Dreamer

Santa Marta


A very high-end, self-contained and intelligently designed hostel, the Dreamer has rooms clustered around one of Santa Marta's best swimming pools. Even the dorms get air-con, a clean shared bathroom and good beds. It's hugely popular with discerning travelers. The Italian owners oversee the kitchen, so the food's great, too.

It's a little way out of town, but in fact it's well located for trips to Ciudad Perdida, PNN Tayrona, Minca and some of the area's better beaches, which means you don't have to face the crush of the city's traffic every time you head somewhere.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Santa Marta attractions

1. Quinta de San Pedro Alejandrino

0.57 MILES

This hacienda is where Simón Bolívar spent his last days in 1830 before succumbing to either tuberculosis or arsenic poisoning, depending on whom you…

2. Iglesia de San Francisco

3 MILES

Dating from 1597, the squat Iglesia de San Francisco is little more than its colonial facade these days due to recurring earthquakes and fires over the…

3. Museo del Oro

3.11 MILES

Oro (gold) is only half of what this fabulous museum is about. Housed in the impressively renovated Casa de la Aduana (Customs House), which features in…

4. Pozo Azul

7.1 MILES

This fun natural pool and small waterfall is a popular sight for locals and tourists alike, though it can get very full on weekends and during high season…

5. Finca La Candelaria

7.22 MILES

This small coffee, cacao and fruit farm is a family-run, organic business that visitors are welcome to tour to see the various stages of growth, harvest…

6. Cascada de Marinka

8.57 MILES

This lovely spot is a 1½ hour walk from Minca – or a 10-minute moto-taxi ride (COP$9000) – and is a surprisingly impressive set of two waterfalls, with…

7. Finca La Victoria

8.99 MILES

Founded in the late 19th century, this family-run coffee plantation offers interesting 40-minute tours (usually available in English) in which the coffee…

8. Playa Cristal

9.18 MILES

This gorgeous boat-in beach on Bahía Neguange used to be known as Playa del Muerto (Beach of the Dead) – little wonder they decided on a name change. It's…