Last updated: May 2026. Barranquilla is a friendly, warm, working city, and most days here pass without anything going wrong. The trouble foreigners run into is rarely random. It is a small set of repeating patterns, the same handful of scams you find in any big Latin American city, plus a couple of local flavors. Learn the patterns and you take almost all the risk off the table. This guide walks through each one calmly and specifically, with what to actually do.
The one principle: no dar papaya
Every Colombian grows up with the phrase no dar papaya, literally "don't give papaya." It means: don't hand someone the opening. Walking down Calle 84 staring at a brand-new iPhone, pulling out a fat wallet at a buseta stop, flashing a nice watch in the Centro, leaving a laptop on the back seat of a parked car. None of these cause a crime on their own, but each one creates the opportunity.
Adopt the costeño baseline. Phone in your pocket when you walk, not in your hand. Laptop and bags out of sight in cars and taxis. Carry small bills so you never have to peel notes off a roll in public. Back up your phone to the cloud before you arrive so that losing it is an annoyance, not a disaster. Almost everything below is just this principle applied to a specific situation.
Taxis and the no-meter problem
Barranquilla taxis are yellow and, in theory, run on a taxímetro. In practice many drivers quote a flat fare, especially to anyone they read as a foreigner, and the meter conveniently does not get switched on. This is the most common thing visitors deal with, and it is usually overcharging rather than anything dangerous.
How to handle it:
- Use an app. DiDi, inDrive (formerly inDriver), Cabify, and Uber all work in Barranquilla. The price is agreed up front, the route is recorded, and there is no meter argument. This is the single biggest fix.
- If you take a street taxi, agree the fare out loud before you get in, or ask the driver to run the taxímetro. "¿Me pone el taxímetro, por favor?"
- Know rough fares so you can tell when you are being padded. A short hop inside the northern neighborhoods runs around COP 8.000 to COP 15.000 (about USD 2 to USD 4 at 4.000 pesos to the dollar). Across town, expect roughly COP 18.000 to COP 30.000 (about USD 4,50 to USD 7,50).
- Grab taxis from a queue at a mall, hotel, or the airport rather than flagging one in the street at night.
- If a driver says "el taxímetro está dañado" (the meter is broken), just get out and take the next one.
"Con taxímetro, por favor. Me lleva a [dirección], barrio [nombre del barrio]."
"With the meter on, please. Take me to [address], neighborhood [barrio name]."
ATM and card skimming
Card skimming is real here, as it is everywhere, but it is easy to avoid with a few habits. The goal is to use machines that are physically supervised and to never let a camera catch your PIN.
- Use ATMs inside bank branches or busy malls during the day. Avoid standalone street machines, gas-station ATMs, and anything tucked into a quiet corner late at night.
- Check the card slot. If it wobbles, looks glued on, or is a slightly different color than the rest of the machine, walk away and use another one.
- Cover the keypad with your free hand when you type your PIN. A hidden micro-camera is the most common way PINs get stolen.
- Stick to the big networks. Bancolombia, Davivienda, and BBVA are the most foreign-card-friendly. There is more on this in our banking and money guide.
- Turn on transaction alerts with your home bank. Catching a fraudulent charge at 3 a.m. lets you freeze the card before more goes through.
One shop-counter variant to watch for: the clerk runs your card, says it "declined," runs it again, and you later find two charges. Watch the terminal screen yourself, and check your alerts before you leave the store.
Phone snatching and the bump-and-grab
The most common street incident in Barranquilla is a phone getting snatched. It is quick, opportunistic, and usually happens because the phone was out and visible: in your hand at a corner, on a restaurant table near the sidewalk, or held up while you walk and text. Motorcycle snatches happen too, where a passenger grabs and the bike is gone before you react.
The distraction variant is the bump-and-grab. Someone bumps into you, or "accidentally" spills a drink, juice, or something sticky on you, and while an accomplice helpfully cleans you up, your pocket gets emptied. It is choreographed and very fast.
How to protect yourself:
- Keep your phone in a front pocket or zipped bag when walking, and step into a doorway or shop if you need to use it.
- On a sidewalk café, keep your phone off the table and your bag strap looped around your leg or chair, not hanging free.
- If someone spills something on you, step back and keep your hands on your own pockets and bag. Decline the "help." A real accident does not come with a stranger reaching toward your waistband.
- Be extra aware near the Centro and busy transit points, and around the Transmetro stations at rush hour.
- If a phone does get taken, let it go. It is replaceable and you backed it up. Nothing is worth resisting a grab.
Fake-police shakedowns
Occasionally someone in a vest will stop a foreigner, claim to be police, ask to see your passport, and then ask to "inspect" your wallet for counterfeit bills or check your documents. The goal is to get your cash into their hands, or to lift a note or two while "examining" it.
The thing to internalize: real Colombian police never need to touch your money, and they do not collect cash on the street. Genuine officers wear a proper uniform with a name and a visible badge, and a real document check does not require handing over your wallet.
How to respond:
- Stay calm and polite. Do not hand over your wallet or any cash.
- Ask for the officer's name and badge number, and to see official identification.
- Offer to sort it out at the nearest CAI (the small neighborhood police posts) or police station. A scammer will not want to go there. A real officer will be fine with it.
- Say you would like to call 123 to verify. Reaching for your phone to dial the emergency line usually ends the encounter.
- Keep your passport in your pocket and offer a photo or a photocopy rather than the physical document when you can.
"¿Me puede mostrar su placa y carnet, por favor? Prefiero ir al CAI más cercano o llamar al 123 para verificar."
"Can you show me your badge and ID, please? I'd prefer to go to the nearest CAI or call 123 to verify."
Dating apps and the robbery setup
This is worth taking seriously because the consequences are bigger than a snatched phone. The pattern: you match with someone on Tinder, Bumble, or Hinge, things move fast, and you invite them back to your apartment. You wake up missing your laptop, watch, and cash, and sometimes an accomplice was let in during the night. A more serious version involves a drink being spiked so you remember nothing (see the next section).
Rules if you use dating apps here:
- First meeting is always in a public, busy place that you choose, not one they insist on.
- Do not bring a new match to a home full of your valuables. If it is going somewhere, a hotel room for the night is the safer call.
- Be wary of anyone pushing hard and fast to move to your apartment, or to a venue you have never heard of outside the normal areas.
- If the profile photos look like a professional model shoot, do a reverse image search before you meet.
- Tell a friend who you are with and share your live location over WhatsApp or your phone's location feature.
Drink-spiking in nightlife
The most serious scam to know about is drink-spiking, sometimes with scopolamine, known locally as burundanga. It leaves a person conscious and compliant but with little or no memory, and it is used to empty bank accounts and apartments. It is uncommon, but it is the one with the worst outcomes, so the precautions are worth the small effort.
The usual setup is a very friendly stranger, often met at a bar or through a dating app, who shares drinks and suggests changing venues quickly. The victim wakes the next day with money gone and a blank stretch of hours.
How to protect yourself:
- Never accept a drink you did not watch being poured, and do not leave your drink unattended, including a quick trip to the bathroom.
- Be cautious of instant closeness from a stranger, especially one eager to move you somewhere new.
- If you are meeting a match, bring a friend, or at least meet in a busy, reputable place you picked.
- Turn off face-unlock on your banking and crypto apps when you go out at night. A phone held up to a sedated face opens everything.
Counterfeit bills and the cash switcheroo
Fake notes circulate, mostly the COP 50.000 and COP 100.000 bills. You can pick up a counterfeit as change at a market stall, a street vendor, or a small shop, and then struggle to spend it later.
- Hold larger notes up to the light. Genuine Colombian bills have a watermark and a security thread, and the printing has a raised, textured feel you can run a fingernail across.
- Count your change in front of the vendor before you walk away.
- The cash switcheroo: you pay with a big note, the vendor palms it and produces a smaller one, claiming that is what you gave. As with taxis, say the denomination out loud as you hand it over.
- When you can, pay small purchases with smaller notes so you are not accumulating big bills you then have to verify.
Overpriced tourist pricing
This is not really a scam, just opportunistic pricing, but it is worth spotting. Some vendors, market sellers, and street stalls quote a higher number to a foreigner, especially if you ask in halting Spanish or look unsure. It is most common with souvenirs, ad-hoc taxi fares, fruit carts, and at events.
- Ask the price before you commit, and ask "¿cuánto vale?" with a bit of confidence.
- Glance at what the person ahead of you paid, or check a posted menu or price list where one exists.
- For anything sizable, getting two quotes takes thirty seconds and resets the price fast.
- A small amount of Spanish and a calm tone does more than haggling. It signals you know roughly what things cost here.
Carnival-season pickpocketing surge
Carnaval de Barranquilla is the best thing about the city and absolutely worth being part of. It also packs enormous, dense crowds into the parade routes along the Vía 40 and Calle 17, and that is exactly the environment where pickpockets do their best work. The risk is petty theft, not danger, and a little planning keeps it that way.
- Carry only what you need into the crowd: some cash, one card, your phone, a photo of your passport rather than the original. Leave the rest at home.
- Use a zipped cross-body bag worn in front, or a front pocket. Avoid back pockets and open totes entirely.
- Agree on a meeting point with your group in case phones get separated or batteries die.
- Plan your ride home in advance. Demand for taxis and apps spikes during Carnival, which is when street-fare overcharging is at its peak.
- Pace the drinks. Most Carnival trouble traces back to someone who lost track of their things, not to organized crime.
Online, marketplace, and rental-deposit scams
A growing share of scams never happen in person at all. These are the patterns to know if you are renting, buying, or messaging from your couch.
Rental-deposit scams
A "landlord" posts an attractive apartment, often below market, and asks you to wire a deposit or first month to hold it before you have seen it or signed anything. The listing is fake or the unit is not theirs. Never send a deposit before you have viewed the place in person (or had a trusted local view it), confirmed the owner, and have a written contract. There is more on doing this safely in our banking and money guide.
Marketplace and "I lost my phone" messages
On Marketplace and similar apps, be wary of anyone who wants to move the deal off-platform and pay or be paid by transfer before meeting. For in-person sales, meet in a busy public spot in daylight. Separately, the fastest-growing message scam is WhatsApp impersonation: someone messages from an unknown number claiming to be a friend or relative who "lost my phone" and needs a quick transfer to a Nequi or Bancolombia account. Always call the person on their real number before sending a peso.
Fake official calls
Migración Colombia and the DIAN tax authority do not call demanding immediate payment over the phone. If you get a call like that, hang up and call the agency back using the number from their official website.
What to do if you get scammed
If something does happen, act quickly and methodically. The order matters.
- If you are in immediate danger, call 123, the national emergency line for police, fire, and ambulance. English is available on request.
- Freeze your cards through each bank's app, change passwords on important accounts, and revoke any third-party app access.
- File a denuncia. For most non-violent crimes, the formal report is filed online through the Policía Nacional's ADenunciar portal (adenunciar.policia.gov.co), or at a Fiscalía / SPOA office. The small neighborhood CAI posts can take an initial statement, but the formal record now lives in the SPOA system. You need the denuncia number for any insurance claim, and without it nothing else moves. File the same day while the details are fresh.
- Use the tourist police. Barranquilla has police accustomed to handling foreigner cases, particularly around Carnival and in the tourist-facing areas. Their office is at Carrera 54 # 71 to 87, El Prado; (+57 605) 351-3211. File your report the same day while details are fresh.
- If your passport is gone, contact your embassy to start a replacement, and include the passport in your denuncia.
- If it was just a phone, the cloud backups matter far more than the hardware. Remotely wipe it, then move on.
"Quiero poner una denuncia. Me robaron [el celular / la billetera / las maletas] en [lugar] hoy a las [hora]. ¿Cuál es el número de radicado?"
"I want to file a police report. I was robbed of [phone / wallet / bags] at [location] today at [time]. What is the report reference number?"
None of this should put you off Barranquilla. The city is warm and the people are genuinely helpful. Read the safety picture honestly in our is Barranquilla safe guide, get comfortable with your money setup in our banking and money guide, and you will spend your time here enjoying the place rather than worrying about it.
FAQ
Is Barranquilla dangerous for foreigners? It is a normal big Latin American city. Most visits pass without incident. The risks that actually affect foreigners are the scams in this guide, mainly taxi overcharging, phone snatching, and, far less often, the dating-app and drink-spiking setups. Read our honest safety guide for the fuller picture.
What is the emergency number in Colombia? It is 123 for police, fire, and ambulance, nationwide.
Are taxis safe? Generally yes. The main issue is overcharging, not danger. Using DiDi, inDrive, Cabify, or Uber removes the meter argument entirely and records your route.
How do I avoid getting a counterfeit bill? Hold larger notes to the light to check the watermark and security thread, feel for the raised printing, and count your change before walking away.
Should I carry my passport around? For day-to-day errands, a clear photo or a photocopy is usually enough. Carry the original only when you have a specific official reason to, and keep it in a front pocket or zipped bag.
Is Carnival safe to attend? Yes, and it is the highlight of the city's year. The only real risk is pickpocketing in the crowds. Carry little, wear a zipped bag in front, and plan your ride home in advance.
Further reading on this site
Is Barranquilla safe, the honest answer
Banking, cash, and money in Barranquilla
Informational only, written to help you avoid common problems, not to alarm. Conditions and contact numbers can change; for emergencies always call 123 and follow the instructions of local authorities. Last review: May 2026.
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