Four Colombian cities among world's most congested in 2025

TomTom's 2025 index shows Bogotá, Medellín, Cali, and Barranquilla among the world's top 20 most congested cities, with Bogotá ranking seventh. The Colombian capital has an average speed of 18.9 km/h and 117 hours lost annually to traffic. This trend marks a 25% rise in global congestion compared to 2024.

The annual TomTom Traffic Index, produced by the Dutch company TomTom founded in 1991 and specializing in GPS navigation and digital mapping, examined data from 492 cities based on 3.65 trillion kilometers driven by users. In 2025, global vehicle congestion rose to 25%, up five percentage points from 20% in 2024.

Bogotá ranks seventh for worst congestion levels. Data shows an average speed of 18.9 km/h, 117 hours lost yearly to traffic, and just 4.7 kilometers covered in 15 minutes during peak hours. José Stalin Rojas, director of the Logistics and Mobility Observatory at Universidad Nacional, attributes this mainly to around 1,200 simultaneous construction sites in the city, including the Bogotá Metro and the TransMilenio trunk line on Avenida 68. "Congestion affects quality of life. Of 24 hours in a day, eight are for sleep, eight more for work or study, and the rest for personal or family matters. Congestion forces people to wake up very early, unable to drop their children at school themselves, for example, to arrive on time," Rojas explained.

Medellín is eleventh, with an average speed of 20.7 km/h, 153 hours lost annually, and 4.4 kilometers in 15 peak minutes. The city is progressing on projects like the Metro along Route 80 to reduce reliance on private vehicles.

Cali loses 138 hours a year to jams, at 20.6 km/h, while its commuter train project is stalled due to unapproved future funding amid the Electoral Guarantees Law. Barranquilla records 16.4 km/h, 126 hours lost, and 5.2 kilometers in 15 minutes.

Ralf-Peter Schäfer, TomTom's vice president of Traffic and Travel Information, stated: “As cities grow and adapt, we must address the multiple challenges driving rising vehicle congestion. This trend demands urgent measures for smarter mobility planning, investments in public and shared transport, better traffic management technologies, and coordinated policies.”

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Realistic scene of massive traffic congestion on Berlin highway with Brandenburg Gate in background, illustrating city's top ranking in TomTom traffic jam index.
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Berlin is Germany's traffic jam capital according to TomTom analysis

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In greater Berlin, traffic flowed on average 40 percent slower than free flow last year, according to TomTom's annual traffic index. Essen and Hamburg follow with 39 percent each. Berlin's congestion level rose by seven percentage points compared to the previous year.

The 2025 TomTom Traffic Index ranks the Philippines as Asia's most congested country, followed by India and Singapore. Filipinos are losing a significant portion of their lives to worsening traffic on the roads. Rappler’s Patrick Cruz reports on the findings.

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The ADAC recorded a total of 866,000 kilometers of traffic jams on German highways in 2025, an increase of 7,000 kilometers from the previous year. The jams lasted 478,000 hours and cleared more slowly. North Rhine-Westphalia was the most affected region.

Colombia's National Infrastructure Agency and Ministry of Transport announced that toll fees will rise by 5.10% starting January 16, 2026, based on last year's IPC variation as reported by Dane. Additionally, 15 tolls will see an extra increase due to the normalization process under Decree 050.

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On Saturday, December 27, the new Calle 26 TransMilenio station on the Caracas Centro trunk line began operations after 19 months of construction linked to the Bogotá Metro Line 1 works. In its first phase, the north access opened, benefiting over 11,000 daily users in the International Center area.

Claro Colombia presented its 5G network balance at the end of 2025, noting it captured 68.4% of national traffic for this technology. In 24 months, the company connected 50 cities and deployed over 2,200 base stations. It also progressed on 5G auction obligations, linking 233 rural educational institutions with fiber optics.

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Colombia's national government has launched the Christmas Exodus Plan to ensure mobility during the year-end holidays, focusing on airfare monitoring and enhanced road inspections. It projects over 4 million vehicles and 3.28 million air passengers from December 19, 2025, to January 5, 2026.

 

 

 

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