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Nomads & Communities
18JUL

Colombia visa rejects two in five

4 min read
13:12UTC

Colombia's Type V digital-nomad visa ran a rejection rate near 42% in 2025, the highest of any major nomad visa, while its 2026 income floor rose 23% in step with the minimum wage.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Colombia rejects nearly half of nomad applicants, but they return as tourists, so Medellin's rent pressure holds.

Colombia's Type V digital-nomad visa (its dedicated remote-worker residence category) carried a rejection rate of roughly 42% in 2025, the highest of any major nomad visa, according to immigration-practitioner tracking rather than any Colombian government release. 1 For 2026 the monthly income floor rose about 23% in step with the minimum-wage rise, to roughly 1,400 to 1,450 US dollars, and health cover must now include medical repatriation; travel insurance no longer qualifies. 2

A two-in-five refusal rate functions as an invisible cap, achieved by administrative attrition rather than a headline threshold. Mexico reached the same end by a different route when it doubled most residency-visa fees with no guidance on the promised reduction . The Colombian floor is not nomad policy at all; it climbs because the minimum wage climbs, which gives it a political durability designed thresholds lack, since no one has to vote for the annual rise.

The rejections have not stopped the inflow, only its legal form. Foreigners now make up roughly one in four apartment purchases in Medellin, with prices in El Poblado and Laureles up 10 to 15% a year since 2023 and city rents up about 11% in 2025, on expat and investor-oriented sourcing rather than a national statistics office. 3 A one-bedroom flat in El Poblado runs 450 to 750 US dollars a month against a typical local income near 638; rejected applicants return on tourist-visa chains, keeping the rent pressure without the residence status.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Colombia offers a digital nomad visa called the Type V Visa (Visa Tipo V) for people who work remotely for employers or clients outside Colombia. In 2025, about 42% of all applications were rejected, making it one of the hardest nomad visas to obtain anywhere in the world. That 42% figure comes from immigration lawyers who track their cases, not from the Colombian government; Colombia's foreign ministry (Cancilleria) does not publish its own rejection statistics. For 2026, the income requirement went up about 23%, because Colombia ties it to the national minimum wage, which rises each January. Applicants now also need health insurance that includes medical repatriation, the kind that flies you home if you need hospital treatment, rather than standard travel insurance. Meanwhile, in Medellin, the city most popular with foreign workers, about one in four flat purchases is now made by a foreigner. In central neighbourhoods like El Poblado and Laureles, rents and prices have risen 10-15% every year since 2023, making them unaffordable for Colombians on local salaries.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Colombia's 42% rejection rate and auto-escalating income floor have two distinct structural causes. First, the Type V Visa income floor is explicitly linked to Colombia's national minimum wage (salario minimo legal vigente, SMLV), which rose roughly 9.5% in 2025 and a further estimated 6-7% for 2026.

This indexing was chosen for political consistency: it prevents any administration from being accused of setting a floor that does not keep pace with domestic living costs. The result is annual compounding that can price out applicants who passed the threshold in a prior year.

Second, Cancilleria's adjudication process concentrates scrutiny on the Medellin and Bogota applicant hubs, where the nomad concentration is highest. Consular officers in these offices have applied health cover requirements more strictly following a 2024 internal guidance note that has not been published.

The repatriation cover requirement replaced travel insurance as qualifying cover, reflecting genuine health-system pressure from high-volume emergency department use in El Poblado and Laureles, but it was implemented by Cancilleria instruction rather than by a reform of the underlying Type V regulations.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Rejected Type V applicants who return on tourist visa chains maintain rental pressure in El Poblado and Laureles without the compliance obligations of residence status, making the rejection mechanism self-defeating as a housing-pressure tool.

  • Consequence

    The minimum-wage-indexed floor will escalate automatically each January, compounding the real income bar by roughly 6-10% per year without any political decision required from Cancilleria.

First Reported In

Update #5 · Thailand halves visa-free entry

Travel and Tour World· 29 May 2026
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Colombia visa rejects two in five
A two-in-five refusal rate works as an invisible cap by administrative attrition, and the wage-pegged income floor escalates automatically every January without any nomad-policy vote.
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