Edificio Minorca Ph, Carrera 18, Bogotá, Colombia
Bogota, Colombia
Guide Price
$232,637
850,000,000 COP
PROPERTY TYPE
Condo
BEDROOMS
2
BATHROOMS
3
Description
Venta Dúplex en Santa Bárbara | Edificio Minorca – 94 m² de Diseño y Automatización
DESCRIPCIÓN: Presentamos este exclusivo apartamento dúplex en el Edificio Minorca, una pieza inmobiliaria única en Santa Bárbara. La propiedad tuvo remodelación integral de alto nivel, donde la estética de lujo se fusiona con la ingeniería acústica y la domótica, garantizando un refugio de paz en el corazón financiero y residencial de la zona.
Acabados:
Ingeniería Acústica: Sistema de insonorización profesional, ideal para quienes priorizan el silencio y la privacidad.
Domótica: Cortinas automatizadas con control remoto y puerta de seguridad blindada.
Carpintería y Pisos: Renovación total de carpintería (madera y closets) con materiales de alta densidad y pisos de diseño contemporáneo.
Distribución Funcional:
Área Privada: 2 habitaciones espaciosas.
Baños: 2 baños completos y no de visitas.
Parqueadero: 1 de dimensiones generosas (vehículo grande).
Experiencia Club House (Edificio Menorca): El edificio ofrece un estilo de vida tipo hotelero con servicios incluidos:
Bienestar: Gimnasio dotado, sauna y terraza BBQ.
Social: Salones comunales de alta capacidad.
Eficiencia: Lavandería comunitaria dotada de uso gratuito (El apartamento no cuenta con zona de lavado)
VIDEO DISPONIBLE: Haz clic en el icono de Video junto a las fotos para ver el recorrido completo.
Location
Open in Google MapsLiving in Bogota
Colombia's capital is remarkably affordable -- you can live comfortably on $2,000/month with rent, dining, and healthcare costing a fraction of US prices. Sitting at 8,600 feet elevation in the Andes, the climate is cool and spring-like year-round (not the tropical heat you might expect). The expat community is Colombia's largest, and locals are welcoming, but Spanish is essential outside upscale neighborhoods, and you need to be street-smart about safety.
Eternal spring weather in Medellín, salsa music drifting from every doorway, and a warmth from Colombians that makes you wonder why you ever thought strangers were something to avoid.
Visa
Digital Nomad Visa (Type V) — requires proof of ~$900-1,000/mo income for 3 months, health insurance, and clean criminal record. Valid up to 2 years. Retirement Visa (Type M) — requires $750+/mo pension or 3x minimum wage. 2026 update: approvals for both have tightened; IT/tech workers are favored for digital nomad.
Learn more: The Complete Guide to Moving to Colombia→Key Fact
Colombia's digital nomad visa approvals have become unpredictable in 2025-2026 — the government now favors applicants in IT or with visible foreign employers. Safety has improved dramatically in major cities but varies by neighborhood.
Learn more: The Cheapest Cities to Live Abroad→Colombia at a glance
How Colombia scores for American expats
Cost of buying in Colombia
Estimated fees and ongoing costs for this property
Closing Costs
3-5% of purchase price
- ·Registration tax: 1.67%
- ·Notary fees: 0.3%
- ·Legal fees: $1,000-2,000
- ·Registration: 0.5-1%
Annual Costs
Property Tax
0.3-1.2% of cadastral value (predial)
Insurance
$200-500/yr
HOA / Condo Fees
$50-200/mo for apartments (administración)
Good to Know
Agent Fees
Seller pays (3%)
Foreign Buyer Note
No restrictions on foreign buyers. Property ownership can support visa applications. Title insurance is not common — hire a good lawyer for due diligence.
Legal help in Colombia
Hire your own attorney — not the seller's. We'll match you with a vetted local lawyer.
Need a local attorney in Colombia?
We'll connect you with an independent, English-speaking real estate attorney experienced with foreign buyers. Not the seller's lawyer — yours.
Contact Agent
VIVIENDI
Next steps for moving to Colombia
Interested in this property? Here's how to move forward.
Understand the buying rules
Foreign ownership laws vary wildly by country. Some welcome you, others restrict or ban foreign buyers entirely.
Sort out your visa
Owning property doesn't give you the right to live there. Research residency options before you buy.
Plan your finances
Understand currency risk, international wire transfers, and whether you can get a local mortgage.
Know your tax obligations
US citizens are taxed on worldwide income. You'll need to file US taxes from abroad and may owe local taxes too.
Set up healthcare
Medicare doesn't cover you overseas. You'll need international health insurance or a local plan.
Run the full checklist
Banking, mail forwarding, power of attorney, pet import rules — the complete pre-move checklist.
FincaRaiz.com.co
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