Last updated: April 2026. Foreigners moving to Colombia hit the word “estrato” within their first week, usually attached to a utility bill, a rental listing, or a mild real-estate humblebrag. It’s one of the most misunderstood features of Colombian life. This guide explains what estratos actually are, how they’re assigned, what they cost you (and what they save you), and how to read them correctly in Cartagena.
Understanding Colombia’s Estrato System
What’s in this guide
- What the estrato system actually is
- The six strata, what they mean
- How estrato affects utility bills
- What else estrato affects
- Estrato by Cartagena neighborhood
- How to check the estrato of a specific address
- Common misconceptions
- What this all means for a foreigner moving to Cartagena
- FAQ
- Further reading on this site
What the estrato system actually is
The estrato socioeconómico is a classification applied to residential dwellings, not to people. Every home in urban Colombia is assigned an estrato from 1 to 6, based on the physical characteristics of the building and its surroundings. Its primary legal function is cross-subsidization of public utilities: lower-estrato homes pay subsidized rates; higher-estrato homes pay surcharges that fund those subsidies.
The system was formalized in Ley 142 de 1994 (the Domiciliary Public Services Law) and refined by CONPES and DANE methodologies. Classification is carried out by each municipality using a national methodology and published through municipal planning offices. DANE coordinates national standards.
Crucial point to understand up front: the estrato describes the house, not the household. A retired schoolteacher living in a flat she bought forty years ago can live in estrato 5, while a young professional renting in the same block might live in estrato 6, a block over in estrato 4. It’s the dwelling that’s classified, not the occupant.
The six strata, what they mean
- Estrato 1, Bajo-bajo: lowest income. Typical housing: self-built, limited services, often on urban periphery.
- Estrato 2, Bajo: low income. Basic formal housing, full services, older neighborhoods.
- Estrato 3, Medio-bajo: lower middle class. Standard formal housing, most Colombian urban homes fall in 2 or 3.
- Estrato 4, Medio: middle class. Larger apartments, better finishes, full neighborhood amenities.
- Estrato 5, Medio-alto: upper middle. Modern condominiums, doorman service, gated developments.
- Estrato 6, Alto: high. Premium neighborhoods, large homes, private security, newest developments.
In 2024, roughly 75% of Colombian households lived in estratos 1 to 3; ~20% in estrato 4; and ~5% in estratos 5 to 6 combined. The system is a crude instrument, imperfect at the edges, but captures the broad socioeconomic shape of Colombian cities.
How estrato affects utility bills
This is the practical meat of the system. Under Ley 142, utility tariffs are structured so that higher-estrato users subsidize lower-estrato users on a base consumption (the consumo básico). Consumption above the subsistence threshold is billed at market rate regardless of estrato.
Typical subsidy/surcharge schedule (values shift periodically; indicative 2026 figures):
- Estrato 1: ~50% subsidy (you pay ~50% of the base rate)
- Estrato 2: ~40% subsidy
- Estrato 3: ~15% subsidy
- Estrato 4: no subsidy, no surcharge (pays cost)
- Estrato 5: ~+20% surcharge
- Estrato 6: ~+20% surcharge
This applies to electricity (Afinia in Cartagena), water and sewage (Aguas de Cartagena, known as Acuacar), natural gas (Surtigas), and fixed-line phone / internet (though the last has partially drifted away from estrato-based pricing as competition grew).
Impact on a Cartagena expat’s bills: an apartment in estrato 6 Castillogrande or El Laguito easily runs COP 600k-900k/month in combined utilities if you use A/C heavily, while the same consumption pattern in estrato 4 Manga or Crespo might be COP 350k-550k.
What else estrato affects
- Public-transport subsidies for low-estrato households in some cities (Transcaribe in Cartagena does not currently apply estrato discounts).
- Access to certain government programs, Familias en Acción, housing subsidies (VIS/VIP), cash transfers, targeted at estratos 1 to 3.
- School placement in some public schools, sometimes tied to residential estrato.
- EPS contribution base: does not directly depend on estrato. Health contributions are based on declared income.
- Property tax (impuesto predial): calculated on cadastral value, not estrato, but cadastral value correlates with estrato.
- Private insurance and financial services: some banks and insurers quietly use estrato as a proxy variable for risk.
- Social signaling: Colombians absolutely do use estrato as shorthand for social class in conversation. The government has debated renaming or reforming the system for exactly this reason.
Estrato by Cartagena neighborhood
Neighborhood-by-neighborhood estrato can be granular, even the block matters. Broad strokes for the expat-relevant areas:
- Castillogrande: estrato 6. The peninsula’s waterfront residential area, quieter than Bocagrande.
- El Laguito: estrato 6 (some 5). Tip of the Bocagrande peninsula, high-rise residential and hotels.
- Bocagrande: estrato 5 to 6, depending on block. The classic high-rise tourist/expat corridor.
- Manga: estrato 4 to 5. Historic residential island, large old homes and newer mid-rise.
- Crespo: estrato 4 to 5. Quiet residential strip between the airport and the sea, gaining favor with expats.
- Marbella: estrato 4. Beachfront just north of the walled city, residential mid-rise.
- El Cabrero: estrato 3 to 4. Lagoon-side neighborhood just north of Centro.
- Pie de la Popa: estrato 3 to 4. Inland of Manga, mixed residential and commercial.
- Centro (Ciudad Amurallada): mostly commercial and short-term rental; residential blocks estrato 3 to 4.
- Getsemaní: estrato 2 to 3. Walled-city-adjacent, increasingly gentrified.
- Torices, Canapote: estrato 2 to 3.
- La Boquilla: estrato 1 to 2. Afro-Cartagenero fishing village on the northern beach strip; rapidly changing as towers push north.
For a fuller read on who lives where and what each neighborhood feels like, see our neighborhoods guide.
How to check the estrato of a specific address
- Look at a utility bill. Afinia (electricity), Acuacar (water), or Surtigas (gas) bills print the estrato near the property address. This is the fastest check.
- Ask the landlord or portero. Everyone who rents or sells a property knows the estrato.
- Cartagena municipal planning office, Secretaría de Planeación Distrital publishes estrato layers.
- DANE provides national methodology reference: dane.gov.co.
Common misconceptions
- “Estrato measures income.” Not directly. It measures housing characteristics in a neighborhood. People with high incomes sometimes live in estrato 4 for historical or family reasons; retirees in older estrato 6 flats can be cash-poor.
- “Higher estrato is always better.” Higher estrato means higher utility bills and higher property tax. For some expats, estrato 4 neighborhoods like Manga or Crespo offer the best combination of cost and livability.
- “Estrato is assigned to me.” The classification is attached to the dwelling, not to you personally. Move, and your estrato changes with the address.
- “Estrato determines what schools my kids go to.” Mostly no, especially in private schools. Some public schools do use geographic zoning that correlates with estrato.
- “The system is being abolished.” There have been proposals, DANE has explored an income-based alternative, but as of 2026, estratos remain the basis for utility cross-subsidy. Reforms inch forward.
What this all means for a foreigner moving to Cartagena
- Read the estrato when you see a listing. It tells you the utility-cost tier and gives a quick signal of the neighborhood character. Ask if it’s not listed.
- Budget utilities accordingly. Same apartment size, estrato 6 costs substantially more per month in utilities than estrato 4.
- Don’t over-index on estrato as a prestige number. The best day-to-day neighborhoods for expats (Manga, Crespo, parts of Bocagrande) span 4 to 5, not always 6.
- Verify with a bill. Listings sometimes overstate. The Afinia or Acuacar bill is the source of truth.
- If you’re estrato 5 or 6 and will be in Colombia long enough to care about tax, check if a lower-estrato area suits you as well. Utility savings of COP 300k/month × 12 months is real money.
FAQ
Can I change the estrato of my home? Only via formal reclassification by the municipal planning office, and only if the neighborhood’s physical character has changed materially. Individual homeowners can’t just request a change.
What estrato is my Airbnb? Hosts usually know; the bills will show it. For a short stay it doesn’t matter much, host absorbs utilities.
Does my rent include utilities? In most Cartagena long-term leases, no, utilities are paid separately by the tenant. This makes the estrato highly relevant.
Will my tenant status affect the estrato? No. The estrato attaches to the property regardless of whether it’s owner-occupied or rented.
Is there an estrato 0 or estrato 7? No. The scale is 1 to 6. Some rural homes are unclassified; unclassified homes are billed at a default rate.
How are new buildings classified? By the planning office, using the neighborhood’s profile and the building’s own characteristics (materials, size, amenities, finishes).
Do I need to know my estrato to open a bank account or sign a lease? The lease will state it. Banks don’t ask directly; they look at utility bills (which show estrato) as proof of residence.
Does the estrato affect property prices? Yes, both because the neighborhood is priced accordingly and because future owners will face those utility surcharges or subsidies.
Are estratos the same in all Colombian cities? The 1 to 6 framework is national, but classifications are city-specific. Estrato 5 in Medellín’s El Poblado and estrato 5 in Bogotá’s Chicó aren’t identical in character, each reflects local standards.
Further reading on this site
Cartagena neighborhoods, where to live
Banking and money
Informational only. Subsidy/surcharge percentages are set by national and local regulation and adjusted periodically; always verify current figures on your utility bill and through MinVivienda or DANE. Last review: April 2026.
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