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5 of the best cycling routes in Colombia

Following the popularity of the cycling boom during the pandemic, bicycle tourism is consequently set to explode come 2021. Offering diverse topography and climates, Colombia provides riders with a huge variety of routes, from mountainous climbs at high altitude, to humid rainforest routes and cool coastal circuits.

Cycling in Colombia

1. The Coffee Route

Weaving through Colombia’s Coffee Belt, a region declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2011, this route is ideal for a road or mountain bike and it makes a great three to five-day bicycle tour, offering challenging yet enjoyable trails. What makes this route even more rewarding is the opportunity to revel in the breath-taking landscapes that engulfs the tarmac and ending each day with well-deserved rest on a coffee farm or in therapeutic hot springs.


2. The Colonial Villages Route

This five-day trip passes through some of the country’s most picturesque surroundings and the best-preserved colonial villages in the regions of Boyacá, Cundinamarca and Santander. Follow in the trails of escarabajo Nairo Quintana, who grew up in Boyacá and utilised the surrounding mountains to become one of the best climb cyclists in the world. However, this route offers riders a surprisingly comfortable tour of the Andes and is ideal for cyclists who do not necessarily consider themselves athletes.

3. Bogotá & Bernal

Those looking for a little less strenuous cycle, visit Bogotá, the country’s municipal and cultural capital, which is overflowing with excellent restaurants and has more kilometres of cycle routes than anywhere else in Latin America. Every Sunday between 7am – 2pm, more than 100km of roads are closed to motor vehicles, allowing cyclists full reign to enjoy the streets of Bogotá. A one-hour trip from Bogotá is the hometown of 2019 Tour de France winner, Egan Bernal. Boasting impressive architecture, culinary hot-spots and an archaeological museum housing more than 1,400 artefacts belonging to 14 indigenous cultures, Zipaquirá is a must visit before embarking on neighbouring steep climbs that Egan trained on himself such as: La Calera or go to Cajicá, Chía, Nemocón and Tunja.


4. The Heroic Tour

This is a trip reserved for only the most advanced cyclists, it is over 1,000 kilometres long, traversing the breadth of the Colombian Andes’ and passing some of Colombia’s most spectacular landscapes. It also includes the ascent to the mythical Alto de Letras, where some of the best cyclists have trained, and which, due to its altitude, is one of the most challenging routes worldwide.


5. Colombia’s Caribbean Coast

If one would like a ride at more casual pace, without the inclines found in the Colombian Andes, then take a cycle along Colombia’s Caribbean coast from Barranquilla to Ciénaga and admire the sea and palms while you pedal. Cyclists can enjoy a cooling coastal breeze while soaking up the warm Caribbean sun, with the opportunity to stop at the beach along the way and take part in sport fishing or scuba diving.



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