What is a finca, really?
A finca is not an Airbnb. It's not a hotel. It's a private countryside estate that Colombian families typically own for weekend escapes, rented out when not in personal use.
The word 'finca' literally means farm, but in Antioquia it's used for anything from a modest country cabin to a luxury walled compound with staff quarters. Most party fincas in this guide are purpose-built or retrofitted for group rentals — pools, BBQ pavilions (called kioscos), multiple bedrooms, and outdoor social zones.
Expect more rustic than you'd get in a U.S. vacation rental at the same price point. That's not a downgrade — it's the point. Fincas trade furniture polish for land, privacy, and a level of peace that costs millions in California or Florida.
Climate: the single biggest factor
Antioquia has altitude-based microclimates, and the same time of year feels completely different 30km apart. This determines which finca region you should pick more than anything else.
| Region | Altitude | Daytime | Night | Pool |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Occidente Santa Fe, Sopetrán, San Jerónimo | 500–800m | 28–32°C | 22–26°C | Year-round ✓ |
| Copacabana / Girardota | 1,400m | 22–27°C | 17–20°C | Most months ✓ |
| Guatapé | 1,900m | 18–24°C | 13–17°C | Daytime only |
| Llanogrande, El Retiro | 2,100m | 16–22°C | 10–14°C | Heated recommended |
| Santa Elena | 2,500m | 14–20°C | 8–12°C | Heated required |
If your group wants to party in the pool after dark, you must either go Occidente (warm climate) or pay for a finca with a heated pool in Oriente. A $400 Llanogrande finca without heating will clear out of the pool by 7pm in March.
The hot water truth
Most fincas in Occidente (Santa Fe, Sopetrán, San Jerónimo) do not have hot water showers. This is normal and not a defect.
. If the answer is no and you need it, pick a different region." data-es="En zonas cálidas, los colombianos no usan agua caliente — la ducha es para refrescar, no calentar. Si en tu grupo hay abuelos, niños pequeños o gente sensible al frío, pregunta antes de reservar: \"¿La finca tiene agua caliente?\". Si la respuesta es no y la necesitas, elige otra región.">In warm-climate regions, Colombians don't use hot water — showers are seen as refreshing, not warming. If your group includes grandparents, small kids, or cold-sensitive people, ask before booking: "¿La finca tiene agua caliente?". If the answer is no and you need it, pick a different region.
Fincas in Oriente (Llanogrande, El Retiro, Santa Elena) almost always have hot water — required at that altitude. Guatapé is mixed; confirm directly.
What to pack (seriously)
Most fincas provide less than you'd expect. Read the listing carefully — some don't supply towels, coffee makers, or bed sheets. Budget fincas especially.
Always Bring
- Pool & body towels
- Mosquito repellent (DEET)
- Toilet paper (extra rolls)
- Sunscreen SPF 50+
- Portable speaker
- Phone charger & power bank
Warm-Climate Extras
- Light-colored clothing
- Swim gear × 2 pairs
- Hat / sun protection
- Electrolytes (Gatorade, Suero)
- Flip-flops
Cool-Climate Extras
- Warm layer / sweater
- Long pants for night
- Warm socks / closed shoes
- Extra blankets (if kids)
Party Essentials
- Ice cooler / hielera
- Aux cable + adapter
- Disposable cups & plates
- Trash bags (bolsas)
- Cash for emergencies
Mosquitoes & altitude
Mosquito presence is almost entirely a function of altitude. Below 1,700m, expect mosquitoes. Above 1,900m, they mostly disappear.
- Occidente (Santa Fe, Sopetrán): Heavy mosquitoes, especially dawn/dusk. DEET is essential. Some dengue risk — check CDC advisories.
- Guatapé: Moderate, especially lakeside. Repellent recommended.
- Llanogrande, El Retiro, Santa Elena: Minimal mosquitoes. Altitude kills them.
If you're flying in from sea level, note that altitudes above 2,000m can affect people differently — light shortness of breath on exertion, poor sleep the first night. Drink more water than feels necessary. Alcohol hits harder at altitude.
Getting there from Medellín
Your options depend on group size:
Uber / Taxi / InDriver
Works for 1–4 people. Uber operates in a legal gray zone in Colombia but functions normally. Expect COP 80,000–250,000 (USD $20–65) one-way depending on region. InDriver lets you negotiate fares directly.
Private driver (our recommendation for groups)
Hire a driver with an SUV or van for the full weekend. Rates run COP 250,000–500,000/day (USD $65–130) including airport pickup. A driver who knows the finca route is worth the price — rural Antioquian roads aren't always in Google Maps.
Rental car
Possible but rarely worth it. Medellín traffic is aggressive, parking in the city is a nightmare, and tollway (peaje) costs add up. Only rent if your itinerary includes day trips outside any single finca's area.
Bus
Cheap but impractical with luggage or alcohol. Terminal del Norte serves Guatapé (~COP 18,000). Terminal del Sur serves Santa Fe de Antioquia (~COP 20,000). Expect 2–3 hour trips.
Payment methods & currency
The Colombian peso (COP) fluctuates but typically runs around 3,700–4,200 COP per USD. Always check XE.com the day of travel.
- Deposit/booking: Usually a bank transfer in COP or international wire in USD. Some accept Wise (lowest fees). Never send via Western Union or MoneyGram.
- On-site payments: Cash is king. Bring small bills (COP 10,000 / 20,000 / 50,000).
- Nequi: Colombia's Venmo. Requires a Colombian bank account or number — hard to use as a tourist, but if you're with locals, it's instant and free for them.
- Credit cards: Rarely accepted by rural finca owners. Some larger agencies take them with a 4–6% surcharge.
- ATMs: Easily found in Rionegro, El Retiro pueblo, Guatapé, Santa Fe. Daily withdrawal limits around COP 600,000–1,000,000 per transaction.
If a finca owner pressures you to pay a large deposit via Nequi, crypto, or gift cards before you've seen a rental contract (RUT + Chamber of Commerce) — walk away. That's a scam pattern.
Cultural norms & tipping
Paisas (Antioquians) are famously warm, proud, and talkative. Learn a few things:
- or \"Buenas\" before getting to business. Skipping the greeting reads as rude." data-es="Los saludos importan. Siempre empieza con \"Buenos días\" o \"Buenas\" antes de ir al grano. Saltarte el saludo parece maleducado.">Greetings matter. Always start any interaction with "Buenos días" or "Buenas" before getting to business. Skipping the greeting reads as rude.
- Noise norms are generous. Most rural fincas have no hard noise curfews — but aim to wind down around 1am out of respect for any neighbors. Finca staff will tell you if there's a stricter rule.
- Tipping. Not mandatory but appreciated. For property managers and cleaners: COP 50,000–100,000 at the end of the stay is generous. For drivers: 10%. Restaurants often auto-add a 10% propina voluntaria.
- Punctuality. "Colombian time" is real — expect 15–30 minute delays on service calls, food deliveries, or drivers arriving. Plan accordingly.
- Respect the staff. Many fincas have live-in caretakers (mayordomo/a). They are not servants; they're professionals running the property. Greet them, thank them, don't shout instructions.
Essential Spanish phrases
Even broken Spanish is appreciated. These get you 80% of the way:
Safety realities
Antioquia in 2026 is not the Antioquia of 1995. That said, country-specific caution applies.
- Fincas themselves are safe. Rural properties have walls, gates, and caretakers. Theft from inside a rented finca is rare — the property manager's livelihood depends on it.
- Route safety. Main highways (Medellín–Rionegro, Medellín–Guatapé, Túnel de Occidente) are safe day and night. Rural dirt roads deep in the mountains can be dodgy at night — stick to main routes after dark.
- Don't flash wealth. Leave the Rolex at home. Don't wave iPhones or fat stacks of pesos in public spots between Medellín and the finca.
- Scopolamine (burundanga) is a real risk at bars and clubs in Medellín. Don't accept drinks from strangers, especially on the last night of a bachelor party when guards are down.
- Drugs. Cocaine is illegal in Colombia regardless of its reputation, and consumption on a finca where the owner could be implicated creates real legal exposure for them. Don't.
- Emergency numbers: 123 (general emergency), 119 (fire), 132 (Red Cross). Police response in rural Oriente is fast; Occidente is slower.
Food & grocery stocking
Most fincas provide a kitchen but no food. You'll want to grocery-stock before heading out or arrange catering.
Grocery chains
- Éxito — Colombia's Walmart. Stores in Rionegro (en route to Llanogrande), Bello (en route to Copacabana), and San Jerónimo.
- Carulla — upscale supermarket. Imported wines, decent cheeses. Rionegro, El Poblado.
- D1 / Ara / Justo & Bueno — discount chains. Cheap basics. Don't expect imports.
- Makro — bulk warehouse (Costco equivalent). Best for large parties stocking up on ice, alcohol, meats.
Catering options
Rappi (Colombia's DoorDash) delivers to many Oriente fincas — check address coverage first. For Occidente, you typically need to pre-arrange with local vendors or ask the finca owner for contacts. BBQ (asado) catering runs COP 45,000–80,000 per person — a cook brings meat, charcoal, sides, and runs the grill.
Booking red flags
Most finca rentals go smoothly. But scams do exist. Here's how to spot them:
- Only exterior photos in the listing — often means rooms are worn out, dirty, or misrepresented. Ask for interior photos including bathrooms and mattresses.
- No reviews, no social presence. Google the finca name + "reseñas". Check if the Instagram account has been posting for 6+ months.
- Pressure to pay 100% upfront to an individual's personal account. Legit operations accept 30–50% deposit, balance on arrival.
- No written rental contract. Always request a contract in Spanish listing: property address, dates, total cost, cancellation terms, and damage deposit.
- — No. Address and location verification come before any payment." data-es="\"Haz la transferencia y te mando la dirección\" — No. La dirección y ubicación se verifican ANTES de cualquier pago.">"Just transfer the deposit and I'll send the address" — No. Address and location verification come before any payment.
- Price that's 40%+ below market. Real fincas for 20 guests don't go for $80/night. If it's that cheap, it doesn't exist.
Sample weekend itinerary
A realistic 3-day/2-night bachelor or birthday weekend in Occidente (our pick for first-timers):
Friday
- 2:00 PM — Pickup at MDE airport or El Poblado. Stop at Éxito Rionegro for alcohol, ice, snacks.
- 5:00 PM — Arrive at finca, property tour with manager, pool time.
- 8:00 PM — Asado (BBQ) catering arrives. Dinner under the stars.
- 10:00 PM — Pool party, music, games. Warm climate means it runs until you're done.
Saturday
- 10:00 AM — Slow breakfast, coffee, recovery. Hammock time.
- 12:00 PM — Day trip to Santa Fe de Antioquia (colonial town, 30 min from most Occidente fincas). Lunch at Portón del Parque or Mariela's in the plaza.
- 4:00 PM — Back to finca. Afternoon pool / horseback riding / tubing on the Río Cauca.
- 9:00 PM — Big dinner, DJ if booked, main event night.
Sunday
- 11:00 AM — Recovery brunch. Pack up. Manager inspection and damage deposit return.
- 1:00 PM — Depart. Factor 90 min back to Medellín or MDE.