Medellín neighborhoods map
Medellín from above — the Aburrá Valley and its main neighborhoods

Medellín sits in a long, narrow valley running roughly north-south, with neighborhoods stacked up the hillsides on both sides. The city’s shape matters when planning a trip — most attractions are within a 20-minute Uber of each other, but the elevation change between neighborhoods is significant. This page covers the neighborhoods, transit lines, and key landmarks.

The Aburrá Valley

The whole metro area sits inside the Aburrá Valley — a single river valley about 60 km long. The Medellín River runs north–south down the middle, and the Metro line runs alongside it. The valley walls climb steeply on both sides; the higher you go, the cooler it gets. El Poblado and Laureles are on the valley floor; Comuna 13 and Santa Elena are on the slopes; Parque Arví is on the rim at 2,500 m.

Aburrá Valley city layout

Main Tourist Neighborhoods

El Poblado sits on the southeast slope of the valley. Provenza is at its center; Calle 10 to the north; Castropol and Manila to the east higher up; Las Palmas climbing further still toward the rim. The neighborhood is hilly throughout.

Laureles sits on the western valley floor, north of Estadio. Flat, gridded, low-rise. La 70 is the main entertainment artery. Plaza de Laureles is the social heart.

Centro is the historic civic core, north of El Poblado, west of the river. Plaza Botero, Catedral Metropolitana, Palacio de la Cultura, Museo de Antioquia all within walking distance. Working-class daytime; quiets after sunset.

Envigado is south of El Poblado, at the southern edge of the valley. Suburban, residential, the favorite for longer-term stays.

Metro & Metrocable Lines

The Metro is one of South America’s cleanest, easiest urban transit systems. Line A runs north-south down the valley floor; Line B runs east-west through Centro. The cable cars (Metrocables) extend service up the hillsides:

K-line (north): rises into the Santo Domingo neighborhood; spectacular city views.

J-line (west): includes the San Javier station that’s your gateway to Comuna 13.

L-line (east): an extension that climbs from Santa Elena up to Parque Arví. Costs slightly more than standard Metro fare.

Medellín Metrocable cable car

Key Landmarks

Plaza Botero — Centro, Carrera 52 / Calle 52. Museo de Antioquia — right next to Plaza Botero. Catedral Metropolitana — Parque de Berrío, 1 block west. Pueblito Paisa — Cerro Nutibara, just south of Centro. Comuna 13 escalators — San Javier station + 5-minute walk uphill. El Tesoro mall — upper El Poblado, the city’s upmarket shopping center. El Castillo — also upper El Poblado, a museum-and-gardens estate.

Day Trips Outside the Valley

Guatapé — 2 hours northeast. Jardín — 3 hours south. Santa Fe de Antioquia — 1.5 hours northwest (colonial town, hot and dry). Coffee farms — 1–2 hours scattered around the surrounding hills.

Where to Stay by Map

The full neighborhood comparison covers who should stay where. To browse hotels by location:

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Tours That Map the City

City tours that visit multiple landmarks across the valley: