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Villa de Leyva
Attraction · Colombia

Villa de Leyva

Colombia's greatest colonial square, a living-museum town preserved in stone and whitewash, and a gateway to ancient Muisca civilisation in the Boyacá highlands.

From £3,595 Next 17 Aug 2026
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Tours that visit Villa de Leyva

Hand-crafted small-group journeys and private tailor-made itineraries that include this experience.

Colombia and Panama – Bridging the Americas
Colombia
Guaranteed Departure
4.9
Small Group
28 Days

Colombia and Panama – Bridging the Americas

This epic 28-day adventure through Colombia and Panama reveals the diverse cultural, historical, and natural wonders of two of Latin America’s most captivating nations. Beginning in Bogota, this itinerary is one of our popular Colombia Tours, taking you through the country’s colonial heritage, the spectacular Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá, and the beautifully preserved town of Villa de Leyva. Journey south through the Tatacoa Desert, the archaeological treasures of San Agustin, and the elegant “White City” of Popayan, before continuing into the lush Coffee Region, where traditional fincas, sugar plantations, and rolling hills define the landscape. Crossing into Panama, explore the contrasts of Panama City – from the ruins of Panamá Viejo to the grandeur of the Panama Canal. There’s no shortage of incredible experiences in Panama City – meet the Indigenous Emberá and Ngäbe-Buglé communities. Discover the highlands of Boquete, the wildlife-rich cloud forests of La Amistad International Park, and the idyllic Caribbean islands of Bocas del Toro with their coral reefs and tropical tranquillity. Blending archaeology, culture, coffee, and coastlines, this immersive journey captures the essence of Latin America at its most authentic and varied.

From

£6,545

  • LocationBoyacá department, central Colombia
  • Altitude2,149 m / 7,051 ft
  • Best timeYear-round (Dec–Mar & Jun–Aug driest)
  • Time needed2 days (2 nights on our tours)
What to do

Key experiences at Villa de Leyva

  1. Walk the Plaza Mayor

    Stand in the centre of the huge central plaza, reputedly the largest cobbled square in South America. Flanked by 16th-century colonial buildings and entirely free of traffic and overhead wires, it feels as though time has stood still since the colonial era.

  2. Browse the pottery village of Ráquira

    En route to Villa de Leyva, stop in the village of Ráquira, famous for its handicrafts. The village lines its painted streets with hand-thrown terracotta ceramics and colourful artisan crafts — one of the most vivid and photogenic villages in Colombia.

  3. Discover the Santo Ecce Homo Convent

    Visit this 17th-century Dominican convent constructed by the Spanish in 1620. Built from local stone studded with a profusion of fossils, it features delightful courtyard gardens and a dozen beautiful galleries adorned with religious art, offering a real window into Colombia's colonial era.

  4. Come face-to-face with a Kronosaurus

    Explore the extraordinary Museo el Fósil, which houses the 7-metre-long remains of a crocodile-like ancestor known as the Kronosaurus. Dated between 100 and 150 million years old, this massive fossil was recovered from the surrounding area back when it lay on the shores of a tropical sea.

  5. Step inside the Casa de Terra Cotta

    Finish your sightseeing at a truly unique architectural wonder claimed by its architect, Octavio Mendoza, to be the largest piece of pottery in the world. You can explore the whimsical rooms inside, which have been fashioned entirely from clay and baked hard by the sun.

About this place

The story behind Villa de Leyva

Villa de Leyva

Villa de Leyva is one of the best-preserved colonial towns in South America. Strict preservation laws have kept it almost entirely unchanged since the colonial era — no overhead cables, no modern shop fronts, no concrete. The streets are cobbled, the buildings are whitewashed, and the central plaza is the largest cobbled square in South America.The town sits at 2,149 metres in the dry highlands of the Boyacá department, giving it a clear, bright light and a cool, settled climate that makes it ideal for exploring on foot. In fact, the town has maintained much of its original charm and tranquillity owing to a lack of mineral deposits nearby and the relative aridity of the surrounding landscape

The Plaza Mayor

The Plaza Mayor is the heart of Villa de Leyva and one of the great public spaces in the Americas. Reputedly the largest cobbled square in South America, it is flanked by churches, restaurants, handicraft shops, and traditional whitewashed buildings. The square is entirely free of traffic and overhead wires, which makes it feel—especially in the early morning before the day-trippers arrive—like a genuinely undisturbed colonial landscape.

The fossil museum and Ráquira

Villa de Leyva sits in a region of ancient seabed, and the Museo El Fósil just outside town houses a remarkable collection of marine fossils. This includes the 7-metre-long remains of a kronosaurus, a crocodile-like ancestor dated between 100 and 150 million years old that was beached here when the area was a tropical sea. En route to Villa de Leyva, our tours also stop in the village of Ráquira. Famous for its handicrafts, artisans here produce the vivid hand-thrown terracotta pottery and ceramics that line every shopfront along its painted streets.

The Santo Ecce Homo Convent

This quiet religious outpost highlights the far-reaching influence of European missions during Colombia’s early settlement. Set against the arid Andean landscape, it served as a peaceful retreat for reflection and provides deep historical context for the Spanish colonial presence in the region.

Casa de Terra Cotta

Providing a fascinating modern contrast to the town's strict 16th-century architectural preservation, this livable structure demonstrates how traditional natural materials can be transformed into wildly imaginative, organic shapes. It is a brilliant example of artistic engineering, built entirely without the use of modern cement or steel.

Visiting with Undiscovered Destinations

Villa de Leyva features on Days 3 to 5 of both our Colombia itineraries. The 17-day Secret Heart of Colombia tour and the 28-day Colombia and Panama – Bridging the Americas tour both spend two nights at the charming Hotel & Spa Getsemani (or similar).

You will journey here on a scenic overland drive from Bogotá, stopping en route to descend into the subterranean Salt Cathedral of Zipaquirá and admire the skills of local craftsmen in Ráquira. Your full day of sightseeing in Villa de Leyva includes the Plaza Mayor, the Santo Ecce Homo Convent, the fossil museum, and the Casa de Terra Cotta.

Upon leaving the town on Day 5, our tour takes an alternative scenic back-road via Tunja. Here, you will stop at the Boyacá Bridge, a tiny white-washed stone crossing that serves as the most important monument in Colombian history—the exact site where Simón Bolívar won his most decisive battle for independence.

Practical info

Visiting Villa de Leyva

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