque–style restaurant is accompanied by antiques and artwork from Colombia's colonial past. Beyond this location in the Candelaria, there is spot in the Centro Internacional, and another in Usaquen.

Club de Pesca

$$$$

Time slips gently by at this 18th-century fortress-turned-restaurant by a marina in the Manga neighborhood, not far from the walled town. Fish is a focus, and the restaurant prides itself on its wine list. It's easy to linger on the waterfront terrace in the shade of a giant fig tree, and the refreshingly calm ambience has played a large part in making Club de Pesca a local favorite. The food, though fresh, doesn't stand up to other high-end offerings around town.

Crêpes & Waffles Arte-Sano

$

This unique chain of Latin American–Spanish restaurants serves—surprise!—crepes and waffles, as well as a delicious selection of ice-cream desserts. There are locations all over the city, but this trendy new branch in Zona G has taken the concept to a more refined, healthier level, without losing the guilty-pleasure angle. It's great for breakfasts, when you can get a pumpkin pancake with artisanal granola and Greek yogurt accompanied by a freshly squeezed juice. Later in the day, plunge into the ever-changing range of savory crepes that are stuffed with everything from portobellos and asparagus to chicken curry or beetroot marmalade, goat cheese, and sprouts.

D'Andre Gourmet

$$
This cheap and cheerful spot is a Poblado breakfast institution that offers American and local classics---anything arepa and egg based---with a decent cup of coffee. Spend a lengthy breakfast or brunch at a table on the raised wooden deck; the daily set-lunch menu is one of the neighborhood's best bargains, with a selection of mains, soup of the day, and a side salad for around 20,000 pesos.

Di Lucca

$$

Perfectly located in the heart of the Zona T, this beloved Italian restaurant serves up pitch-perfect pastas and pizzas, stellar seafood dishes, and daily blackboard specials. The outside terrace is a lovely spot to dine. Reservations are essential.

Divino Niño Jesus

$$$

Set right on South West Bay beach, with tables under the trees, this is exactly the place one hopes to find on a Caribbean holiday. Niño's serves fabulous dishes like lobster in a garlic sauce or grilled fish of the day, which should be washed down with cold beer and fresh juices. Avoid peak lunch hours as service tends to dip considerably when it gets busy.

880027, Colombia
No phone

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Donde Chucho

$$$
Now grown to several locations around Santa Marta, this branch in a quieter corner of the Parque de los Novios has a superb seafood selection backed up by a smooth jazz soundtrack. Grilled fish dishes are excellent, as are the ceviches. Service varies between attentive and friendly to quite distracted, but the ambience and fresh fish make it worth it.
Calle 19 #2–17, Santa Marta, Colombia
5-421–0861

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El Boliche Cebicheria

$$$ | Centro

This tiny restaurant on a quiet, flower-filled street of one-story houses in the San Diego section of the historic town serves up impeccably fresh, creative ceviche and other seafood dishes. With six or seven basic tables—and the kitchen just behind them all—space is at a premium, but the food is worth the squeeze. Empanadas are stuffed with crab, coconut milk, lemongrass, and chimichurri; the cebiche coco comes with squid, shrimp, and conch, along with coconut milk, cilantro, and sweet peppers. Fried plantain chips are a perfect accompaniment, and cocktails are available. You have to love a place where, during a late lunch, the owner's child may be playing underfoot. Reservations are recommended for dinner.

Calle Cochera del Hobo, #38--17, Cartagena, 130001, Colombia
310-368–7908

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El Cielo

$$$$

With El Cileo, chef Juan Manuel Barrientes brings a highly conceptual, contemporary tasting menu to Medellín in a clean space with bare wooden tables that become the canvas for the 13 courses he calls "experiences;" a meal here is equal parts theater and dinner. The small portions are Colombian at heart, with an array of curious local ingredients. The experience won't appeal to all, but for those it does, expect quality avant-garde cuisine at a bargain prices. Look for branches in Bogotá and Miami.

El Falso Olivo

$$$
A good wine list and professional, amiable staff make El Falso Olivo the city’s best choice for international flavors. Bathed in light from floor-to-ceiling windows that overlook a plant-filled patio, this contemporary Mediterranean bistro has high ceilings with long pendant lights, wood paneling, and polished cement flooring that complete the sleek modern aesthetic. The menu is distinctly Iberian, with tapas style-dishes like crispy polenta, Andalusian gazpacho, or pulpo a la gallega (tender octopus in olive oil and paprika), but don’t miss the sublime fish mains or the tender ribs or lamb.
Calle 16 #103–00, Cali, Colombia
2-555–8250
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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El Hato Viejo

$$$

Generous portions draw locals to this second-story restaurant where waiters in Panama hats serve you on a balcony overflowing with plants or in the large dining room with terra-cotta floors. This is a great place to try a range of traditional Antoiquian dishes, especially the monstrous bandeja paisa, a dish heaped with beans, finely ground beef, fried pork chicharron, sausages, egg, and arepas. Come in a group so you can sample various local hits, like the sopa de guineo (plantain soup) or the cazuela (stew) before sinking your teeth into lomito (tenderloin). Finish your feast with brevas con queso (figs with white cheese). There's also a branch in Las Palmas, near the Intercontinental Hotel, which is more rustic and has fabulous views of the valley.

Carrera 47 No. 52–17, Medellín, 050012, Colombia
4-251–2196
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.

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El Olivo Food House

$$
Two restaurants in one, the Food House's Spanish owners have drawn on a wealth of travels to put together tastefully designed dishes with fresh, top-quality ingredients. Downstairs, the burger bar, Madison, channels a vintage American diner, with suitably killer milk shakes and chunky, pure-beef burgers with inventive toppings. Upstairs, and closer to home, El Olivo serves a modern market cuisine with Mediterranean roots and shares the space with a small gallery showing local artists. The effort put into sourcing quality products, and the owners' attention to detail, shines through in their food, with rich sauces, perfectly crisped croquetas de bacalao, and the paella which is sure to become a house favorite.

El Patio

$$

None of the cutlery matches, the plates are a hodgepodge of styles, and the small dining room is crammed with tables, but all this simply adds to the restaurant's eccentric charm. It's in a great location a couple of blocks from the Plaza de Toros Santamaría in the bohemian neighborhood of La Macarena. Try one of the masterful salads or the delicious veal parmigiana.

Carrera 4A No. 27–80, Bogotá, 110311, Colombia
1-282–6121
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted
Closed Sun.

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The Grog Rocky Cay

$$$
For lunch with your toes tucked in the sand and delicious seafood on your plate, The Grog is the spot. Ask for a table under one of the trees on the beach, and with piña coladas in hand, order fresh and tasty dishes like the arroz caribe, a stir-fry with grilled shrimp and octopus. This is a great place to see the day to its end.
San Andrés, 880008, Colombia
311–232–3247

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Helena Adentro Restaurant

$$
Equal parts art gallery and bar-restaurant, Heleno Adentro is a slice of young and creative Colombia, bursting with color and eye-catching design, with funky, repurposed antiques dotted here and there. The impressive bar and fruity cocktails are the main draws here, backed up by a short menu of local dishes with contemporary stylings designed to share and snack on. Unfortunately, mains are hit or miss, and service lags at times. The clear-roofed interior patio is the pick of the spaces, particularly at night, when it takes on romantic candlelit hues, but take time to explore the whole restaurant—each room is a visual treat.

Home Burgers

$$

Sometimes you just need a good burger, and that is the simple premise behind Home Burgers, a modern diner-style salon with a fast-food counter. The burgers are quality beef, perfectly grilled to your liking, and the fries superb. There’s also an excellent veggie-burger option. Come early if you want to get a table—both Chapinero branches fill up quickly.

Horacio Barbato

$$$

The sister restaurant to 80 Sillas, Horacio is equally well designed, with a great staff and a menu that focuses on simple ingredients. You can't go wrong with anything porcine or slow cooked---the crispy pork belly and homemade pâté are spot-on---and the wine list is filled with quality choices. Upstairs, overlooking a tree-filled patio, is the best place to dine.

I Balcone

$$
Directly above the famous Cafe Havana, I Balcone retains its mantle of go-to spot in the city for fans of thin-crust pizza thanks to an excellent dough and all handmade ingredients. The pasta, also freshly made, is an equally good choice, with the creamy lobster linguine a standout. The interior lacks a bit of love, but get there early to assure a spot at the little tables squeezed onto one of the balconies, and you can enjoy the inevitably pleasant evening and lively street life passing below.
Calle del Guererro #29--146, Cartagena, 130001, Colombia
5-660--9880

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Julia

$$$
Home to some of Bogotás best thin-crust pizza, this Zona G locale is unbeatable for its cozy, low-lit atmosphere and light and crispy pizzas with generous, quality toppings. Tables are tucked between exposed-brick walls and wine displays, with the bar and pizza oven in the back. There are branches in Usaquen and Zona Rosa.

La Canoa Cafe Cultural

$$$
A funky little café with checkered floors and tearoom-style salons, La Canoa's air-conditioned, brightly lit interior makes for a welcome respite any time of the day. The highlight is the selection of pastries and desserts for a snack with coffee. At lunchtime, the daily set menu is delicious and comes at a comfortable price; the homemade panini sandwiches are great, and the seafood salads are always a winner---try the Mediterráneo (shrimp and capers).
Calle 18 #3–75, Santa Marta, 470004, Colombia
5-421–7895
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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La Condesa Irina Lazaar Restaurant

$$
Plain white walls, simple wooden tables, and tiled floors set the scene at this neighborhood favorite. Since opening in 2010, this hard-to-find restaurant has gathered fans from every spectrum of Bogotá society for its big-hearted ambience, outstanding, seasonal menu, and easy-on-the-wallet prices. The menu changes constantly, but keep an eye out for shrimp and fish dishes, for which the chef has a particularly deft hand.
Carrera 6 No. 10--19, Bogotá, Colombia
1-283--1573
Restaurant Details
No dinner

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La Cosecha Parrillada Restaurant

$$
There are plenty of restaurants in and around the center that have decent offerings, but La Cosecha stands out for quality and service. You can expect generous portions of well-cooked beef and some superb examples of local favorites like lengua a la criolla (beef tongue in a creole tomato and onion sauce).

La Fama Barbecue

$$$
For a taste of the American South, or just a good night out, head out to the hugely popular La Fama for Colombian-Texan-style barbecue. Here you'll find traditional barbecue staples like slow-smoked ribs or brisket as well as more local fare like the hump, a traditional cut of local beef that's marinated for two days and then smoked for 15 hours. The pecan pie is an excellent way to end the meal.
Calle 65 Bis No. 4-85, Bogotá, Colombia
1-644--7766
Restaurant Details
No dinner Sun.

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La Fragata

$$$$

With its slowly revolving dining room, this is one of the capital's more unusual restaurants. Somehow the dimly lit, dark-oak interior successfully conveys the sensibility of a 19th-century frigate. The lobster, crab, red snapper, and locally caught rainbow trout are satisfying, but the real draw here is the view.

Calle 100 No. 8A–55, Bogotá, 110221, Colombia
1-218–4456
Restaurant Details
Credit cards accepted

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La Frontera Restaurante Pizzeria

$$
There are no frills here---candleholders are empty wine bottles and food is served on a smoothed slice of a tree trunk---but the pizza comes out thin, crispy, and delicious every time and the beers are cold. It's exactly what you need after a day at the beach.
Colombia
300–319–5629

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