How to Rent an Apartment in Medellín Without Getting Scammed
How to rent an apartment in Medellín without getting scammed — avoid gringo pricing, find fair deals, red flags to watch for, and current 2026 market prices by neighborhood.

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Renting an apartment in Medellín as a foreigner is straightforward — once you know the traps. The most common pitfall is "gringo pricing": landlords quoting rates 30–100% above what locals pay for the same apartment.
This guide teaches you how to find a fair-priced apartment, what to look for in a lease, and how to avoid the most common scams.
The Gringo Tax — And How to Avoid It
Gringo pricing is real. Landlords in tourist-heavy areas like El Poblado can spot a foreigner and quote prices accordingly. A furnished 1-bedroom that a Colombian renter gets for $600/month may be listed at $900–$1,100 on Airbnb or to an obvious expat.
How to avoid it:
- Use local platforms — Metrocuadrado and Fincaraíz list properties at local prices. Avoid Airbnb for long-term stays.
- Have a Colombian contact negotiate — Even a WhatsApp message from a Colombian number changes the dynamic.
- Look outside El Poblado — Laureles, Envigado, and Sabaneta offer similar quality at 20–40% lower prices.
- Sign a long-term lease — Monthly-to-monthly furnished apartments carry a massive premium. A 6–12 month lease drops the price significantly.
- Ask what locals pay — Online expat groups often share what people are paying. Use this as a benchmark.
Where to Find Apartments
What Documents Do You Need to Rent?
- Cédula de extranjería (or passport for short-term)
- Proof of income (bank statements, work contract, or remote work proof)
- A codeudor (Colombian co-signer) — required by many landlords
- 1–2 months deposit (standard)
Red Flags — Scams to Watch For
Current Market Prices by Neighborhood (2026)
| Neighborhood | 1BR Unfurnished | 1BR Furnished | 2BR Furnished |
|---|---|---|---|
| El Poblado | $500–750 | $700–1,100 | $1,000–1,800 |
| Laureles | $400–600 | $550–850 | $800–1,300 |
| Envigado | $350–550 | $500–750 | $750–1,100 |
| Sabaneta | $300–450 | $400–650 | $600–950 |
| El Centro | $200–350 | $300–500 | $450–700 |
For a full neighborhood guide including safety, lifestyle, and what each area is really like, read our
complete Medellín neighborhood guide.
📖 Keep Reading
How to Use Facebook Marketplace to Find Cheap Rentals in Colombia — Skip Airbnb and find apartments at local prices, 50–70% cheaper.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to rent an apartment in Medellín as a foreigner?
Furnished 1-bedroom apartments range from COP 1,500,000–3,500,000/month ($360–$850) depending on neighborhood. El Poblado is most expensive, while Laureles and Envigado offer better value.
Do I need a Colombian bank account to rent an apartment?
Common Scam Red Flags
Watch out for these warning signs: requests for payment before viewing the apartment, prices that seem too good to be true (a luxury El Poblado apartment for $300/month is a scam), landlords who won't meet in person or only communicate through WhatsApp, pressure to pay deposits via cryptocurrency or wire transfer, and listings with stock photos or photos that reverse-image search to other websites. Always visit the apartment in person before paying anything.
Understanding the Lease Process
Colombian leases (contrato de arrendamiento) typically require a fiador — a Colombian co-signer who owns property. This is the biggest challenge for foreigners. Alternatives include: paying 3–6 months upfront, using a fiador service company (they charge 1–2 months rent as a fee), or renting from landlords who waive the fiador requirement for foreigners (common in expat-heavy areas). Deposits are usually 1 month's rent, returned at the end of the lease minus any damages.
Best Sites and Apps for Apartment Hunting
FincaRaíz and Metrocuadrado are Colombia's main rental platforms — think Zillow for Colombia. Filter by neighborhood, price, and amenities. Facebook groups like 'Apartments for Rent in Medellín' and 'Medellín Expats' often have listings from landlords renting directly. For furnished apartments catering to foreigners, check Nestpick, Furnished Finder, or the Medellín-specific Facebook groups. Avoid relying solely on Airbnb for long-term stays — month-to-month rates are 30–50% cheaper when you rent directly from a landlord.
Typical Costs Beyond Rent
Budget for utilities on top of rent: electricity ($30–60/month depending on AC usage and estrato), water ($10–20), gas ($5–10), internet ($20–35 for fiber), and building administration fees ($30–80/month for apartments in buildings with amenities). In total, expect $100–200/month in utilities on top of rent. Furnished apartments usually cost 20–40% more than unfurnished but save you the hassle and expense of buying furniture.
Timing also matters when apartment hunting. January through March is peak season in Medellín — digital nomads and snowbirds flood in, and landlords raise prices 10–20% in El Poblado. The best deals are found May through September, when tourist traffic drops and landlords are more willing to negotiate. If you can start your search during low season, you'll find better apartments at lower prices with more room to negotiate lease terms. Always negotiate — listed prices in Colombia are almost never final, and offering to pay 3 months upfront can knock 10–15% off the monthly rate.
Not always. Many landlords accept cash or international bank transfers. However, having a Colombian account makes monthly payments easier and shows landlords you’re serious about staying.
Can I rent an apartment in Colombia on a tourist visa?
Yes. Many landlords rent to tourists for 1–6 months. You won’t need a cédula for informal arrangements, but formal 12-month leases typically require one.
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