Sick in Medellín? How to See a Doctor as a Tourist
Medellín has become one of Latin America’s most popular destinations — digital nomads, backpackers, foodies and cultural travelers all converge on a city that’s reinvented itself over the past two decades. Getting sick in Medellín as a tourist is never fun, but the city is better equipped for it than most visitors expect.
Here’s everything you need to know about getting medical care in Medellín as a tourist: which clinics work for foreigners, what it costs, whether you’ll find English-speaking doctors, and how to get a prescription without leaving your Airbnb in El Poblado.
Sick in Medellín and need a doctor right now?
Online consultation with a licensed doctor — diagnosis and prescription in under 15 minutes. Available in English, 24/7 from anywhere in Medellín.
CONSULT NOW — €30Healthcare in Medellín for tourists — the basics
Medellín has one of the best private healthcare systems in Colombia. The city’s investment in health infrastructure over the past 20 years has produced quality hospitals and clinics — most concentrated in the south of the city, close to El Poblado where most tourists stay.
As a foreign tourist, you don’t have access to Colombia’s public EPS system — it’s for Colombian affiliates only. Your options are private clinics and hospitals, where you pay directly or through travel insurance. There’s also a growing market for medical tourism in Medellín, which means English-friendly services are more common than in other Colombian cities.
Emergency number in Colombia: 123 — works nationwide for ambulance, police and fire. For the Red Cross: 132. For non-urgent medical needs, private clinics and TravelDoctores are your first option.
Your medical options as a tourist in Medellín
Best private clinics for tourists in Medellín
- Clínica Las Américas: well-equipped private hospital in southwest Medellín, not far from El Poblado. Good reputation with expats and medical tourists. Has some English-speaking staff.
- Clínica El Rosario (El Tesoro): in the upper El Tesoro area, popular with the local upper-middle class and foreigners. High standard of care.
- Clínica Medellín: established private hospital with several locations across the city. Quality care, mainly in Spanish.
- IPS Universitaria: university-affiliated clinic, slightly more accessible in cost, good general care.
Not feeling well in Medellín? Don’t spend your day in a waiting room.
Video consultation with a licensed doctor · English guaranteed · prescription to your phone · available from El Poblado, Laureles or anywhere in Medellín.
GET PRESCRIPTION — €30Most common health issues for tourists in Medellín
- Traveler’s diarrhea: new food environments, tap water exposure and unfamiliar bacteria are the usual culprits. Medellín’s food scene is excellent but the change in microbiome can hit hard the first few days.
- Respiratory infections: the famous “eternal spring” climate hides sharp temperature differences between indoor AC and outdoor warmth. This gap causes frequent throat and sinus infections in tourists.
- UTIs (urinary tract infections): dehydration and travel stress are risk factors. Requires antibiotic prescription — easily managed via online consultation.
- Dengue: Medellín itself is at 1,495m — not a high-risk zone — but surrounding valleys (Envigado, Itagüí, Santa Fe de Antioquia) are tropical and dengue is present. Use DEET if venturing outside the city.
- Skin infections: minor cuts, insect bites and humidity can lead to bacterial skin infections that need topical or oral antibiotics.
- Hangover-related dehydration: Medellín’s nightlife reputation is well-earned. Alcohol plus heat plus altitude equals significant dehydration risk. Oral rehydration salts are your friend.
Dengue alert: sudden high fever (39°C+), severe muscle and joint pain, and rash appearing 3-7 days after the fever starts are dengue warning signs. If you’ve been in tropical areas around Medellín, see a doctor — dengue requires close monitoring and can worsen rapidly without treatment.
English-speaking doctors in Medellín
Medellín’s growing medical tourism industry means English-friendly services are more available here than in other Colombian cities. The El Poblado district has the highest concentration of bilingual medical services, including some private specialist offices that advertise in English.
That said, English is not guaranteed even in private clinics — and emergency situations don’t always give you time to find the right clinic. TravelDoctores offers English-language consultations available 24/7, which means you have immediate access to a doctor who speaks your language at any hour.
Pharmacies in Medellín for tourists
Cruz Verde, Farmatodo and Drogas La Rebaja are the main pharmacy chains in Medellín with multiple locations across El Poblado, Laureles and the city center. Many have 24-hour branches. You can present a digital prescription (shown on your phone screen) and most pharmacists in tourist areas will dispense the medication without requiring a paper copy.
💬 Real case: A British digital nomad working from El Poblado developed a classic strep throat — high fever, severely swollen tonsils, difficulty swallowing — on a Friday night. The private clinic nearby had a 3-hour wait. He contacted TravelDoctores at 9pm. The doctor confirmed strep throat based on the video examination and issued a prescription for amoxicillin. He found a 24-hour Cruz Verde two blocks away. By Monday, back to work.
How TravelDoctores works from Medellín
Sick in Medellín and need care now?
Licensed doctor in English · Diagnosis and prescription in 15 min · From El Poblado, Laureles or anywhere in Medellín · 24/7.
CONSULT NOW — €30Frequently asked questions: doctors in Medellín for tourists
Yes, especially in El Poblado and Laureles. Several private clinics have bilingual staff. For guaranteed 24/7 English care without leaving your accommodation, TravelDoctores offers online consultations with English-speaking licensed doctors.
Clínica Las Américas, Clínica El Rosario (El Tesoro) and Clínica Medellín are the most recommended private clinics for tourists. For non-urgent issues, TravelDoctores provides online care in under 15 minutes without requiring you to travel.
Medellín is at 1,495 meters — not high enough to cause true altitude sickness in healthy people. Some may feel mildly short of breath the first day, but it passes quickly. It’s nothing like Cusco or Bogotá’s altitude effect.
Private consultation: 70,000–250,000 COP (€15–€57). ER visits cost significantly more. TravelDoctores offers online consultations with prescription for €30, available 24/7.
Traveler’s diarrhea, respiratory infections (from temperature changes between AC and outdoors), UTIs, skin infections and dengue risk in surrounding tropical valleys. Most of these can be evaluated and treated via online consultation without visiting a clinic.
Sick in Medellín? A doctor is 15 minutes away.
Online consultation with a licensed English-speaking doctor.
Diagnosis and prescription sent to your phone. €30 · No waiting room · 24/7.
Need a dedicated English-speaking doctor in Medellín? Visit our English-speaking doctor in Medellín service, available 24/7.






