REVIEW · CARTAGENA
Trendy Cartagena photo/ Video Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Trendy Cartagena Photo/ Video tour · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Cartagena photographs better with a guide on your heels. This trendy photo and video walk through Getsemaní, the fortress area of San Felipe, and the Walled City is built for pose coaching and same-day iPhone delivery, so you can share the shots while the day is still young.
One thing to think about: this is a phone-based experience and the guide is doing it as a hobby (not a studio professional), so you’ll want realistic expectations about equipment and results—plus the tour runs in Spanish with only a little English.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go
- A Trendy Cartagena Photo Tour That Stays Practical
- Price and Value: Is $53 Reasonable Here?
- How the Route Flows: From Parque Centenario to the Clock Tower
- Getsemaní: Where the Posing Tips Really Matter
- San Felipe Castle: Photos With the View Factor
- Walled City Lanes: The Frames That Feel Like Cartagena
- The iPhone Photo System (and What That Means for Results)
- Optional Palanqueras Photos: Budget Extra Cash
- Who This Tour Fits Best
- Booking Checklist Before You Step Out
- Should You Book This Trendy Cartagena Photo/Video Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the trendy Cartagena photo/video tour?
- Where do we meet for the tour?
- Will I get photos and videos the same day?
- Are photos with the palanqueras included in the price?
- What language does the guide speak?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go

- Built for fast, social-ready photos you get them the same day from your phone.
- A structured route through Getsemaní, San Felipe, the Walled City, and the clock tower.
- On-the-spot posing help so you’re not just wandering and hoping you look good.
- Video is part of the plan, not just still photos.
- Optional palanqueras photos cost extra, so keep cash aside.
- Short walk, hot city reality, bring comfortable shoes and expect to move.
A Trendy Cartagena Photo Tour That Stays Practical

This tour is for people who want more than a scenic stroll. It’s a fashion-minded photo and video walk focused on walking the streets of Cartagena and getting you angles that work. You’re not left alone to figure everything out. Your guide stays with you, captures the moments, and provides tips on how to pose, so you look like you planned it.
I like that the delivery is immediate. The photos and videos are taken from your iPhone cell phone and you get them the same day, so you’re not stuck waiting or hunting for files later. If you’re the kind of person who posts on vacation, this matters.
The other practical upside is the length. You’re out for about 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours, which is enough time to hit the key photo areas without eating your whole day.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Cartagena.
Price and Value: Is $53 Reasonable Here?

For $53 per person over a short, guided route, you’re mainly paying for three things: (1) someone directing you to the best photo spots, (2) a guided posing and filming process, and (3) same-day photos and videos pulled from your own iPhone.
There’s also an included touch: a personal water bottle. That’s small, but in Cartagena heat, small things help.
Here’s the honest trade-off. If you’re looking for a professional studio-style shoot with advanced gear and perfect lighting control, you might feel underwhelmed. The tour is explicitly not positioned like that. If you want fun, good angles, and quick shareable results, the pricing can make sense.
How the Route Flows: From Parque Centenario to the Clock Tower

The tour starts where many visitors naturally pass through: around Parque Centenario, meeting at an old fountain or pool. From there, the pace stays walkable and photo-focused.
You’re essentially moving through three “moods” of Cartagena:
- Getsemaní streets where color and street life make your photos pop
- San Felipe castle viewpoint area for a fortress-and-skyline angle
- The Walled City historic lanes for epic postcard-style frames and architecture
It ends at the clock tower, which is a logical finish point—easy for photos, and convenient for wrapping up.
Getsemaní: Where the Posing Tips Really Matter

Your first major stop is Getsemaní. This is where the tour’s style kicks in: you’ll do a photo stop, some sightseeing, and a walk that lasts about 1 hour.
What you should expect here is direction. Your guide captures the best angles and shares tips on how to pose. That sounds basic, but it’s the difference between photos where you look unsure and photos where you look like you belong on your own feed.
Practical value: Getsemaní is full of visual texture—walls, corners, street scenes. Without guidance, you can end up photographing the scene but missing the human element. With guidance, you get composition that includes you in a way that feels intentional.
What to watch for: this early part sets the tone. If you want extra variety (portraits, full-body, couple shots, short video clips), say it early. Don’t wait until you’re already moving toward the next stop.
San Felipe Castle: Photos With the View Factor
Next up is the castle of San Felipe. This stop is about more than pretty walls. It’s your chance to get photos with the kind of view that makes Cartagena feel bigger than just street corners.
You’ll take good photos while enjoying the magnificent view of the city. In other words, your guide isn’t just chasing walls; they’re building a photo sequence: street color first, skyline fortress energy second.
A quick consideration: this is one of the moments where you’ll benefit from being ready to pause for positioning. If you’re the type who wants to walk at your own pace and just take what comes, you may feel a little “scheduled.” If you like a clear plan, this part will feel satisfying.
Walled City Lanes: The Frames That Feel Like Cartagena
After San Felipe, you head toward the historic center of the Walled City for epic photos. This is where the streets tighten up visually and everything starts looking like postcards.
Your guide also shares interesting things happening in Cartagena. Even when you’re focused on photos, little context helps your brain connect the frame to the place, not just the image.
Why this stop matters for value: the best travel photos aren’t only about scenery. They’re about story. The Walled City gives you architecture and atmosphere, so your photos look like a real visit, not just a portrait session.
If you want variety, this is the time to ask for it. You’ll usually get the most creative shots when the route naturally changes—arches, shaded lanes, brighter corners.
The iPhone Photo System (and What That Means for Results)
The tour takes photos and videos from your iPhone cell phone, and you’ll have the files the same day since they’re taken directly from your device.
This is both the strength and the limitation. It’s easy and fast. You’re using what you already have, and delivery is immediate.
But if you’re expecting a professional camera workflow, adjust your mindset. One booking noted a phone setup rather than a dedicated camera experience, and the overall positioning is hobby-first. Translation: your results depend a lot on how comfortable the guide is with shooting, pacing, and composition.
What I recommend you do:
- Come prepared to communicate what you like (close-up vs. full-body, bright vs. moody angles).
- Be open to pose coaching. It’s designed to work with street backgrounds and mobile framing.
- Know that phone-based video will look like phone video. That’s fine for social.
Optional Palanqueras Photos: Budget Extra Cash
At some point you’ll have the option of taking photos with palanqueras. This is a cultural and visual experience that can look great in photos.
But the key detail: the palanqueras charge to appear in your photo, and that cost is not included in the tour price.
So bring cash (it’s listed as something to bring anyway). If you want that photo, decide early whether it’s worth it for you, and don’t scramble at the last moment.
Who This Tour Fits Best
This tour is ideal if you want:
- fashion-style photos and short videos
- a structured walk where you don’t have to plan angles alone
- quick same-day sharing for social media
It also makes sense for couples and groups. Since it’s built around walking and photo stops, you’ll get more out of it when you actually want to be part of the frame.
If you’re the kind of traveler who only wants unstructured wandering, you might prefer a self-guided route. And if you want high-end professional photography results, you may feel the limits of a phone-based hobby shoot.
Booking Checklist Before You Step Out
Here’s what you’ll want to have ready so the experience runs smoothly:
- Comfortable shoes (you’ll be walking through multiple areas)
- Comfortable clothes
- Cash (especially for palanqueras photos)
- Wear yourself like you’re on vacation, but move like you’ll be on your feet—because you will
And one more mindset tip: with only 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours, you’ll get better photos when you treat it like a real shoot. That means deciding your priorities before you start.
Should You Book This Trendy Cartagena Photo/Video Tour?
If you want fun, guided, fashion-minded photos and you care about getting them the same day from your iPhone, this tour is a solid choice for the price. The short duration also helps—you get the main photo zones without losing your whole day.
I’d skip it if you want a professional photo session with high-end camera gear and a long, flexible timeline. For a quick, social-ready Cartagena photo story, though, it can be a great way to make the city work for your camera.
FAQ
How long is the trendy Cartagena photo/video tour?
It lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes to 2 hours.
Where do we meet for the tour?
You’ll meet at the old fountain or pool in the Parque Centenario area.
Will I get photos and videos the same day?
Yes. The photos and videos are taken from your iPhone cell phone, and you’ll receive them the same day.
Are photos with the palanqueras included in the price?
No. Photos with the palanqueras cost extra and are not included.
What language does the guide speak?
The live guide speaks Spanish (with a little English).
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























