Best hotels in Bogotá | A Curated Visual Guide to Top Stays
Welcome to PressBeyond, the ultimate curated visual guide for design-driven hotels! My name is Will Miller and these are my recommendations for the best boutique and luxury hotels in Bogotá.
I am the founder of PressBeyond and I am an ultra-meticulous hotel curator who loves clean visuals. I have individually analyzed and tiered each hotel included in this guide based on a variety of criteria (architecture & design, location, brand & brand affiliation, existing reviews, and my own personal experiences), and importantly, I have hand-selected the leading imagery for each hotel to provide you with easily-digestible, yet detailed and complete, like-for-like, high-level visual profiles. I felt this summarization step was a critical missing piece across existing guides, blogs, and booking platforms. My aim is to make it easier for people to identify hotel environments that resonate with them, along with enabling them to visualize the types of social experiences that those environments help foster. My brain doesn't work when exposed to cluttered content, so my goal was to create the opposite.
Underneath this, we are also a full booking engine offering 5% Venmo cash back along with other exclusive perks. For all of you design-obsessed hotel enthusiasts out there, I hope this guide helps get you to where you see yourself!
An Overview of the Boutique & Luxury Hotel Landscape in Bogotá
Bogotá rewards close reading. The city's most telling architectural argument plays out in Zona G and Zona T — two northern neighborhoods separated by temperament as much as distance. The Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina, occupying a 1946 Spanish Colonial Revival mansion on Carrera 7, is among the more persuasive cases for preservation-as-hospitality anywhere in Latin America: its colonnaded courtyards and terracotta detailing belong to a tradition of Bogotá urbanism that has been systematically undervalued. A few minutes west, the conventional Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá and the Sofitel Victoria Regia operate in Zona T's denser commercial grain, where the city's appetite for international brand architecture runs at full volume. The Sofitel in particular holds an interesting position — its rates suggest a splurge proposition that its design execution doesn't always sustain. The El Chicó and La Cabrera corridor, running north along Carrera 11 and the streets around Parque 93, is where Bogotá's more considered mid-market hospitality has taken shape. Click Clack Hotel in El Chicó — the name slightly belying the seriousness of its graphic identity and tightly curated interiors — has maintained a loyal design-conscious following since opening, offering a genuinely urban experience at a rate that makes it one of the more intelligent stays in the city. Nearby, Salvio Parque 93 works the Curio Collection format competently, benefiting from proximity to one of Bogotá's most livable public plazas. B.O.G. Hotel in La Cabrera carries its own design ambition, and Cassa Luxury Homes, oriented toward the leafy stretch of Parque El Virrey, leans into residential scale rather than hotel theatrics — a format that suits the neighborhood's quieter, tree-lined pace. The W Bogotá in Santa Barbara sits somewhat apart from both clusters, its brand-mandated aesthetic landing in a district that has historically prioritized residential calm over experiential density — an awkward fit that the property's energy can't quite resolve. The Artisan D.C., Autograph Collection, in the Financial District, is the outlier that makes the most sense on paper: a design hotel positioned against the corporate grain of its surroundings, banking on the contrast. For travelers who want to understand Bogotá architecturally rather than simply sleep comfortably in it, Casa Medina remains the reference point — not for nostalgia, but because it demonstrates what the city's built heritage can become when someone genuinely commits to the material.












































