⚠️ VISITOR NOTICE
Medellín's Parque Lleras Crackdown: What Visitors Need to Know in 2026
Published May 15, 2026 · 5 min read · By Medellín Rainbow News Desk
Child Safety: Medellín Rainbow was founded to help rescue exploited children. The sexual exploitation of minors is a serious crime in Colombia and globally. If you witness exploitation of any child, contact the Colombian authorities (123) or the U.S. Embassy (+57 604 322 8090) immediately.
📋 Key Facts
- Mayor Gutiérrez began enforcement of anti-sex-tourism measures in Provenza and El Poblado in 2024
- May 2026: Protests by sex workers after mayor expanded shutdown of areas where they operate
- Bar closing hours in Lleras Park area remain restricted; enforcement ongoing in 2026
- Criminal networks operate in Parque Lleras targeting foreign men — often using scopolamine
- Sex work between consenting adults is legal in Colombia; child exploitation is a serious felony
- Foreign nationals convicted of child sex exploitation face up to 25 years in Colombian prison
Medellín's mayor Federico Gutiérrez has continued enforcement of anti-sex-tourism measures that began in 2024, following sustained pressure over the sexual exploitation of minors in tourist districts. In early May 2026, protests erupted from sex workers after the mayor expanded shutdown areas — events captured in local media and expat YouTube channels.
For visitors, the ongoing situation has several practical implications for safety and nightlife in El Poblado.
Background: The 2024 Crackdowns
In April 2024, Mayor Gutiérrez issued a six-month ban on prostitution in Provenza and El Poblado after an American tourist was found in a hotel room with two girls aged 12 and 13. The ban came after a series of incidents involving foreign nationals and trafficked minors in tourist-heavy areas. The mayor stated: "It is sad to see how many people believe they can come to Medellín and do whatever they want."
Enforcement has continued and expanded into 2026, with bar closing hours, increased police patrols, and ongoing operations targeting trafficking networks in and around Parque Lleras.
What's Changed for Nightlife in 2026
- Parque Lleras: More police presence, earlier last-order enforcement, periodic crackdown operations. The area remains popular with tourists but is significantly more policed than pre-2024.
- Provenza: More upscale restaurants and galleries have moved in; the area's nightlife character is shifting toward dining and art events rather than late-night clubs.
- Hotel policies: Most reputable hotels now require guest registration for all visitors — this is enforced specifically to prevent exploitation incidents.
The Criminal Intersection: Sex Tourism and Scopolamine
Parque Lleras is the epicenter of both sex tourism concerns and scopolamine-related crimes targeting foreign men. Criminal networks operating in the area use attractive women to approach foreign tourists, offer companionship, and then drug victims to rob them. This is the same pattern documented in dozens of incidents in the Medellín Rainbow safety database.
The crackdowns on sex work and the parallel crackdowns on scopolamine gangs are connected — many of the criminal networks that exploit sex work also run drugging operations. The May 2026 arrest of additional gang members in El Poblado is part of the same enforcement effort.
For Visitors: Practical Advice
- Parque Lleras is still worth visiting for the restaurant and bar scene — just exercise heightened awareness after midnight
- Avoid interactions with individuals aggressively approaching you offering "services" or company
- Report suspected child exploitation immediately to 123 or the U.S. Consulate
- Book accommodation at well-regarded hotels with proper guest registration policies
- Remember: Engaging in sex tourism involving minors is a felony with sentences up to 25 years in Colombia
💡 Better alternatives to Parque Lleras at night: The Provenza restaurant strip (now more food-focused), El Santísimo (craft cocktails, upscale), Calle 10 bar corridor, or head to Laureles (La 70) for a more authentic, significantly less predatory nightlife scene.
Sources: YouTube LIVE LATAM NEWS Roundup (May 2026), AP/multiple outlets (April 2024 crackdown coverage), Tovima.com/WSJ (June 2024), Medellín Rainbow Safety Database.
← Back to News