I’ve travelled all over the world and I can say that Santa Marta is one of my favourite places to be a digital nomad. I like it so much I’ve started doing an annual digital nomad retreat there each year.

While the digital nomad community is much smaller than nomad hotspots like Medellin and Mexico City, there is a small, tight-knit group of digital nomads, expats and locals who hang out together and regularly plan fun events each week.

The combination of beaches, mountains and infrastructure in Santa Marta is hard to beat. If you’re looking to live by the beach with excellent fast wifi, an international airport 15 minutes away (most flights come through Bogota, Medellín or Panama City) and modern infrastructure, my top choice is the El Rodadero neighbourhood of Santa Marta.

This area is also incredibly affordable. You can stay at a coliving space by the beach for around $700-$900 a month or if you’re planning to stay long term, you can rent an apartment on the beach for less than you’d pay in most other Caribbean beach destinations.

Many foreigners I have met here liked it so much that they bought an apartment. You can find a beachfront condo for under 100K, especially in the emerging beach neighbourhoods between El Rodadero and Santa Marta’s Simón Bolívar International Airport.

Santa Marta is one of the sunniest places in Colombia, with year-round sunshine most of the day and late afternoon showers in the rainy season. Unlike in Bogotá and Medellín, you don’t get regularly socked in by clouds in the rainy season.

It gets quite hot in Santa Marta during the middle of the day but there’s usually a strong breeze (what locals call La Brisa Loca) that keeps the air fresh and clean. It’s a few degrees cooler and less humid than Cartagena or Barranquilla and there are much better beaches in the area (the city beaches in Santa Marta aren’t great, El Rodadero is much better).

Plus, whenever you want to escape the heat, you can be in cloud forests in Minca, La Tagua or Cerro Kennedy at elevations similar to Medellín in about an hour.

The Outdoorsy Lifestyle In Santa Marta

Cerro Ziruma Panorama
The best beaches are 10 minutes away from Santa Marta in Playa El Rodadero.

Santa Marta is Colombia’s oldest city (the second oldest in the Americas). It was founded on July 29, 1525, by the Spanish conqueror Rodrigo de Bastidas and in July 2025, the local Costeños celebrated the 500th anniversary of their city.

Sitting between the Caribbean Sea and the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta mountains, Santa Marta is perfect for adventurous people who want to lead an outdoorsy lifestyle that combines lots of beach time with mountain hikes.

The Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta is the world’s tallest coastal mountain range and it has the highest peaks in Colombia, Pico Colón at 5,775 meters (18,947 feet) and Pico Simón Bolívar at 5,775 meters (18,947 feet). Recent geological surveys now consider Pico Simón Bolívar to be the highest peak in Colombia.

On the beaches east of Santa Marta, like Costeño Beach and Palomino, you can sit on a tropical beach and see these glacier-capped mountains less than 50 miles away.

I first discovered this area when I watched the excellent documentary Aluna about the spiritual wisdom of the indigenous Kogi people and their fight to protect their homeland in the Sierra Nevada. BBC filmmaker Alan Ereira has the best description I’ve heard of the importance of this area:

“Imagine a pyramid standing alone by the sea, each side a hundred miles long. It’s a mountain nearly four miles high. In its folds imagine every different climate on earth. This is the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, and the people hidden here call the Sierra the Heart of the World and themselves the Elder Brothers.”

Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta Cloud Forests
The view of the world’s tallest coastal mountains and the highest glacier-capped peaks in Colombia from the cloud forests on Cerro Kennedy.

If you love being outdoors when you’re not working online, it’s hard to beat the weather and outdoor recreation opportunities around Santa Marta.

My 3 favourite things about Santa Marta are the consistent sunny climate on the coast, the epic sunsets on the beach in Playa El Rodadero and the fact that it’s only a 1-hour bus or taxi to the cloud forests in Minca whenever I feel like a cooler climate with daily afternoon rain for a few days.

Plus, if you’re looking for a full digital detox to reset for your nervous system occasionally, this is the best place in Colombia for trekking, with world-class destinations like the Lost City Trek, Tayrona National Park, and the Bunkuany Archaeological Complex.

The opportunities are endless here for adventurous digital nomads with some of the world’s best undeveloped white sand beaches, refreshing waterfalls for jungle swimming and unique indigenous cultural experiences.

Here are just a few of your options for outdoor recreation and living a healthy active lifestyle here:

  • Scuba diving in Taganga where there’s world class reefs and aquatic life
  • Take a boat trip to world class beaches like Playa Blanca and Playa Cristal
  • Hike from El Rodadero to beaches like Inca Inca and Playa Del Amor
  • Go camping on the beach at Cabo San Juan in Tayrona National Park
  • Multi-day treks like the Lost City, Bunkuany And Cerro Kenendy
  • Surf the breaks in Palomino, Los Cocos or Costeño Beach
  • Visit an indigenous villages in the Sierra Nevada
  • Float down a lazy river to the ocean in Palomino
  • Go waterfall swimming in Minca or Guachaca
  • Hike high into the cloud forests in Minca

To get an idea of just how beautiful the area is, here’s a video reel I put together with a lot of my drone footage from the area:

As you can see, this area of Colombia is one of the best places in Latin America for nature lovers.

The Pros And Cons Of Living In Santa Marta:

Santa Marta Colombia
A drone shot of the marina and beachfront in Santa Marta.

While Colombia offers a lot of great options for digital nomads and expats, I think Santa Marta is really unique in its combination of history, beaches and mountains.

I like to describe the area as a combination of Mexico and Costa Rica. The area around Santa Marta is sunny and arid with cacti like Oaxaca in Mexico but it also has beaches and jungle like Costa Rica in Tayrona National Park and to the east in Palomino as well as cloud forests with great hiking up in Minca like Montezuma in Costa Rica.

There is much less hustle and bustle here than in Bogota or Medellin. I’ve heard that salaries for professional jobs tend to be 50% less on the coast, so it makes it difficult for most Colombians to move here. Plus, the biggest industries here are tourism, natural resources and real estate, so there are a lot fewer economic opportunities here.

The upside of this is that Santa Marta rentals and real estate prices are much cheaper than larger Colombian cities, which is great if you’re planning to work remotely here.

Here are some the pros of living in Santa Marta:

Much lower cost of living compared to Bogotá, Medellín or Cartagena
Warm, tropical climate year-round with consistent sunshine and a sea breeze
Proximity to nature with jungle, mountains, beaches and national parks nearby
A relaxed, small-city feel with fewer distractions and slower pace than big cities
A growing community and a lot less annoying “hookers & drugs” foreigners

Here are some of the cons of living in Santa Marta:

Wifi can be spotty in some areas, so look for accommodation that advertises fast Internet
There are electric outages in some areas so you need to live in a highly developed area
Compared to Medellín, Santa Marta has fewer coworking spaces and laptop-friendly cafes.
It’s hot year-round. Much hotter than Medellín but slightly cooler than Cartagena.
In the rainy season, sewers can overflow and make it difficult to get around.

As a much smaller city, Santa Marta isn’t as developed as Medellín when it comes to remote work infrastructure, so knowing the right spots for living and working is essential.

That’s what I’ll cover later in this digital nomad guide.

Why I Chose To Live In Playa El Rodadero

El Rodadero Panorama

While I enjoy the historical center of Santa Marta, it can feel unsafe at night if you walk down the wrong block (it changes fast). It’s best to stick to the touristy areas at night where there are a lot of great restaurants and nightclubs (La Puerta was my favourite place to dance).

By the beach in El Rodadero it feels very safe and you can also walk around at night because this is probably the most popular year-round beach for Colombians so there are lots of people around enjoying their vacation at all hours of the night.

From El Rodadero, it’s an easy 10-minute drive or a cheap Uber (under 20,000 pesos) over the mountains that separate El Rodadero from the city of Santa Marta.

There’s a great community of young expats and digital nomads in El Rodadero, while I found Santa Marta to attract either a very young crowd of backpackers or more of an older crowd of retirees.

I’m usually in Santa Marta in the winter so I can escape the cold in Canada but I’d probably like it even more in the rainy season when you get refreshing showers in the late afternoon (it only rains occasionally rather than nearly every day in other parts of Colombia).

Finding Coworking And Coliving Spaces In The Area

Santa Marta Life Coliving Villa

Here are some of your options for coworking and coliving in Santa Marta:

1. Santa Marta Life Coliving – A coliving community I started with a Colombia friend in the quieter and safer El Rodadero beach neighbourhood 10 minutes from Santa Marta’s historical center.

2. Samatech – This was my favourite coworking space. A good coworking space in the business district that has air conditioning.

2. Flamingo Coworking – This small coworking space shares a building with a backpacker hostel and the biggest rooftop club in Santa Marta called La Brisa Loca but it lacks air conditioning.

4. Arrecife Mall – The mall in El Rodadero has a free coworking space that is air-conditioned. There’s also a good Juan Valdez Cafe in the mall for coffee.

Best Cafés for Working In The Area

My go-to cafe for working remotely is Cafe de Pombo, you can work indoors or outside.

1. Café De Pombo – This new upscale library-style cafe was my favourite place to work. The coffee and food is top notch, the washrooms are clean and the wifi is fast.

2. Vívolo Café – This funky cafe on the waterfront causeway has beautiful art and good coffee with strong wifi.

3. Ikaro Café – Strong WiFi, amazing coffee, and a relaxed vibe. They have great vegetarian and vegan food.

4. Lulo Café – A popular spot with healthy food, good WiFi, and a central location. Can get busy, so morning hours are best for working.

5. La Canoa – A quieter spot with a good atmosphere for working, plus some of the best coffee in Santa Marta.

Pro Tip: Internet speeds can fluctuate, so always have a SIM card with mobile data (Claro or Movistar) as a backup when working remotely. With Claro, I pay 40,000 COP ($10 USD) a month for $60 GB of data.

Where To Stay And Visit In The Area

Minca Panorama
The beautiful town of Minca in the mountains overlooking Santa Marta.

Your choice of neighborhood will impact your experience as a digital nomad. Santa Marta has a mix of areas, each with its own vibe.

1. El Centro (Historic Downtown) – Best for culture, nightlife, and easy access to coworking spaces and cafés. However, it can be noisy at night and can feel unsafe if you walk down the wrong block.

2. El Rodadero – A more modern, residential area with beachside apartments, supermarkets and a resort-style atmosphere. Good for long-term stays.

3. Minca – A peaceful mountain retreat with incredible nature and cooler weather. Internet can be slow, so it’s best for digital nomads who don’t rely on high-speed WiFi all the time.

4. Taganga – A small fishing village popular with divers and backpackers. It’s scenic but not ideal for remote work due to unreliable WiFi.

5. Palomino – A hippie surf town about 90 90-minute drive from Santa Marta. The wifi here can be spotty but it has improved a lot in the last two years.

6. Los Cocos – I really like this small town on the beach just east of Tayrona National Park. It’s quiet, there’s lots of waterfalls and indigenous villages nearby that you can visit on a short hike in the mountains.

Tip: If you plan to stay for a month or more, my friend Wilson who runs Santa Marta Life Coliving can help you find long-term rental options.

Networking And Social Life In Santa Marta

Santa Marta’s digital nomad community isn’t as established as in Medellín or Bogotá but it’s growing fast.

The best ways to meet locals, travellers and other digital nomads are through local WhatsApp and Facebook groups. There is an excellent Digital Nomad WhatsApp group run by a great American guy named Tony.

You will also find some digital nomad and expat Facebook Groups and Meetups where people occasionally post events like brunches, language exchanges and workshops.

When I spend the day working at nomad-friendly cafés like Pombo, Ikaro or Lulo, I’ll usually meet at least one new person.

If you’re looking for nightlife, there is great dancing at La Brisa Loca and La Puerta. Colombians are really friendly, especially the Costeños on the coast, so it’s easy to meet people here.

If you’re thinking of spending a few weeks or months in Santa Marta, I hope this guide has given you some ideas to get started once you land in the city.

If you have any questions about Santa Marta, feel free to reach out.

Kyle Pearce

Kyle Pearce is from Vancouver, British Columbia and he spends the winters in Santa Marta, Colombia. He runs a cultural ecotourism company called Sacred Treks that helps people travel with a purpose and a social entrepreneurship community of mission-driven founders called Social Creators. You can follow him on Instagram @kaaist