Having a Baby in Colombia: Hospitals, Costs & What Expats Should Know
Everything expats need to know about having a baby in Colombia: hospital costs, prenatal care, citizenship, and choosing the right clinic.

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If you are expecting a baby while living in Colombia, you are probably full of questions. The healthcare system works differently here, the paperwork can feel overwhelming, and you want the best for your family. The good news? Colombia has excellent maternal care, especially in private clinics, and the costs are a fraction of what you would pay in the US or Europe.
Here is everything I have learned from expats who have gone through the process, plus the practical details you actually need.
Public vs Private Hospitals: Which Should You Choose?
This is the single most important decision you will make. Colombia has both public (EPS) and private healthcare, and the gap in maternity care is significant.
Private clinics like Clinica del Country, Clinica El Rosario, and Fundacion Santa Fe are where most expats deliver. You get private rooms, English-speaking staff (in major cities), modern equipment, and personalized attention. Your OB-GYN follows you through the entire pregnancy and is there for the delivery.
Public hospitals through the EPS system are functional but crowded. Wait times are longer, rooms are shared, and you are less likely to find English-speaking staff. Emergency maternal care in Colombia is solid regardless -- the country has invested heavily in reducing maternal mortality.
My recommendation: go private if you can afford it. The price difference is meaningful but not astronomical. If you are on the EPS, clinics like Clinica Las Americas in Medellin still provide good care.
What Does It Cost to Have a Baby in Colombia?
Having a baby in Colombia is dramatically cheaper than in the US, even at a top-tier private clinic.
Typical Costs (Private Clinic, 2026)
- Natural birth: 3-6M COP (700-1,400 USD)
- C-section: 5-12M COP (1,200-2,800 USD)
- Prenatal care: 1.5-3M COP (350-700 USD)
- Epidural: Usually included
- Private room/night: 200-500K COP (47-117 USD)
With prepagada insurance, most costs are covered.
Compare that to 10,000-30,000 USD in the US without insurance. Even with international health insurance from SafetyWing, you are looking at a fraction of the cost.

Prenatal Care: What to Expect
Colombian prenatal care follows a similar schedule to North America or Europe. Monthly checkups first two trimesters, biweekly in the third, weekly near your due date.
- Monthly OB-GYN consultations
- Blood work and urine tests each trimester
- 3-4 ultrasounds including 20-week anatomy scan
- Glucose tolerance test
- Group B strep screening
- Optional genetic testing (NIPT ~1.5M COP)
One thing that surprises expats: Colombian OB-GYNs tend to recommend C-sections more often. The C-section rate is around 45 percent. If you want a natural birth, be upfront about it early.
Choosing the Right Clinic
Best Cities for Expat Births
Bogota has the most options. Fundacion Santa Fe, Clinica del Country, and Clinica Marly are top choices.
Medellin offers Clinica El Rosario, Clinica Las Americas, and Hospital Pablo Tobon Uribe. Check the best cities for expats guide.
Cali and Barranquilla also have good private clinics, though English-speaking staff is less common.
Citizenship and Birth Certificate
Any baby born on Colombian soil is automatically a Colombian citizen, regardless of the parents nationality. This is called jus soli (right of the soil).
- The clinic issues a certificado de nacido vivo immediately
- Within 30 days, register at any Registraduria Nacional
- Receive the official registro civil de nacimiento
- Apply for tarjeta de identidad
For your home country citizenship, contact your embassy. Most countries grant citizenship to children born abroad to their citizens.
Maternity Leave and Postpartum Support
Maternity leave in Colombia is generous: 18 weeks of paid leave. Fathers get 2 weeks. These apply to formal employees registered with the EPS system.
Postpartum support is culturally strong. The concept of la dieta -- a 40-day recovery period -- is taken seriously. Hiring a postpartum doula costs 80,000-150,000 COP per day.
Insurance Considerations
Get your insurance sorted before getting pregnant. Most prepagada plans have 10-12 month waiting periods for maternity.
- EPS: Covers everything but public hospital only
- Prepagada: Colsanitas, Sura, Compensar -- private clinic access
- International: SafetyWing offers maternity plans
Read the full healthcare options breakdown before deciding.
The Downsides Nobody Mentions
- Language barrier: Not all staff speak English, even at private clinics
- Cultural differences: Colombian families can be very involved -- sometimes more than you want
- Paperwork fatigue: Lots of documents and notarized translations
- C-section pressure: Some doctors push for C-sections
Frequently Asked Questions
❓ Can I have a home birth in Colombia?
Yes, but uncommon and most insurance will not cover it.
❓ Do I need Spanish to give birth here?
English-speaking OB-GYNs exist at top clinics. Nursing staff usually speaks only Spanish.
❓ Will my baby get Colombian citizenship?
Yes. Jus soli applies to all births on Colombian soil.
❓ How do I find an English-speaking OB-GYN?
Expat Facebook groups, your embassy, or your prepagada insurer.
❓ Is it safe to have a baby in Colombia?
Yes. Private clinics in major cities meet international standards.
Having a baby abroad is a big deal, and Colombia makes it surprisingly manageable. Drop a comment below or reach out on the community forum.
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