Coffee Region, Colombia
Colombia

Coffee Region, Colombia

Mist, green hills, and the working farms that produce Colombia's best-known export.

About Coffee Region

A sense of place.

The Eje Cafetero — the coffee axis — is a triangle of small green departments in the Andean foothills where the country's coffee is grown, dried, and shipped to the rest of the world. The landscape is improbably beautiful: terraced cafetales draped over hillsides, wax palms that climb to sixty meters in the Cocora Valley, whitewashed haciendas with shutters painted in primary colors.

Stay on a working finca. Most have opened a handful of rooms to guests, and the rhythm of the farm — sunrise on the terrace, a walk through the rows with the farmer, breakfast of eggs and freshly roasted coffee — is the experience itself. Salento and Filandia are the two small towns worth basing in for an evening or two; both are full of design-conscious cafés and family-run restaurants.

This is the part of Colombia where the country slows down. Plan three nights minimum. Pair it with Cartagena, with Medellín, or with both — the coffee region is the soft middle of almost every good Colombian itinerary.

Why stay here

Ideal for the traveler who wants —

CouplesSlow travelFood and coffee loversNatureFamilies

Stays in Coffee Region

Where to settle in.

All stays

Local guidance

What we'd tell a close friend.

nature

Cocora Valley

The wax-palm valley — one of South America's most photographed landscapes. Go early.

culture

Filandia

A small whitewashed town with the best lookout in the region — quieter than Salento.

food

Helena Adentro

Farm-to-table dinners in Filandia — book ahead.

tip

Rent a car or hire a driver

Fincas are scattered. Public transport between them is unreliable.

Nearby in Colombia

Where to go next.

Begin your stay

Stay in Coffee Region.