Arriving in Bogotá — whether you're staying a while or just passing through — comes with its own list of things to figure out: where to live, how to get around, who to call when something breaks. Hiring a private chef shouldn't add to that list of friction. It should be the one indulgence that takes care of itself: someone who already knows the markets, the suppliers and the flavors of this country, and puts all of it at your service, with nothing left for you to decode on your own.
The advantage of working with a private chef already established in Bogotá is that you don't need to know anything about the local market: not where to buy the best fresh fish for a dinner by the water, not which farm in La Calera grows the best herbs, not how to track down a Colombian wine that's actually worth drinking. That curation is already done. Your part is simple: tell your chef what you like, what you don't eat, how many people are at the table, and what you're celebrating. Everything else — menu, shopping, setup, service and cleanup — is handled by a team that already knows the terrain.
This matters most if you've just moved or are only in town for a few weeks: there's no time, or appetite, for scouting markets, negotiating with suppliers, or improvising a menu around ingredients you've never seen in a grocery store before. An experienced private chef erases that learning curve entirely.
One of the most common worries among expats and travelers is the language gap: how do you explain your allergies, restrictions and preferences if your Spanish barely gets you through ordering a coffee? The good news is that working with a chef used to international guests removes this problem from the start. Communication can happen in English from the very first message, the menu can be presented bilingually, and any sensitive detail — an allergy, a diet, a religious tradition around food — gets confirmed in writing before the event, with no room for misunderstanding. This isn't about simplifying the culinary experience for a foreign audience; it's about removing the friction of communicating it.
For those coming from markets like New York, London or Miami, a private chef in Bogotá usually delivers far more value than expected: top-quality ingredients, a full service team and an experience that unfolds over several hours, at a fraction of what the equivalent would cost elsewhere. Even so, it helps to think of the investment not as a "price per plate," but as a complete experience: a custom-designed menu, market shopping, table setup, live service and, if the occasion calls for it, transportation to a special location like a house on the Tominé Reservoir. The range depends on the number of guests, the location and the complexity of the menu, and it's always quoted transparently before you confirm, so there are no surprises.
In every case, the thread is the same: you don't need to know Bogotá to experience it well through its food. You just need to say what you're celebrating. If you're ready to design your own experience — at home, at a villa, or by the water — write to us and let's talk through the menu, the date and the setting that best fit your occasion.