Best in cartagena tagged
Dinner
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Agua de León
Agua de León has one of the most striking interiors in Cartagena. The entrance is framed in brass, which stops you from the street before you even walk in. Inside, focused lighting shines directly onto each table, large half-circular mirrors line the walls backlit with a warm glow, and the whole space feels intimate and genuinely high-end. The menu is modern bistro with excellent seafood: lobster roll, tuna ceviche, burrata, and inventive cocktails that match the room’s ambition. There’s also a hamburger that has no business being as good as it is. Romantic and quiet on the inside, which makes it best for couples or small groups rather than louder, more boisterous evenings. There’s a small rooftop as well. Reservations recommended.
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Ajeno Rooftop at Hotel OSH
The rooftop at Hotel OSH in Getsemanà is one of those places that gets every detail right. Perched on the fifth floor, it looks down into the hotel's own internal courtyard pool below, which at nighttime creates a genuinely stunning visual that you don't find on any other rooftop in the city. The design blends modern architecture with colonial warmth in a way that feels considered rather than forced, which mirrors the neighborhood it sits in.
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Buena Vida MarisquerÃa & Rooftop
Buena Vida is all about celebrating Colombian flavors with a modern, elevated touch. The menu leans local but with plenty of polish—think traditional seafood and coastal dishes reimagined with upgraded ingredients and playful presentations. There’s seating on two air-conditioned floors that’s comfortable and lively, plus a rooftop that feels like its own little party, serving up gastro-style bites and city views when the weather cooperates.
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Carmen
Carmen is the Cartagena outpost of one of MedellÃn’s most celebrated restaurants, and it earns its reputation independently. Set in a stunning colonial courtyard in San Diego, a tree at the center, fairy lights overhead, and an open kitchen visible from the tables, it’s one of the most beautiful dining rooms in the city. The menu is modern Colombian Caribbean with a strong focus on local seafood and ingredients. The cocktail program is exceptional. If you want something special, the tasting menu (seven or nine courses) is the move: creative, locally rooted, and memorable. A dish or two occasionally push the inventiveness a little far, but the menu rotates and the overall level is high. Everything à la carte is equally solid. Reservations essential.
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Carta Ajena
Carta Ajena is inside OSH Hotel in Getsemanà and has built a reputation as one of the most consistently excellent brunch experiences in the city. The menu is creative and Caribbean-rooted, with inventive takes on familiar dishes that feel local rather than pandering to tourist tastes. Brunch runs until 3 p.m. on weekdays, making it one of the more generous windows in the city for a long, unhurried morning meal. The space is beautiful, the service is attentive, and the cocktail menu is as good as the food. Live saxophone performances add to the atmosphere on select evenings.
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Casa Mar
There's a blue chain-link fence on a street in Cartagena that you'd walk past a hundred times without a second thought. On one side: a fire station. On the other: a gas station mid-construction, the kind of half-built rebar-and-dust situation that makes you wonder if anyone's coming back to finish it. And then there's the fence itself. When we showed up there was barely a sign that anything exists beyond it. We'd actually been here before to jump on a boat, back when it was merely a dock. We had no idea.
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Casona Vida
Casona Vida is a beautiful brunch spot in the Centro Histórico, sister restaurant to Vida Coffee Shop, set in a stunning colonial space near the Iglesia de Santo Toribio. The menu leans toward healthier, more internationally-influenced options: the kind of brunch that appeals to visitors looking for quality ingredients and thoughtful preparation rather than a purely Colombian spread. Beautiful interior, a courtyard that feels more like a garden, and live music on weekend evenings. The Zona Norte location in Las Ramblas is equally good if you're in that part of the city. The walled city location can be a little hard to find, tucked off a side street from Plaza San Diego, so Google Maps is your friend.
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Celele
Celele has earned its place on the World’s 50 Best list, and once you sit down, it’s easy to see why. The menu reimagines Colombia’s native ingredients with precision and purpose. Each plate tells a story—where the elements come from, why they were chosen, and how they’ve been transformed into something completely new. It’s not traditional fare. Some locals even push back on it. But if you’re curious about Colombia’s culinary future, this is the place to start.
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Crepes & Waffles
Crepes & Waffles is the most Colombian restaurant in Colombia, which is a remarkable thing to say about a creperie founded in a Bogotá garage in 1980. Over 82% of its employees are women, the majority of them single mothers and heads of household, many of whom face significant barriers to employment elsewhere. The company is a certified B Corporation that pays above minimum wage, provides healthcare and housing support, and sources ingredients from small farming communities. Every meal here supports something real.
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deIndias Comedor & Copas
deIndias sits across from Parque Centenario, a short walk from the Clock Tower, one of those spots that feels like a proper local discovery even when you’ve been sent there by someone else. Chef José ‘El Chato’ Barbosa builds his menu around Colombian ingredients and territory, using smoking, curing, fermenting, and pickling to create dishes with real depth. The burrata starter is the one everyone comes back talking about. The rest of the menu is inventive and locally rooted, built around sharing. The cocktail program draws from their own small-batch distillery. There’s a rooftop that hosts live music, DJs, and dancing. Closed Sundays.
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Discos y Mariscos
We haven’t made it here yet, but it’s on the short list after multiple recommendations from people whose food opinions we take seriously. A contemporary seafood spot on Carrera 10b in GetsemanÃ, it’s been described as a celebration of fresh Caribbean flavors in a relaxed and vibrant setting: Colombian rhythms, freshly prepared ceviches, tacos, and cocktails. Early reviews are exceptional. The spicy green ceviche in particular has come up repeatedly. Opens at 4 p.m., closed Tuesdays. We’ll update this entry after we’ve been.
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Ely
Ely is the kind of brunch spot you keep coming back to, not because it's flashy but because it's consistently excellent. The menu leans lighter than most spots in the city, with great salads (a genuinely rare find in Cartagena), well-prepared breakfast options, and coffee that holds up on its own. The interior has a warm library-style feel that makes it equally good for a quiet solo breakfast or a relaxed meal with friends. A great option for kids too. The walled city location is our recommendation over Bocagrande, which gets significantly more crowded on weekends. Also works well for lunch if brunch hours have passed.
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Erre de Ramón Freixa
Erre proves Cartagena’s best dining isn’t only found in the historic center.
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Harry's Sasson
Housed in a restored colonial mansion with cascading greenery and an open-air courtyard, Harry Sasson offers a setting that’s just as elegant as the menu. You’ll find polished plates that blend Colombian ingredients with global technique — from fresh local seafood to beautifully executed wok-fried rice, Peruvian-style noodles, and vibrant ceviches. The seafood is the standout, but we love ordering a spread from the bar menu: things like fried crab croquettes, octopus, or grilled hearts of palm that are perfect for sharing. The cocktails lean classic and well-executed — more faithful than flashy — and everything is elevated without trying too hard.
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Lobo Del Mar
Lobo del Mar is one of those places that knows how to put on a show without losing sight of what matters: great food, great drinks, and a great vibe. Housed in a beautifully lit colonial building with contemporary touches, it’s the kind of spot where the warm brick and archways glow at night while a live band or DJ keeps things lively.
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Mar y Zielo
Mar y Zielo offers one of Cartagena’s most romantic dining experiences, right in the heart of the old city. Set in a beautifully restored colonial house, its candlelit stone walls and thoughtful design create an intimate, memorable atmosphere. The menu is