Semana Santa (Holy Week) is Colombia's single biggest finca weekend of the year. The entire country shuts down, roads fill up, and every finca within driving distance of a major city books out weeks in advance. If you don't plan ahead, you'll be refreshing Airbnb on Palm Sunday watching prices double in real time. Here's how to get ahead of it.

The Semana Santa Finca Economy

Semana Santa typically falls in March or April. Most Colombians get Thursday and Friday off (Jueves Santo and Viernes Santo), but many take the entire week. That creates a 5–10 day window of peak finca demand — the highest of any period in the Colombian calendar, surpassing even Christmas and New Year's.

What this means for pricing: expect 50–100% surcharges over regular weekend rates. A finca that normally rents for $150/night on a Saturday may cost $250–300 during Semana Santa. Many properties require minimum stays of 3–5 nights during the holiday. And the best properties — the lakeside Guatapé houses, the premium Coffee Region haciendas — sell out 2–3 months in advance.

When to Book

Booking WindowWhat's AvailablePrice Impact
3+ months beforeFull selection, best propertiesStandard Semana Santa rates
6–8 weeks beforeGood selection, premium sold out+10–20%
2–4 weeks beforeLimited, mostly budget/remote+25–50%
Last weekScraps — cancellations only+50–100%
Pro Strategy

Book your Semana Santa finca in January. The best properties open their holiday calendars right after New Year's. Set calendar reminders for January 5–10 and start searching immediately. This is not an exaggeration — Colombians treat Semana Santa finca booking like Americans treat Super Bowl tickets.

Best Regions for Semana Santa

Hot-weather regions dominate Semana Santa bookings. Colombians want pools, sun, and heat after the city grind. The top picks:

Santa Fe de Antioquia — The Medellín crowd's top Semana Santa choice. Hot, colonial, walkable. Books out fastest. San Jerónimo / Sopetrán — Budget-friendly alternative to Santa Fe. Faster drive, more availability. Melgar — Bogotá's go-to. Resort-style fincas with waterparks and massive pools. Guatapé — Premium pick for groups wanting the lake experience. Highest prices during Semana Santa. Eje Cafetero — The international visitor favorite, but cooler weather means slightly less domestic demand during this period — which can work in your favor for availability.

Traffic Warning

Roads out of Medellín and Bogotá become gridlocked on the Wednesday and Thursday before Semana Santa. What normally takes 2 hours can stretch to 4–5. Leave early in the morning (before 7 AM) or late at night. The return trip on Easter Sunday or Monday is equally bad. Budget extra time and bring water, snacks, and a full tank of gas.

Budget Survival Tips

If you're price-sensitive, here are strategies for Semana Santa: book the earliest possible dates (Monday–Wednesday of Holy Week are cheaper than Thursday–Saturday), look at regions that aren't the top 3 (Mesa de los Santos, Lago Calima, and Carmen de Viboral have lower demand), consider the Eje Cafetero's cooler weather as a feature not a bug (domestic travelers avoid it, which means better availability for you), and always check local platforms before Airbnb — the price gap widens during peak periods.

Browse Available Fincas

Frequently Asked Questions

Ideally in January — the best properties open their Semana Santa calendars right after New Year's. Booking 3+ months in advance gives you the full selection at standard holiday rates. Waiting until 2–4 weeks before means limited options and 25–50% higher prices.

Expect 50–100% surcharges over regular weekend rates. A $150/night finca typically costs $225–300 during Semana Santa. Many properties also require minimum stays of 3–5 nights during the holiday period, which increases total cost.

The Eje Cafetero (Coffee Region) tends to have better availability than hot-weather regions because domestic travelers prefer heat during the holiday. This is an advantage for international visitors who appreciate the cooler climate. Mesa de los Santos and Lago Calima also have lower demand than the Antioquia and Cundinamarca corridors.