For years, the conversation about luxury penthouses in Medellín began and ended in El Poblado. Buyers wanted the Milla de Oro, the panoramic balconies above Carrera 43A, and the prestige addresses on Los Balsos. But a quieter, leafier shift has been underway just across the Aburrá Valley—and in 2026 it is impossible to ignore. Laureles, the grid-planned barrio on Medellín’s west side, has stepped firmly onto the luxury map, and a new wave of penthouses is arriving to meet the demand.
When Time Out crowned Laureles the coolest neighborhood in the world, the ranking validated what locals had long suspected: that tree-lined streets, walkable cafés, and a slower rhythm could compete with—and even outshine—the glittering high-rises of El Poblado. Two years on, that cultural prestige is translating directly into real estate prestige, and luxury penthouse buyers are leading the charge.
From Sleeper Neighborhood To Luxury Hot Spot
Laureles was designed in the 1940s by architect Pedro Nel Gómez around two concentric circular avenues, giving it an unusual European feel for a Colombian city. For decades, it was where upper-middle-class Paisa families raised their children—elegant but not flashy, residential but never sleepy. Penthouses, when they existed, were modest by international standards.
That has changed. Developers who once concentrated almost exclusively on El Poblado have now turned to the western circle, attracted by the neighborhood’s sudden international cachet and by lot prices that, while rising, still allow for projects priced below the most exclusive El Poblado towers. The result is a wave of boutique luxury buildings—typically eight to twelve floors, with one or two penthouses crowning each project—designed for buyers who want walkability, character, and a more authentically Colombian setting without sacrificing high-end finishes.
Critically, the supply is constrained. Laureles is a heritage-conscious neighborhood, and zoning is designed to preserve its low- to mid-rise character. That means the inventory of true penthouses with private terraces and city views will always be scarcer than in El Poblado, supporting long-term values for the units that do come to market.
Laureles Penthouse Pricing In 2026
Pricing in Laureles has moved up sharply but remains a relative bargain compared with the Milla de Oro. As of early 2026, the average price per square meter in the neighborhood sits around 6.5 million COP—roughly 1,580 USD per square meter—putting it just below the citywide median and well under prime El Poblado, where prime penthouse stock can clear three times that figure.
For a true luxury penthouse in Laureles in 2026, buyers should plan on a budget in the range of 1.8 billion to 3.5 billion COP, or roughly 440,000 to 850,000 USD. At the upper end of that range, a recent listing showed a four-bedroom, six-bathroom Laureles penthouse with maid’s quarters at 2.99 billion COP—around 730,000 USD. By global luxury standards, that is what a one-bedroom condo costs in many secondary U.S. cities, and the comparison is exactly why North American and European buyers continue to take Medellín seriously.
It is also worth remembering that Medellín-wide, penthouses and ultra-luxury units make up only about 2 percent of all transactions. In Laureles, where new build penthouses are even more limited, that scarcity is the single most important factor a buyer should understand.
Lifestyle: What You’ll Wake Up To In Laureles
A Laureles penthouse offers something El Poblado simply cannot replicate. Step out of your building and you are immediately on a tree-lined street, often within a five-minute walk of three or four independent cafés roasting Colombian single-origin beans. The Primer Parque de Laureles and Segundo Parque de Laureles anchor the neighborhood with weekend farmers’ markets and live music. La 70, the famous nightlife corridor, is a short stroll away when you want energy, and the Atanasio Girardot stadium delivers Atlético Nacional matches on the same walking radius.
What buyers tell us they value most is the texture. Fruit vendors still push their carts through the streets. Neighborhood bakeries still open at six in the morning. The yoga studios, art galleries, and farm-to-table restaurants that have arrived in the past three years coexist with the bodegas and barbershops that have been there for decades. From a high-floor terrace, that mosaic looks especially good in the late-afternoon light, with the western mountains catching the sun and the city spreading toward El Poblado in the distance.
The climate plays its role, too. Medellín’s eternal spring—averages between 17 and 28°C year round—means a Laureles penthouse terrace is genuinely usable 365 days a year. New developments are leaning into that fact with biophilic design: vertical gardens on facades, native hardwood ceilings, full-height sliding glass walls that erase the boundary between living room and terrace, and rooftop pools sized for actual laps rather than just photographs.
The Investment Case For Laureles Penthouses
For investors, Laureles in 2026 offers a rare combination: cultural prestige that is still being priced in, a constrained supply pipeline, and a tenant base that is broader than El Poblado’s. The neighborhood attracts long-term expats, remote-working professionals on Colombia’s digital nomad visa, visiting academics tied to nearby universities, and Colombian executives who want to be near the city’s commercial spine without the El Poblado density.
That diversity tends to smooth out occupancy. While El Poblado’s short-term rental market is heavily tourism-driven and seasonal, Laureles supports stronger month-long and quarter-long bookings, often at slightly lower nightly rates but higher occupancy. For penthouses with private terraces and three or more bedrooms, the math frequently pencils out competitively with comparable El Poblado units once you net out vacancy.
Resale dynamics are encouraging as well. Sale-to-asking-price ratios in Medellín’s premium neighborhoods are running between 96 and 99 percent in 2026, meaning sellers are largely getting close to what they ask. In Laureles specifically, the combination of cultural buzz and limited new construction has tightened that ratio further on the most desirable penthouse stock.
A Quiet Star Steps Forward
Laureles will never feel like El Poblado. That is precisely the point. For a luxury buyer who wants the panoramic terrace and the chef’s kitchen but also wants to walk to the bakery on Sunday morning and recognize their neighbors, Laureles in 2026 is arguably the most interesting penthouse market in Medellín. The world’s coolest neighborhood title was the spark; the supply-constrained, lifestyle-led market it has produced is the substance.
If you are considering a luxury penthouse purchase in Medellín this year, Laureles deserves a serious place on your shortlist. Browse our curated collection of Laureles, El Poblado, and Las Palmas penthouses at medellinpenthouses.com, or get in touch with our team to schedule private viewings on your next visit to the city.