Where

PressBeyond Logo

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.

Book with PB and get cash back
Click Clack Hotel - Image 1
Click Clack Hotel - Image 2
Click Clack Hotel - Image 3
Click Clack Hotel - Image 4
Click Clack Hotel - Image 5

Click Clack Hotel

Bogotá • El Chicó • OPTIMIZE

avg. $123 / night

Includes $6 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Click Clack Hotel Design Editorial

In Bogotá's El Chicó district, where the financial corridor softens into tree-lined residential streets, a slender tower wrapped in darkened laser-cut metal cladding — its surface patterned with an intricate web of organic tracery — announced something genuinely different for the Colombian capital when Click Clack Hotel opened in 2013. The building, designed by local firm Campuzano Arquitectos, rises ten floors above Carrera 11, its stacked glass volumes cantilevering outward at irregular intervals, the perforated facade panels shifting tone between charcoal and deep bronze depending on the light. The triangle motif carried through the signage and entrance portal signals the property's graphic identity before you're even inside. The 62 rooms split into two distinct registers that illuminate the hotel's dual ambitions. Higher-floor suites feature full-height glazing on two sides, blonde wood-effect tile floors, lacquered black millwork columns dividing sleeping from living areas, and industrial tripod floor lamps that give the rooms a loft-like looseness — the Andes visible as a low grey wall beyond. Lower-category rooms pull back toward a warmer palette: button-tufted charcoal headboards, type-printed wall graphics quoting Samuel Johnson, pendant lights with ceramic shades. The ground-floor Boticario bar, with its long solid-wood counter, slatted timber ceiling, and backbar assembled from salvaged industrial components, and the plant-canopied lounge above it — furnished with HAY About A Chair pieces alongside custom upholstery — give the public areas the texture of a neighbourhood creative hub rather than a conventional hotel lobby.

Book with PB and get cash back
The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection - Image 1
The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection - Image 2
The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection - Image 3
The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection - Image 4
The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection - Image 5

The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection

Bogotá • Financial District • OPTIMIZE

avg. $196 / night

Includes $10 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Marriott Bonvoy® property

The Artisan D.C. Hotel, Autograph Collection Design Editorial

Brick and raw concrete have always been Bogotá's honest vernacular, and The Artisan D.C. Hotel, part of Marriott's Autograph Collection, commits to that language without apology. The facade's warm terracotta coursing frames full-height steel-and-glass window walls at street level, a red-lacquered door providing the single chromatic disruption — a deliberate compositional accent that reappears throughout the interior. Set in the city's financial district on Calle 26, the property draws its design concept from the crafts and literary culture of Colombia, placing Gabriel García Márquez quotations on guestroom walls alongside pop-art portraiture and talavera-inspired ceiling motifs in cobalt and cream. The lobby carries the atmosphere of a Bogotá intellectual's private library — tufted leather Chesterfield sofas arranged beneath a blackened steel mezzanine, open shelving lined with ceramics and bound volumes, a rose-copper pendant lamp hanging at the centre like a suspended thought. The bar continues this industrial warmth with a curved dark-fluted counter, red leather stools on turned walnut legs, and exposed brick forming the back wall behind bottle-laden steel shelving. Guestrooms shift registers depending on floor and category: some feature raw brick accent walls with talavera-patterned bed runners and painted ceiling ornament, others deploy red enamel pendants and mesh-fronted wardrobes in an earthier, workshop-inflected palette. Wide-plank dark timber flooring connects both registers, giving the property a material consistency that holds its eclectic cultural references in check.

Book with PB and get cash back
Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton - Image 1
Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton - Image 2
Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton - Image 3
Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton - Image 4
Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton - Image 5

Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton

Bogotá • Parque 93 • OPTIMIZE

avg. $230 / night

Includes $12 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Hilton Honors™ property

Salvio Parque 93 Bogota, Curio Collection by Hilton Design Editorial

Facing Parque 93, one of Bogotá's most coveted urban green spaces in the Zona Rosa district, a ten-storey tower of cantilevered concrete floor plates, corten steel vertical fins, and deep planted terraces gives Salvio Parque 93, Curio Collection by Hilton its most distinctive architectural argument: that a contemporary hotel tower can engage a park rather than merely overlook it. The building's stepped balconies, visible in the exterior image draped with vegetation and lit warmly against the night sky, soften what might otherwise be a hard commercial profile into something closer to a vertical garden. Inside, the interiors move between two registers. Guest rooms are composed in a restrained palette of grey-washed wood wall panels, honey-toned oak flooring, brass pendant and wall sconces, and upholstered platform beds — furniture with clean mid-century proportions kept deliberately quiet so the city views do the expressive work. The rooftop restaurant shifts tone entirely: exposed concrete columns, louvred steel ceiling panels, and bentwood chairs around solid oak tables frame a panorama of Bogotá's northern hills at dusk. The ground-floor bar trades that restraint for atmosphere — a curved counter clad in vertical timber reeding, an arched antique-mirror back bar stacked with spirits beneath amber globe pendants, and encaustic cement-tile floors patterned in ochre and slate, the whole space landing somewhere between a Bogotá cantina and a considered piece of hospitality design.

Book with PB and get cash back
Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá - Image 1
Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá - Image 2
Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá - Image 3
Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá - Image 4
Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá - Image 5

Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá

Bogotá • Zona T • SPLURGE

avg. $386 / night

Includes $20 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá Design Editorial

Three late-nineteenth-century brick warehouses in Bogotá's Zona Rosa district gave the Four Seasons Hotel Bogotá an architectural identity that no amount of contemporary construction could manufacture. The five-storey façades, their arched windows glowing amber against the Andean night sky, carry the weight of industrial heritage through a neighbourhood that has become the Colombian capital's most concentrated address for fashion, dining, and international commerce. When the property opened in 2015, the challenge was threading a Four Seasons sensibility through bones that predate the brand's founding by roughly a century. Inside, the approach favours a quiet, metropolitan refinement over any overt reference to Colombian vernacular. Guestrooms are fitted with dark-stained wood headboard panels, natural sisal-weave rugs, and Secto Design pendant lamps in pale birch veneer — a Scandinavian touch that keeps the atmosphere closer to a considered private apartment than a corporate hotel suite. La Biblioteca bar anchors the ground floor in Calacatta marble, burnished brass table bases, and cognac leather club chairs arranged around a bonsai-dressed counter, the whole room carrying the register of a well-appointed private members' club. The restaurant extends toward a glazed garden wall framed by mature bamboo, its dusty-rose velvet armchairs and board-formed concrete panels suggesting an interior that treats the Bogotá garden as its primary decoration. The property holds 66 rooms across a footprint that preserves the warehouse massing almost entirely intact from the street.

Book with PB and get cash back
Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota - Image 1
Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota - Image 2
Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota - Image 3
Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota - Image 4
Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota - Image 5

Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota

Bogotá • Zona G • SPLURGE

avg. $421 / night

Includes $22 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogota Design Editorial

Completed in 1946 by Colombian architect Santiago Medina Mejía as his own private residence, the building that became Four Seasons Hotel Casa Medina Bogotá stands as one of the finest examples of Republican colonial architecture in the capital — a three-storey brick manor with terracotta roof tiles, stone-arched entry portals, and wrought-iron balconies that feel borrowed from a Castilian country house rather than assembled for a hotel. The Andean foothills of Cerros Orientales rise directly behind it, a backdrop that makes the Zona Rosa streetscape feel genuinely dramatic rather than merely picturesque. Inside, the 62 rooms work with the building's inherited geometry rather than against it — attic-floor suites reveal exposed dark timber roof trusses left structurally intact, their angular geometry meeting linen-upholstered tufted headboards, diamond-pattern dhurrie rugs, and trunk-style mirrored side tables in an arrangement that feels more like a well-edited private house than a managed hotel room. Chesterfield leather armchairs and glass-topped campaign trunk coffee tables reinforce that sensibility. The restaurant spaces shift registers smartly: one dining room sets wire-framed bucket chairs against whitewashed exposed brick and herringbone parquet floors, while the glassed-over courtyard bar layers Edison filament pendants above a granite-topped counter with brass-detailed base and walls dense with climbing greenery — a conservatory atmosphere that has made it one of Bogotá's most sought-after evening destinations.

Book with PB and get cash back
Cassa Luxury Homes - Image 1
Cassa Luxury Homes - Image 2
Cassa Luxury Homes - Image 3
Cassa Luxury Homes - Image 4
Cassa Luxury Homes - Image 5

Cassa Luxury Homes

Bogotá • Parque El Virrey • OPTIMIZE

avg. $146 / night

Includes $8 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Cassa Luxury Homes Design Editorial

Parque El Virrey — the long green corridor threading through Bogotá's Chapinero Alto — provides the immediate context for Cassa Luxury Homes, a boutique property whose facade puts brick and timber in deliberate conversation with the tree canopy directly across the street. The building's street elevation layers warm-toned handmade brick against a grid of dark steel-framed windows, cedar louvres angled to manage Bogotá's lateral light, and planted balconies that blur the boundary between architecture and garden. Cor-ten steel planters at street level, fern-filled and already settled into the pavement, signal that the interior logic begins before you cross the threshold. Inside, the design moves between two registers. The suites run a considered neutral — oatmeal linen headboards, oak parquet in a herringbone pattern, timber joinery panels housing the television wall — punctuated by single gestures of colour, most visibly a burnt-orange leather high-back chair that recalls the work of Bogotá's own furniture ateliers. The restaurant is organized beneath a glazed steel pergola strung with trailing vines and globe pendants, its tables topped in white-veined marble set against rope-woven outdoor chairs in sage and grey. Above everything, the rooftop lap pool is framed by the same pale brick as the facade, open at each end to the Cerros Orientales — the mountain escarpment that defines Bogotá's eastern horizon and gives the city its particular quality of altitude light.

Book with PB and get cash back
B.O.G. Hotel - Image 1
B.O.G. Hotel - Image 2
B.O.G. Hotel - Image 3
B.O.G. Hotel - Image 4
B.O.G. Hotel - Image 5

B.O.G. Hotel

Bogotá • La Cabrera • OPTIMIZE

avg. $156 / night

Includes $8 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

B.O.G. Hotel Design Editorial

Placing a genuinely design-forward hotel in Bogotá's La Cabrera neighbourhood — where the city's old-money residential fabric gives way to corporate towers and embassy compounds — required a clear point of view, and B.O.G. Hotel, which opened in 2012 with interiors by the Chilean studio Pinkeye Design, arrived with one fully formed. The building presents a crisp contemporary facade of pale panelling and frameless glazing, the canopied entrance with its honeycomb-patterned soffit signalling a level of material specificity that carries through every floor of the property's fourteen storeys and 84 rooms. Inside, the palette shifts between warm brass, grey-toned oak flooring, and textured woven wall panels in tobacco and earth tones — cowhide desk chairs appearing in multiple room configurations as a recurring Colombian material reference rather than a decorative afterthought. The restaurant on the ground floor makes the most persuasive case for the hotel's architectural ambitions: a double-height travertine wall runs the full length of the dining room, a long ribbon fireplace set flush into its base, dark timber ceiling beams floating above curved leather armchairs in a composition that borrows from both Bogotá's colonial masonry tradition and a broadly mid-century European sensibility. On the roof, a retractable steel-and-glass pergola shelters a narrow lap pool with unobstructed views across the Andes — the city's altitude of 2,600 metres giving the sky above it a particular quality of light.

Book with PB and get cash back
W Bogota - Image 1
W Bogota - Image 2
W Bogota - Image 3
W Bogota - Image 4
W Bogota - Image 5

W Bogota

Bogotá • Santa Barbara • OPTIMIZE

avg. $257 / night

Includes $14 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

Marriott Bonvoy® property

W Bogota Design Editorial

Fitted into the mixed-use Santa Bárbara complex in Bogotá's upscale Usaquén district, where a cluster of dark-clad residential towers rise above a landscaped podium, the W Bogotá announced the brand's arrival in Colombia with the chromatic intensity the chain has made its signature. The exterior, visible at night as a facade of stacked horizontal fins washed in electric blue, sits within a broader masterplan that gives the hotel its ground-level garden approach — low plantings, linear lighting, and a raw concrete canopy framing the entrance in a language closer to urban infrastructure than traditional hospitality arrival. Inside, the interiors carry the full W playbook at considerable volume. The WET deck lounge deploys cascading brass chain curtains, oversized circular pendants, circular banquettes in charcoal leather, purple velvet ottomans, and a large-scale graffiti mural backlit in neon — a combination that makes nightclub and lobby feel like the same room. Guest rooms divide between two moods: one palette runs to teal-upholstered headboards that sweep across the ceiling in a continuous quilted canopy, gold satin runners, and yellow lacquered side tables; the other works in chartreuse mosaic tile, brass pendant mirrors, and a dark geometric ceiling treatment that curves down to embrace the bed. The all-day dining space steps back from this intensity — warm oak floors, yellow armchairs, curved cove lighting — as if giving the property somewhere to breathe between the spectacle.

Book with PB and get cash back
Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia - Image 1
Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia - Image 2
Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia - Image 3
Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia - Image 4
Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia - Image 5

Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia

Bogotá • Zona T • SPLURGE

avg. $431 / night

Includes $23 / night in cash back

Cash back is redeemable via Virtual Visa, Venmo, or bank transfer starting 24-48 hours after check-out

ALL - Accor property

Sofitel Bogota Victoria Regia Design Editorial

Bogotá's Zona Rosa has long been the city's most self-consciously European quarter, and the red-brick facade of the Sofitel Bogotá Victoria Regia — five storeys of arched windows, burgundy awnings, and a wrought-iron entrance canopy — commits fully to that aspiration. The building carries the feeling of a Haussmann-era Parisian hotel transplanted to the Andes, its warm terracotta masonry and classical proportions sitting in deliberate contrast to the glass towers rising around it on Calle 100. The Colombian and French flags flanking the entrance are not merely decorative; they signal the Accor group's sustained investment in this address as the brand's flagship in the Colombian capital. Inside, the renovated rooms settle into a palette of slate grey, warm taupe, and olive — fabric-panelled headboards with integrated LED strips, wide-plank timber floors, brass dome bedside lamps, and compact circular tables paired with velvet tub chairs in ochre. The bar pulls harder on the drama: navy-lacquered panelling with oval mirrors, a bar front clad in Verde Guatemala marble, herringbone parquet underfoot, and brass rail stools arranged along a white stone counter. Wicker bistro chairs spill onto a glazed terrace at street level, maintaining the Parisian brasserie reference that the building's exterior establishes and that the Basilic restaurant, visible from the entrance lobby, sustains through the ground floor.

Best hotels in Bogotá | A Curated Visual Guide to Top Stays