Colombia records over 219,000 street vending units

Preliminary results from the Dane's National Urban Economic Census show Colombia has 219,042 street vending units, mostly in large cities like Bogotá. This activity includes stationary, semi-stationary, or mobile forms in public spaces. Dane director Piedad Urdinola clarifies that not all are itinerant, but street vendors with fixed stalls.

Colombia records over 219,000 street vending units

The National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane) has released preliminary results from its National Urban Economic Census, which will identify urban productive units, their size, economic activity, formality level, and employment generation. Initial data indicate Colombia has 219,042 street vending units, defined as stationary, semi-stationary, or mobile activities in public spaces, involving individual, shared, or associated work forms.

Bogotá tops the list with 42,097 units, followed by Medellín (13,692) and Cali (12,213). The top five includes Barranquilla (9,684) and Cartagena (6,558). Other cities such as Bucaramanga (6,444), Cúcuta (6,016), Montería (5,446), Soledad in Atlántico (3,602), and Ibagué (3,364) round out the top 10. Among the 30 municipalities with the highest concentration, nine are non-capitals, like Soacha (2,983) and Piedecuesta (1,517).

Dane director Piedad Urdinola explained: “There is always a little stall that is in the corner every day. The same happens in other cases. Not all are itinerant anymore, that's why we call them street vendors”.

David Cubides, chief economist at Banco de Occidente, links this figure to labor informality in Colombia, which features a high structural unemployment rate and elevated informality levels in the region. “Informality is reflected in indicators like informal and street vendors, who end up moving and settling in major cities,” he noted.

Final census results are expected by the end of the first semester of 2026, providing a more detailed overview of these units.

Related Articles

Illustration of joyful diverse Colombian workers celebrating the unemployment rate drop to 8.8%, featuring job signs, graphs, and national flag.
Image generated by AI

Colombia's unemployment rate drops to 8.8% in March 2026

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística (DANE) reported that Colombia's unemployment rate fell to 8.8% in March 2026—the lowest for any March since 2001, continuing the downward trend from 10.9% in January and 9.2% in February—with 2.34 million people unemployed (down 174,000). This marks a 0.8 percentage point drop from 9.6% in March 2025. The employed population grew by 650,000 (2.7%), while the January-March quarter rate stood at 9.6%. Neiva ranked among cities with the lowest unemployment.

Mayor Carlos Fernando Galán signed Decree 117 of 2026 on April 14, modifying Decree 642 of 2025 and setting rules for over 150,000 informal street vendors in Bogotá's public spaces. The measure establishes maximum occupation capacities per zone and aims to organize areas without harming vulnerable people.

Reported by AI

Dane released the third batch of preliminary results from the National Urban Economic Census. Out of two million economic units, 1.1 million include sociodemographic data on owners. Women lead with 613,953 units, ahead of men by 36,970.

Research by Codess and Universidad Externado de Colombia indicates that labor informality spreads between municipalities, while formalization does not produce the same expansive effect.

Reported by AI

A Fenalco survey reveals April sales posted the weakest performance of the year. Just 32% of businesses reported increases while 68% saw sales hold steady or fall compared with April 2025.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline