Hotel in Cartagena, Colombia
Casa San Agustin
1,525ptsColonial Mansion Continuity

About Casa San Agustin
Three connected 17th-century colonial mansions in Cartagena's walled city, Casa San Agustín preserves original frescoes, stone gargoyles, and a 300-year-old aqueduct while delivering 30 rooms and suites with Frette linens and access to a private beach on Barú. A member of Leading Hotels of the World and rated 90 points by La Liste (2026), it sits in the intimate upper tier of the city's historic-center accommodation.
Three Centuries Under One Roof
Walking into Casa San Agustín from Calle de la Universidad, the transition is immediate and physical. The street outside belongs to Cartagena's Centro Histórico at full volume: horse-drawn carriages, flower sellers, the compressed warmth of a Caribbean afternoon. Inside the property's thick colonial walls, that noise compresses into a courtyard stillness framed by palm fronds and the sound of water moving through a stone channel. That channel is a 300-year-old aqueduct, one of the few surviving remnants of Cartagena's original urban irrigation system, and it runs directly through the swimming pool as if the two eras simply agreed to share the space. It is the hotel's most arresting architectural detail and the clearest argument for why heritage-led boutique properties in this city occupy a different register from larger international competitors like the Hotel InterContinental Cartagena de Indias or the Four Seasons Hotel and Residences Cartagena.
What Three Mansions Become
The configuration of Casa San Agustín matters as much as its age. Three adjacent colonial homes, each with traditional stucco exteriors, have been connected into a single property that still reads as a private house rather than a hotel. That domestic scale is not accidental. With 30 rooms and suites across the combined footprint, the property sits at the smaller end of Cartagena's premium tier, which also includes Casa Pestagua and Hotel Quadrifolio. What distinguishes Casa San Agustín within that cohort is the density of original material it has retained. The Renaissance-era oil paintings in the library, the wood-beamed ceilings, the stone gargoyles on the exterior — none of these were reconstructed for atmosphere. They were preserved, which is a meaningfully different thing in a city where colonial restoration can sometimes tip toward theatrical reproduction.
The hotel opened in 2013 and accumulated TripAdvisor Traveler's Choice Awards consecutively through 2017, as well as Andrew Harper's Grand Award in 2015. Its 2026 La Liste rating of 90 points positions it alongside properties that compete on heritage depth and service precision rather than room count or amenity scope. Membership in Leading Hotels of the World provides the peer-set context: Casa San Agustín belongs to a category where independent properties are curated against consistent quality thresholds rather than brand standards.
The Rooms: Restraint as Intentional Design
Boutique hotels in historic buildings frequently face a choice between two failure modes: erasing original character in favor of minimalist modernity, or over-saturating rooms with period reproduction until they feel like museum installations. Casa San Agustín lands closer to the former without fully committing to it. The palette runs neutral, with organic linens and mahogany furniture providing warmth without nostalgia. Four-poster ironwork beds dressed in Frette linens sit against stone floors and richly tiled bathroom surfaces — materials that reference the colonial period without costuming it.
Five room categories allow for meaningful differentiation across the 30-key inventory. Deluxe rooms anchor the range with king-size beds; premium suites add private hot tubs; junior suites incorporate separate living areas. The two-bedroom Prestige and Virrey Suites occupy the upper end, suitable for those requiring separation of space rather than simply more of it. One practical note from the property's own assessment: not all rooms have street-facing windows or terraces, and the distinction matters in a city where the flower-draped balconies and color-saturated street life of the Centro Histórico are half the reason to be there. Guests who consider that view part of the experience should specify when booking. High season runs December through March, and with only 30 rooms in the inventory, advance planning is not optional for those dates.
Alma and the Caribbean Table
The Cartagena hotel's restaurant, Alma, represents the Colombian-Caribbean culinary tradition at a level consistent with the property's positioning. The kitchen's approach centers on regional ingredients and technique: the signature cazuela assembles lobster, clams, fish, squid, octopus, shrimp, and mussels in a coconut milk and lobster cream base, a dish that reads as both comfort food and a demonstration of how the Caribbean coast's marine resources translate into formal dining. The bar program draws comparable attention for its craft cocktails, functioning as a destination within the hotel rather than simply a convenience for guests who don't want to leave.
For those who do want to explore further, our full Cartagena restaurants guide covers the wider dining scene across the walled city and beyond. The neighborhood around Casa San Agustín is dense with options: Buena Vida, a tropical rooftop bar suited to late-afternoon drinks, and Cafe de la Mañana, which combines photography, coffee, and brunch under a single colonial roof, are both within walking distance. Galleries including La Presentacion, Galeria NH, and Casa Chiqui serve the art and design crowd in the same radius.
Beyond the Walls
One amenity that places Casa San Agustín outside the typical urban boutique category: access to Acasí, a private white-sand beach on the island of Barú. The concierge arranges a 45-minute private boat charter for the crossing, which converts what might otherwise be a day-trip logistical exercise into something closer to a managed excursion. For a property operating entirely within a dense historic city center, this extension to a beach setting is a material differentiator against comparable addresses like the Charleston Santa Teresa Cartagena Hotel or Hotel Boutique Santo Domingo.
Wednesday through Sunday evenings, a live band plays salsa in the hotel's patio from 8 to 10 p.m. , a programming choice that aligns the property with the city's social rhythm rather than insulating guests from it. The general atmosphere skews toward couples; families with young children and large groups will likely find the intimate scale and ambient tone a less natural fit than options like the Hotel Casa del Coliseo or Hotel Casa Don Sancho By Mustique.
Planning Your Stay
Casa San Agustín sits at Calle de la Universidad, Carrera 6, in Cartagena's Centro Histórico, within walking distance of the city's primary plazas, churches, and commercial streets. Rates are listed from $540, placing the property in the premium tier of Cartagena's boutique accommodation. For context on how that price point compares against other historic-center properties, see also the Hotel Boutique Casona del Colegio. Elsewhere in Colombia, travelers building a broader itinerary might consider the B.O.G. Hotel in Bogotá, the Hotel boutique y restaurante vegetal Casa Lėlytė in Bogota, or further afield, Elcielo Hotel & Restaurant in Medellín and Hilton Santa Marta in Santa Marta. For those extending travel internationally, Leading Hotels of the World properties such as Aman Venice in Venice and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz occupy comparable positioning in terms of heritage credentials and independent-luxury standards.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What kind of setting is Casa San Agustín?
- Casa San Agustín occupies three connected 17th-century colonial mansions in Cartagena's UNESCO-listed Centro Histórico. If you are staying in Cartagena primarily to experience the walled city and want a property that sits inside its architectural history rather than adjacent to it, this address makes that case directly. The hotel's 30-room scale and Leading Hotels of the World membership confirm its positioning in the premium boutique tier, with rates from $540 per night reflecting that category.
- What room category do guests prefer at Casa San Agustín?
- The premium suites, which include private hot tubs, and the junior suites with separate living areas represent the most requested configurations for travelers prioritizing space and privacy. Given the property's recognition in La Liste's 2026 rankings (90 points) and its couple-oriented atmosphere, the premium suite tier aligns leading with the experience most guests are seeking. Specify at booking whether a street-facing view matters to you, as not all rooms have exterior windows or balconies.
- What's the standout thing about Casa San Agustín?
- The preserved 300-year-old aqueduct running through the pool courtyard is the architectural detail that sets the property apart within Cartagena's premium accommodation tier. Beyond that, the combination of verified original features , Renaissance frescoes, stone gargoyles, wood-beamed ceilings , with access to a private beach on Barú via private boat charter gives the hotel a range that most historic-center boutique properties in the city do not match. La Liste's 90-point rating in 2026 and Leading Hotels of the World membership provide external validation of that positioning.
- Should I book Casa San Agustín in advance?
- Yes. With only 30 rooms across the property, availability tightens considerably for the December-to-March high season. The hotel's consistent award recognition since opening in 2013 and its La Liste placement mean demand has remained steady. Book as far ahead as the property's policy allows for travel during the Christmas-to-Easter window, and confirm room-type preferences at the time of reservation rather than on arrival.
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