Colombia’s housing market is entering the second half of 2026 in a gradual recovery phase, with sales momentum building even as affordability strains persist in the capital. No single breaking headline dominated Colombian property coverage in the last day or two, but the broader data picture — from national price indices to city-level forecasts — paints a market that’s clearly shifting gears after a rough 2024-2025 stretch. Here’s where things stand.
Current Price and Market Trends
The median national housing price in Colombia sits around COP 290 million, with the median residential price per square meter at roughly COP 4.6 million (about $1,250 per square meter), according to market data compiled by TheLatinvestor. BBVA Research’s 2026 outlook projects the economy growing around 2.7% this year, with new housing sales expected to climb 11.5% in 2026 after an already-strong +9% rebound in 2025.
That recovery is uneven geographically. Medellín continues to stand out as the most resilient major market, still posting positive real price growth, while Bogotá and parts of its metropolitan area are seeing price erosion in real terms — a function of a more fragile supply-demand balance and mounting affordability pressure on local households. Mortgage rates remain a headwind across the board, hovering between 10% and 18% annually, which keeps many locally-financed buyers on the sidelines even as sentiment improves.
Supply is a key part of the story: construction activity dropped more than 35% in early 2025, which is now translating into tighter available inventory in desirable neighborhoods. Combined with strong rental demand — Colombia now has more than 7 million renting households — that supply squeeze is helping support prices in prime areas of Bogotá and Medellín even as many locals describe the market as feeling overpriced relative to wages.
Notable Recent Developments
1. BBVA Research’s 2026 outlook confirms a sales rebound driven by the non-subsidized segment. According to BBVA Research’s Colombia real estate outlook, the projected 11.5% increase in 2026 housing sales is being driven mainly by the ”no VIS” (non-subsidized) segment — buyers who are more creditworthy and less reliant on government housing subsidies. That’s a meaningful shift from prior years when subsidized housing programs did more of the heavy lifting, and it suggests private-sector demand and mid-to-upper income buyers are returning to the market with more confidence.
2. Colombia remains one of the most open property markets in the region for foreign buyers. Coverage from TheLatinvestor and Convexo Real Estate Law confirms Colombia has no broad restrictions on foreigners purchasing residential apartments or houses in mainstream cities, a policy stance that continues to attract international and remote-work buyers, particularly to Medellín’s El Poblado district and Cartagena’s historic zone. The relatively weak peso continues to make Colombian property attractive to dollar- and euro-earning buyers, reinforcing steady foreign demand even as local affordability tightens.
3. Days-on-market data highlights a two-speed market. Recent analysis pegs average time-to-sell for Colombian residential property at 180-210 days nationally, but well-priced units in sought-after neighborhoods like Chapinero (Bogotá) or El Poblado (Medellín) are moving in three to four months, while overpriced or poorly located listings can sit for nine to twelve months or longer. That gap underscores how pricing discipline matters more than ever for sellers right now.
Outlook
Colombia’s real estate market looks set for a moderate, uneven recovery through the rest of 2026 rather than a broad-based boom. Medellín’s resilience, sustained foreign buyer interest, and a rebounding non-subsidized sales segment all point to genuine underlying momentum, but tight credit conditions, thin new supply, and affordability fatigue in Bogotá will likely keep the recovery selective rather than universal. For buyers — local or foreign — the market increasingly rewards patience and neighborhood-level research over broad bets on the national numbers.
Track Colombia real estate daily: For up-to-date listings, price trends, and market data on the Colombia housing market, visit https://colombiahousingmarket.com/.