An established hotel, events and leisure estate on 12.6 hectares of commercial land — a value-add opportunity offered whole as Colombia reopens to private capital under a new, business-first government.
In June 2026, Colombian voters elected a security- and business-focused government. Markets responded immediately, and international analysts began re-rating the country. This estate is a way to take a position in that shift in a real, tangible asset — not a stock ticker.
President-elect Abelardo de la Espriella — "El Tigre" — won the June 21 runoff and takes office on 7 August 2026 on a platform of security, fiscal discipline and reopening to private capital. Colombian equities and the peso rallied on the result.
Days after the election, JP Morgan published an investment framework — Trade, Investment, Growth, Retrenchment, Enforcement — arguing the new administration could revive private investment. It is the bank's bullish *analysis* of where Colombia is headed, and it is being read closely by global capital.
Colombia's constitution gives foreign buyers the same property rights as citizens — no residency required, full title in your own name. A purchase at this scale also clears the threshold for a Colombian investor (Visa M) residency pathway.
Sitting on the high plateau outside Tunja, the estate combines a built hospitality and events complex — hotel rooms, two salons, conference space and leisure facilities — with 12.6 hectares of commercially zoned land, held in a single title. It operates today, and the real upside is in repositioning the operation and developing the land as the region grows.
Boyacá's capital corridor is gaining public and logistics infrastructure. Proximity to new civic anchors and a major storage complex is exactly the kind of catalyst that re-rates land value over a hold.
Offered as a single transaction, priced against the value of the built assets and the land. A current independent appraisal (avalúo comercial) and the title certificate anchor the price; operating details are shared with qualified parties under NDA.
Figures are indicative and provided for orientation only. They are not an appraisal, valuation or offer of securities. Buyers should commission their own due diligence and rely on the formal documentation in the data room.
Request access to the data room →Foreign individuals and entities hold the same property rights as Colombians. The estate sits in the central highlands — well outside any restricted border zone — and the land is zoned commercial / mixed-use, so the rural-farmland ownership debate simply doesn't apply here. Here's the path, end to end.
Register for a Colombian RUT/NIT with DIAN — doable from abroad. Required by notaries, registries and banks.
Move capital through the official FX market and register it with Banco de la República (Form 4) — your clean trail for repatriation and visa use.
A Colombian real-estate lawyer runs the title study on the Certificado de Tradición y Libertad and confirms AML/SARLAFT compliance.
Sign the deed (escritura pública) before a notary and register it. Title in your own name — plus an investor-visa pathway at this value.
This is general information, not legal or tax advice. US buyers in particular should note there is no comprehensive US–Colombia income-tax treaty; consult a cross-border attorney and accountant before transacting.
Tell us a little about your mandate and we'll send the full teaser, photography and — for qualified parties — data-room access. No obligation.