Mexico vs Colombia: Which Country Should You Choose?
Travel
Mexico City

Mexico vs Colombia: Which Country Should You Choose?

Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell
December 20, 2025 6 min read 26

Choose Mexico for: world-class food scene (tacos to high-end restaurants, $3-8 meals), established expat infrastructure, cultural depth (37,266 archaeological sites, Aztec/Mayan history), reliable infrastructure (metro/buses/Uber), proven business systems, climate diversity (tropical beaches to high-altitude spring weather). Choose Colombia for: lower costs (20-30% cheaper, Medellín $1,200-1,800/month vs. Mexico City $1,800-2,500), easier residency pathway (2 years to permanent residency vs. 4 years), warmer social culture (more openly friendly), clearest Spanish dialect (easier learning), improved safety reputation (Medellín safer than many US cities). Living in Mexico City, I've watched both countries attract expats, both offer compelling reasons to move, but the best choice depends on priorities: Mexico wins on infrastructure and food, Colombia wins on cost and social warmth, and many expats ultimately choose based on gut feeling after visiting both.

Climate & Geography

Mexico boasts diverse climates ranging from tropical beaches to high-altitude cities with spring-like weather year-round. Mexico City, at 7,380 feet elevation, maintains temperatures between 50-75°F throughout the year. Colombia offers similar diversity, with Medellín earning the nickname "City of Eternal Spring" due to its consistent 70-75°F temperatures.

Winner: Tie. Both offer excellent climates depending on your preferences. Mexico offers more variation; Colombia offers more consistency in highland regions.

Cost of Living

Mexico's cost varies dramatically by location. Mexico City runs $1,800-$2,500/month for a comfortable lifestyle. Beach towns like Puerto Vallarta or Playa del Carmen can stretch to $2,500+. Remote areas stay under $1,500.

Colombia is generally cheaper. Medellín supports a comfortable lifestyle at $1,200-$1,800/month. Bogotá runs $1,500-$2,000. Smaller cities drop to $800-$1,200. Your dollar stretches further in Colombia overall.

Winner: Colombia. Roughly 20-30% cheaper than equivalent Mexican cities.

Healthcare System

Mexico offers both public (IMSS) and private healthcare. Private healthcare is excellent and affordable, doctor visits run $40-$80, specialists $60-$120. Quality rivals U.S. standards at a fraction of the cost.

Colombia's healthcare system ranks among Latin America's best. Private insurance costs $60-$150/month for comprehensive coverage. Public healthcare (SISBEN) is available to residents. Quality is excellent, particularly in major cities.

Winner: Mexico. More established expat-friendly private healthcare infrastructure, though Colombia is catching up.

Visa & Residency

Mexico offers straightforward temporary residency (4 years) with financial requirements around $2,700/month income. Permanent residency comes after 4 years. Citizenship is achievable after 5 years of permanent residency.

Colombia provides similar pathways. V visa (temporary resident) requires ~$800/month income. Permanent residency is available after 2 years. Citizenship requires 5 years of permanent residency.

Winner: Colombia. Easier initial requirements and faster path to permanent residency (2 years vs 4 years).

Safety & Security

Mexico's safety varies dramatically by region. Mexico City is generally safe in expat-friendly neighborhoods like Roma, Condesa, and Juárez. Northern border states carry higher risk. Coastal resort areas are typically secure.

Colombia has shed its 1990s reputation. Medellín is now considered safer than many U.S. cities, with low expat crime rates. Bogotá is secure in upscale neighborhoods. Cartagena and Santa Marta are tourist-safe but require standard precautions.

Winner: Colombia. Perception has improved dramatically; safety in major expat hubs rivals or exceeds Mexican equivalents.

Culture & Social Integration

Mexico offers deep historical roots, Aztec ruins, colonial architecture, pre-Hispanic traditions. The culture is family-oriented, and expats can integrate into vibrant communities. Spanish learning is essential but doable.

Colombia's culture is warm and welcoming. Colombians are known for friendliness and openness to outsiders. Music, dance, and celebration are central to daily life. Spanish proficiency helps but isn't as critical as in Mexico.

Winner: Colombia. Slightly more welcoming to foreigners; less emphasis on Spanish proficiency for daily life.

Food & Dining

Mexico has world-class cuisine, from street tacos to high-end restaurants. Mexico City rivals any global city for food diversity. Cost is reasonable: $3-$8 for excellent meals.

Colombian cuisine is simpler but quality is good. Medellín and Bogotá offer international options. Average meal costs $4-$6. Less culinary variety than Mexico but good value.

Winner: Mexico. Superior culinary scene and more diverse dining options.

Infrastructure & Development

Mexico has more developed infrastructure, reliable internet, modern transportation, established business systems. Mexico City has metro, buses, and Uber. Real estate development is mature.

Colombia's infrastructure is improving rapidly. Internet reliability varies more than Mexico. Major cities have good transportation. Real estate is developing but less mature than Mexico.

Winner: Mexico. More established infrastructure overall.

Related Mexico City Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Mexico or Colombia cheaper for expats?
Colombia is 20-30% cheaper than Mexico overall. Medellín: $1,200-1,800/month comfortable living vs. Mexico City $1,800-2,500. Bogotá: $1,500-2,000 vs. Mexico beach towns $2,500+. Smaller Colombian cities: $800-1,200. Mexico offers more variation in costs by location; Colombia consistently offers better value across regions. Winner: Colombia for budget-conscious expats.
Which has better healthcare: Mexico or Colombia?
Mexico wins for established expat-friendly private healthcare infrastructure: doctor visits $40-80, specialists $60-120, quality rivaling US standards. Colombia's healthcare ranks among Latin America's best: private insurance $60-150/month comprehensive coverage, public SISBEN for residents, excellent quality in major cities. Both offer great options; Mexico has more mature expat infrastructure.
Is it easier to get residency in Mexico or Colombia?
Colombia offers easier path: V visa (temporary) requires ~$800/month income, permanent residency after 2 years, citizenship after 5 years permanent residency. Mexico: temporary residency requires $2,700/month income, permanent residency after 4 years, citizenship after 5 years permanent. Winner: Colombia for lower requirements and faster permanent residency (2 vs. 4 years).
Which country is safer for expats: Mexico or Colombia?
Colombia has improved dramatically: Medellín safer than many US cities, low expat crime rates; Bogotá secure in upscale neighborhoods. Mexico varies by region: Mexico City safe in Roma/Condesa/Juárez, northern border states higher risk, coastal resorts typically secure. Winner: Colombia—perception dramatically improved, safety in major expat hubs rivals/exceeds Mexico City equivalents.
Written by
Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell
United States From Austin, United States | Mexico Living in Mexico City, Mexico

Austin tech refugee. Mexico City resident since 2014. Decade in CDMX. Working toward citizenship. UX consultant. I write about food, culture, and the invisible rules nobody tells you about.

View Full Profile

Found this helpful?

Join the conversation. Share your own tips, experiences, or questions with the expat community.

Write Your Own Blog
26
People Read This

Your blog could reach thousands too

Back to Mexico City Blogs