🚲
Getting Around
The walled city is almost entirely walkable and most visitors explore it on foot. Taxis and the yellow coco-taxis are the main options for reaching areas outside the walls, with rideshare apps like InDriver and Cabify also operating reliably in the city.
⚖️
Cash or Card
Cards are accepted at most hotels, restaurants, and larger shops inside the walled city, but cash in Colombian pesos remains essential for street food, smaller vendors, and tipping. A roughly 40 to 60 split in favor of cash is a practical approach for daily spending in Cartagena Old Town.
☁️
Good to Know
Carteganos operate on a relaxed coastal rhythm known locally as the pace of the coast, and timekeeping is genuinely flexible in social and service contexts. Visitors who arrive expecting punctuality at informal settings will find patience rewarded far more than frustration, and embracing the slower pace is part of experiencing the city authentically.
🏧
ATMs
ATMs are available inside and around the walled city at several banks including Bancolombia, Davivienda, and BBVA, and most international cards work reliably. Withdrawal limits per transaction can be low by international standards, often around 300,000 to 400,000 pesos, so factoring in multiple withdrawals and potential foreign transaction fees is worth doing before arriving.
💳
Currency
The Colombian Peso (COP) is the official currency, and prices inside the walled city are quoted in pesos with typical daily costs ranging from modest to quite high depending on accommodation and dining choices. US dollars are occasionally accepted at tourist-oriented businesses but the exchange rate offered informally is usually unfavorable compared to withdrawing pesos from an ATM.
🔌
Plugs
Colombia uses Type A and Type B outlets at 110V, 60Hz. Visitors from North America will find their devices compatible without an adapter.
🛡️
Safety
The walled city and Getsemani neighborhood are generally safe for tourists during the day, though petty theft and bag-snatching occur and visitors should keep valuables secure and avoid displaying expensive cameras or phones unnecessarily. At night, sticking to well-lit main streets and using reputable taxis or rideshare apps rather than walking in unfamiliar areas is strongly recommended.
✈️
Airports
Rafael Nunez International Airport (CTG) serves Cartagena and sits just a few kilometers from the walled city, making it one of the most conveniently located airports relative to a historic city center in all of South America. Direct flights connect Cartagena to Bogota, Medellin, and several US cities including Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and New York, with the journey from airport to Old Town typically taking under 20 minutes by taxi.