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Overview
Cartagena was the most important port in Spain’s Caribbean empire — the gateway through which looted gold and silver passed on its way across the Atlantic — and for two centuries every rival power in the world tried to take it. The fortifications they forced the Spanish to build are still standing, and this private tour is designed to make you understand them rather than simply photograph them. Smaller, slower, and guided by someone who knows the difference between the story visitors expect and the one that actually happened.
From Castillo San Felipe’s acoustic tunnel system and its gunpowder chambers designed to collapse the ground beneath advancing infantry, through the Walled City’s 208 years of layered colonial architecture, to Getsemaní — the working-class neighborhood outside the walls whose residents actually forced Cartagena’s declaration of independence in 1811 — the day ends at La Popa convent, 150 meters above the city, where the full geography of everything you’ve walked through finally becomes visible at once.
Itinerary
Highlights
Walk through Castillo San Felipe de Barajas — the largest Spanish fortress ever built in the Americas — and descend into its tunnel network with a guide who knows the real military engineering story behind each passageway.
Stroll the Walled City's cobblestone streets past Santo Domingo Square, the Cathedral of Santa Catalina de Alejandría, and colonial balconies draped in bougainvillea, with your guide connecting each stop to Cartagena's path to independence.
Enter Getsemaní — the neighborhood that supplied the foot soldiers of Colombian independence and now leads the country in street art — and hear its story of resilience told through its murals and its people.
Taste Cartagena before you leave: a warm arepa de huevo and fresh coconut water, the two foods most closely associated with the city's Caribbean identity.
Ascend to the Convent of La Popa at 150 meters above sea level — Cartagena's highest point — for a 360-degree view over the Walled City, the bay, and the Caribbean islands beyond (included with the La Popa tour option).
What's Included
Private certified bilingual guide (English/Spanish) for the full tour
Private transportation throughout
Entrance ticket to Castillo San Felipe de Barajas
Entrance ticket to Convent of La Popa (if La Popa tour option selected at booking)
Traditional snack — arepa de huevo and coconut water
What's Excluded
Lunch
Gratuites (optional)
Personal expenses and extra attractions not listed
Know before you book
Your guide picks you up from your hotel or Airbnb — be at the main entrance or lobby 15 minutes before your tour start time. Pickup zones include Centro Histórico, Getsemaní, Bocagrande, Castillogrande, and Laguito.
Cartagena is hot and humid year-round, with temperatures typically between 28–34°C. Light, breathable clothing is essential. Bring sunglasses, a hat, and sunscreen — several stops involve time in direct sun.
The walking sections — especially in the Walled City and Getsemaní — cover cobblestone streets. Comfortable flat-soled shoes are strongly recommended. This tour is not wheelchair or stroller accessible.
The La Popa stop is only included if you select the La Popa tour option at booking. The standard tour is 5.5 hours without La Popa; the full tour with La Popa is approximately 6.5 hours. Item 5: The Cartagena Gold Museum is closed on Mondays — if your tour falls on a Monday, your guide will suggest an equivalent alternative.
Bring cash for any additional purchases, personal snacks, or souvenirs in the Walled City markets. The included snack (arepa de huevo and coconut water) is provided — lunch is not.
More Info
Cancellation Window
12 hours before starting date
Difficulty
Easy
Cancellation policy
Free cancellation up to 12 hours before departure. Cancellations made within 12 hours of the tour start time are non-refundable.
Guest Reviews
Why Book With Cielo
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Every tour is private — your guide and vehicle are yours alone, not shared with strangers on a bus schedule.
You are booking directly with a Colombian-owned company
Our guides are English-speaking Colombian locals — people who know Cartagena's history personally, not contractors reading from a laminated card.
Other Info
FAQs
The standard 5.5-hour tour covers San Felipe Fortress, the Walled City, and Getsemaní with the arepa de huevo snack stop. The 6.5-hour option adds the ascent to the Convent of La Popa — Cartagena's highest point — with panoramic views over the bay and Caribbean coast. The La Popa entrance ticket is included when you select this option at booking. If it's your first time in Cartagena, the full 6.5-hour version is worth it.
Yes — contact us directly when booking to confirm your terminal and arrival time. We'll coordinate pickup and build the tour around your port schedule to make sure you're back before your ship departs.
The tunnels are real and you walk through them. They weren't escape routes — that's a popular myth. They were engineered as acoustic listening passages (to detect troop movement above ground) and explosive chambers designed to be detonated under advancing infantry. Your guide explains the actual military logic, which is considerably more interesting than the pirate story. The upper ramparts give you one of the best views in Cartagena.
The tour involves moderate walking — mostly flat cobblestone streets in the Walled City and Getsemaní, with some inclines at San Felipe Fortress and at La Popa (if selected). The pace is relaxed with regular stops. It's suitable for most fitness levels. Not wheelchair or stroller accessible due to cobblestones and fortress steps.
Getsemaní is the neighborhood outside the Walled City where Cartagena's working class, freed enslaved people, and artisans lived during the colonial era. On the night of November 10, 1811, it was Getsemaní's residents who gathered in the streets and forced the declaration of independence from Spain — not the wealthy merchants inside the walls. Today the neighborhood is known for its political street murals and its ongoing tension between community identity and rapid gentrification from tourism. Your guide walks you through both the history and the present.
Yes — the arepa de huevo and coconut water stop is included in both the 5.5-hour and the 6.5-hour La Popa option.