REVIEW · BOGOTA
Cerveza Tejo y Salsa PubCrawl La Candelaria/Bogotá
Book on Viator →Operated by AE Colombia Travel · Bookable on Viator
One night, Bogotá turns into a playground. The mix of bilingual guidance and hands-on Tejo energy makes this pub crawl feel like culture with a pulse.
I like that the night is built around participation, not just watching: icebreaker games at the start, live game time with cold beer, then a salsa mini-class before your final beer stop. One thing to consider: it runs only Fridays and Saturdays and it needs good weather, so if conditions are bad your date may change.
In This Review
- Key Points to Know Before You Go
- Why This Bogotá Night Works: Beer, Tejo, Salsa, Repeat
- Price and What You Actually Get for $37
- Meeting Point at Hostal Cl. 12b #5-07 and the 7:00 pm Start
- Stop 1: Colonial Hotel Reception, Hidden Rooftop, and Social Traffic Light Wristbands
- Stop 2: Tejo or Bolirana Game Time With Cold Beer
- Stop 3: Salsa Mini-Class and Dancing Access at Traditional Salsa Bars
- Stop 4: Craft Beer Gastropubs, Tasting Samples, and Surprise Aguardiente
- Route Changes, Group Size, and Pace: What to Expect When Bars Shift
- Drinks, Games, and Food: How to Make It Enjoyable
- Who This Pub Crawl Suits Best
- Book It or Skip It: My Decision Guide
- FAQ
- What is the price of the Bogotá pub crawl?
- How long is the experience?
- When does it run?
- Where does it start?
- Where does it end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- Is the guide bilingual?
- What is included for food and drinks?
- What activities are included?
- Is private transportation included?
- What happens if the weather is bad?
- Should You Book This Tour?
Key Points to Know Before You Go

- Bilingual EN/ES guide throughout so you’re not guessing during games or salsa steps
- Tejo or local game time plus cold beer, with rules explained so you can play right away
- Salsa mini-class and dance bars access, designed to help you move, not just stand there
- Craft beer tasting and aguadiente intro, built into a multi-stop gastrobar route
- Small group size up to 25 and a social wristband system to break the ice fast
Why This Bogotá Night Works: Beer, Tejo, Salsa, Repeat
If you want a Bogotá nightlife plan that doesn’t feel like wandering around hoping to find something fun, this crawl gives you a structure. You start with an icebreaker at a colonial hotel, then you move through four gastrobar-style stops that each add something different: a local Colombian game, dancing lessons, and craft beer tastings.
The biggest win is that the activities keep resetting your energy. You go from games to music to tasting instead of spending three hours in one loud room. And because the tour is offered in English with a professional bilingual guide (EN/ES), you’re guided through the parts that usually require local context.
Other La Candelaria walking tours we've reviewed in Bogota
Price and What You Actually Get for $37

At $37 per person for about 3 hours 30 minutes, you’re paying for two things at once: organization and a lot of included extras. This isn’t just entry into a bar. You get a guided route through four VIP gastro bars, with drinks and food that land at key moments of the evening.
Here’s what’s included across the night:
- A welcome beer at one of the selected venues
- A guided game experience with cold beer (tejo or a local alternative)
- A salsa mini-class and time to dance at traditional salsa bars
- Craft beer tasting (the tasting portion is described as multiple samples/shots)
- Surprise aguadiente shots as an intro to Colombia’s iconic drinking culture
- A premium Colombian mini platter at the end (300g)
- Handled pacing and transitions by a bilingual guide
In plain terms, the value is in the combination: you get multiple types of fun in one ticket, which is easier on your wallet than buying every activity separately.
Meeting Point at Hostal Cl. 12b #5-07 and the 7:00 pm Start

The tour begins at 7:00 pm. Your starting point is R10 – Hostal, Cl. 12b #5-07, in Bogotá. You’ll end at Casa Magola, Cra. 3 #17-60, after hitting the final bar stop.
There’s no private transportation included. That matters because you should treat this as a guided bar-and-game route where you’re expected to keep moving with the group. The good news: the experience is noted as near public transportation, so getting to the start point is usually easier than it looks on paper.
Also, your route can vary by date. The operator partners with different bars and pubs to make sure nights feel different, even though the theme stays the same.
Stop 1: Colonial Hotel Reception, Hidden Rooftop, and Social Traffic Light Wristbands

Your night kicks off at Cl. 12b #5-07, at a colonial hotel reception with a hidden rooftop. It’s a strong opener because you’re not dropped into the middle of nightlife right away—you get a quick warm start and a reason to talk to people before any music starts.
You’ll receive a welcome beer and go through icebreaker games. Then comes the part I love for first-timers: the color wristbands system. It uses a social traffic light concept with colors assigned based on status (single or taken). The idea is simple and practical: it helps you spot who might want to talk and keeps the energy friendly instead of awkward.
A small drawback to keep in mind: this opener is designed for social mingling. If you’re hoping for a quieter start, this is still fun, but it’s more interactive than passive.
Stop 2: Tejo or Bolirana Game Time With Cold Beer

Next up is Cra. 4 #12b-18, where the tour flips from chatting to playing. The game is centered on tejo, with rules explained so you can jump in without needing local knowledge. In some versions of the activity, the local alternative is described as local bowling (bolirana), and the overall package also references ancestral Colombian game time such as tejo or rana.
The setup works like this: you get a short lesson, you learn the traditional rules, and then you play while enjoying cold beer. That combination is what makes the stop feel different from a typical pub crawl. You’re not just drinking and watching—you’re involved.
Practical note: game time means you may want to treat this stop like activity time, not a long sit-down. Expect a tighter rhythm.
Other tejo and salsa cultural experiences in Bogota
Stop 3: Salsa Mini-Class and Dancing Access at Traditional Salsa Bars

At Cl. Del Embudo #12B-31, you shift into the music portion: salsa bars and dance time. You’ll get basic salsa steps and then you’ll practice with a cold beer, in an environment meant for dancing.
This is where the tour earns its keep if you’re even slightly curious about salsa but don’t know where to start. The mini-class is designed to help you get the first moves, so you’re not waiting until you’re already on the dance floor trying to decode what to do.
I also like how the tour doesn’t just hand you a playlist. It gives you a structure: steps first, then dancing. That’s the difference between a lesson that feels like school and a lesson that turns into motion.
If you want the vibe to work for you, show up ready to try. Even if you’re not a dancer, you’ll at least be doing the basics with the group.
Stop 4: Craft Beer Gastropubs, Tasting Samples, and Surprise Aguardiente

Your final segment takes you to Cra. 3 #17-60, finishing at Casa Magola. This stop focuses on craft beer and Colombian drinking culture.
You visit local craft beer gastropubs for a tasting experience described as multiple craft beer samples. In the stop description, it’s also listed as a tasting involving two shots, so the experience is clearly structured as a short, guided set of sips rather than a full pour-and-order session.
The highlight here is the surprise aguadiente shots introduction. Aguardiente is part of the country’s social-drinking scene, and the way it’s included helps you try it in context, not as a random shot you order alone.
And then the night closes with food: a premium Colombian mini platter (300g). This is a real value add because it prevents the classic pub-crawl problem where you spend hours drinking and forget to eat until you feel rough.
Route Changes, Group Size, and Pace: What to Expect When Bars Shift

This is a small-group experience, capped at 25 travelers. That size keeps the tour feeling social and manageable. You’re not part of a giant herd, and you’re more likely to get time with the guide if you have questions.
The route can vary depending on your booking date. The operator explains that they use different partner bars and pubs on different nights to keep the experience unique. In practice, that means:
- The exact gastrobar locations might differ
- The theme stays consistent: games, salsa, craft tasting, and included drinks/food
- Your best approach is to show up for the format, not to chase specific bar names
If you hate uncertainty at night, this might feel slightly unpredictable. But if you like variety, it’s a feature.
Also, the total duration is about 3 hours 30 minutes, starting at 7:00 pm. Expect a guided pace with quick transitions. Bring the mindset that this is an itinerary, not a choose-your-own-adventure.
Drinks, Games, and Food: How to Make It Enjoyable
You’ll likely drink at multiple points during the crawl: welcome beer, beer paired with game time, beer during salsa time, craft beer tasting, and a surprise aguadiente shot. The schedule is built so you taste and participate without needing to plan each order.
Still, I’d be smart about pace:
- Take small sips during transitions
- Eat the closing mini platter even if you think you’re fine
- If aguadiente isn’t your thing, treat it as an intro, not a challenge
On the games side, the tour is helpful because rules are taught. You’re not left to figure it out alone. That’s especially important with tejo and any tejo-style play, since it helps to understand how scoring and play works before you start.
And the salsa portion is also structured: you’re given basic steps before you’re expected to dance. If you’re nervous about salsa, this flow reduces the pressure because you have something to try instead of guessing.
Who This Pub Crawl Suits Best
This tour is a great fit if you want an organized Bogotá nightlife plan that mixes Colombian culture with social fun. It’s especially good for:
- People who like bar hopping but want activities built in
- First-timers to Bogotá who want La Candelaria-area energy with guidance
- Anyone curious about tejo and salsa but worried they’ll feel lost without local context
- Groups of friends who want a shared evening with built-in moments to interact
It’s also ideal if you’re traveling with mixed skill levels for dancing or games. The format teaches first, then plays and dances together.
If you’re looking for a quiet, slow-paced tasting night, this one is likely too active. It’s meant to keep moving.
Book It or Skip It: My Decision Guide
Book it if you want a single ticket that strings together four distinct experiences: rooftop icebreakers, tejo-style play, salsa dancing, and a craft beer tasting with aguadiente. The included food at the end and the guided structure make it a strong value at $37.
Skip it if any of these are dealbreakers for you:
- You only want weekday nightlife plans, since it runs Friday and Saturday
- You dislike social icebreakers and status wristband games
- You’re not comfortable with an itinerary that requires you to keep moving without private transport
If you’re open to joining in, this is one of those nights that makes Bogotá feel playful and local without requiring you to plan every stop yourself.
FAQ
What is the price of the Bogotá pub crawl?
It costs $37.00 per person.
How long is the experience?
It’s about 3 hours 30 minutes.
When does it run?
It’s available only on Fridays and Saturdays.
Where does it start?
The meeting point is R10 – Hostal, Cl. 12b #5-07 in Bogotá.
Where does it end?
It ends at Casa Magola, Cra. 3 #17-60.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes. The tour is offered in English.
Is the guide bilingual?
Yes, the tour includes a professional bilingual guide (EN / ES).
What is included for food and drinks?
You get a welcome beer, cold beer during the game portion, craft beer tasting, surprise aguadiente shots, and a Colombian mini platter (300g) at the end.
What activities are included?
You’ll do an ancestral Colombian game experience (tejo or rana-style options), a salsa mini-class, and access to traditional salsa bars.
Is private transportation included?
No, private transportation is not included.
What happens if the weather is bad?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Should You Book This Tour?
If you’re planning a Friday or Saturday in Bogotá and you want one ticket that gives you the full arc—icebreaker welcome, Colombian game time, salsa lessons, craft beer tasting, and a food finish—this is a smart pick. The small group size and bilingual guide help you feel included fast, which is the whole point of a pub crawl done well.































