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Jerico is approximately 108 km (67 miles) from Medellin. By private transfer, the mountain drive typically takes around 2 to 2.5 hours each way, winding through Antioquia's Andean countryside. That gives you a comfortable 4 to 6 hours in town — enough time to explore the main square, hike to the Cristo Rey viewpoint, visit the convent, and still browse the artisan workshops before heading back.
Start at the Parque Principal and the cathedral, then walk the Street of 100 Steps through the surrounding colonial streets. The hike up to the Cristo Rey statue takes roughly 20 minutes through a botanical garden and rewards you with a full view of the town and valley below. From there, head to Bomarzo — a creative hub of artist studios, galleries, and cafes — before making time for the convent, where nuns sell handmade cookies and wine. Leave your last hour for the Carriel workshops and street food before your return transfer. The town is compact and walkable, so the pace feels relaxed rather than rushed.
Jerico earns its place on Colombia's official list of Heritage Towns, and it delivers something you won't find compressed into a single square or museum — it's an entire town that functions as a living cultural artifact. You can walk cobbled streets lined with colonial facades, climb to the Cristo Rey statue for a panoramic view of the valley, buy a Carriel leather bag at the workshop where it was invented, and taste Luisas — a honey-and-guava pastry baked nowhere else on earth. If you're based in Medellin, a day is enough to experience the highlights and return the same evening with something genuinely memorable.
Three things set Jerico apart. First, it's the birthplace of Colombia's first patron saint, Madre Laura — her childhood home is now a museum, and the town's 17 churches reflect a religious identity unlike anywhere else in the region. Second, it's the only place in Colombia where the Carriel bag, a national cultural symbol, is still handmade in its traditional form. Third, the street food here has a reputation that extends across the entire country, from wine and cookies sold by the convent nuns to Luisas, a guava-and-honey pastry that is exclusive to Jerico. These aren't tourist-facing novelties — they're genuinely local and genuinely singular.
Jerico is considered by many Colombians to have the best street food in the country, so arrive hungry. The must-try is a Luisa — a wood-oven-baked square of flour and panela honey layered with guava jam, made only here. From the convent, pick up butter cookies and sweet wine sold directly by the nuns. For something to take home, the Carriel bag is the definitive Jerico souvenir: a multi-pocketed leather bag declared a National Cultural Heritage item, handcrafted in workshops you can visit in town. It's both a functional object and a piece of Colombian history you can actually use.
The public bus from Medellin's Terminal del Sur takes around 3 hours and requires you to navigate schedules, connections, and limited luggage space — with no flexibility once you're on board. A Daytrip private transfer picks you up directly from your accommodation, allows you to set your own departure time, and gets you there in approximately 2 to 2.5 hours. On a day trip where every hour matters, that difference in travel time and convenience is the difference between a full experience and a rushed one.