

Harry Sasson has anchored Bogotá's upper tier of Colombian dining for decades, earning consecutive Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in South America rankings and a La Liste 2025 placement. The restaurant occupies a generous space in the Zona Rosa corridor and delivers a menu rooted in Colombian ingredients interpreted with international technique. Open seven days a week, it draws both long-standing regulars and first-time visitors to the city.

Where Bogotá's Dining Establishment Goes Long
The stretch of Carrera 9 between Calles 72 and 80 has functioned as Bogotá's hospitality spine for the better part of three decades. The Zona Rosa addresses here don't trade on novelty; they trade on sustained credibility. Harry Sasson, at Cra. 9 #75-70, sits squarely in that tradition — a large-format, full-service Colombian restaurant that has remained on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in South America list in 2023 (ranked #49), 2024 (#54), and 2025 (#52), and secured a 75.5-point La Liste placement for 2025. That consistency across multiple independent ranking systems is the kind of signal that separates a restaurant with genuine standing from one that caught a single year's attention.
Walking into a room of this scale in Bogotá — designed for volume and occasion simultaneously , is a particular kind of experience. The city's most durable fine-dining addresses tend to be larger than their counterparts in Paris or Tokyo, built to accommodate the sprawling social rituals of Colombian business lunches and multi-generational family dinners. Harry Sasson fits that mold: a space where the ambient noise suggests full occupancy rather than quiet reverence, and where the room itself communicates that this is a place people return to, not just visit once.
Colombian Ingredients Through a Trained Lens
The most useful frame for understanding what Harry Sasson represents in Bogotá's dining scene is the question of what Colombian cuisine looks like when it is treated with the same technical rigour applied to French or Japanese cooking. The answer, across Colombia's better restaurants, tends to involve a close relationship with foundational ingredients: the country's extraordinary biodiversity of corn varieties, the depth of its tuber and legume traditions, and proteins shaped by both Andean and coastal geography.
Corn sits at the base of Colombian food culture in ways that parallel its role throughout Mesoamerica and the northern Andes. Nixtamalization , the alkaline processing of dried corn that unlocks nutritional value and transforms texture , underlies the masa used in arepas, tamales, and empanadas across every region of Colombia. In a high-end dining context, the question is always how that foundational grammar is maintained under the pressure of refinement. The restaurants in Bogotá that hold sustained critical standing, Harry Sasson among them, tend to answer that question by using Colombian ingredients as the fixed point and technique as a variable, rather than the reverse. Compare this approach to what El Chato and Leo pursue in the same city: the modernist wing of Colombian cooking tends to deconstruct those foundational elements, while the more classical positions use them as a stable base. Harry Sasson's durability across ranking cycles suggests it operates closer to that stable-base position.
For context on how this fits into the wider Colombian dining conversation, our full Bogotá restaurants guide maps the city's tiers and neighbourhoods in detail. Restaurants like Debora Restaurante in Bogotá and Carmen in Medellín represent different points on the same spectrum of Colombian fine dining, each placing a different weight on ingredient provenance versus technical elaboration.
The Peer Set and What the Rankings Say
Three consecutive years on the Opinionated About Dining South America list, with rankings clustering between #49 and #54, signals a restaurant operating in the mid-upper tier of the continental ranking rather than at its very apex. That is a meaningful distinction. The OAD methodology relies heavily on peer voting from professional diners, which means it tends to reward restaurants with consistent technical execution over time rather than those generating short-cycle buzz. A sustained ranking cluster in that range, combined with La Liste recognition, places Harry Sasson in a peer set that includes other Bogotá addresses competing for the same well-travelled, internationally fluent diner.
The Google rating of 4.6 across 4,497 reviews adds a different data layer: that volume of reviews at that rating represents a broad consensus among diners with varying frames of reference, not just the professional-critic circuit. A restaurant holding 4.6 at nearly 4,500 reviews is managing consistency at scale, which in a city where dining rooms run large is its own form of technical achievement.
Internationally, Colombian cooking has gained footholds in cities where it previously had little visibility. Elcielo in Miami and Elcielo in Washington, D.C. have pushed a modernist Colombian format in the United States; Quimbaya in Madrid addresses a European audience; Latido in Singapore and Parche in San Francisco push into markets where Colombian food culture is newer. What all of these share is that they are operating in contexts where the cuisine requires explanation. Harry Sasson, by contrast, operates in the city where the cuisine needs no preamble , which permits a different kind of depth and specificity in the cooking.
For the broader Colombian restaurant picture beyond Bogotá, 1621 The Restaurant in Cartagena, Domingo in Cali, Manuel in Barranquilla, and Andres Carne de Res in Cartagena represent the range of registers the cuisine operates across nationally.
Planning a Visit
Harry Sasson runs a seven-day operation: Monday through Saturday from noon to 11 pm, Sunday from noon to 5 pm. The Sunday close at 5 pm is worth noting for anyone planning around an evening flight or late-afternoon arrival. The full-week schedule and extended weekday hours make it more accessible than many of Bogotá's peer addresses, which tend to close Sundays entirely or operate reduced mid-week services. The Zona Rosa location on Carrera 9 places it within easy reach of the city's main business-hotel corridor and the Parque 93 neighbourhood, both of which concentrate the majority of international visitors' accommodation. For broader planning across the city, our guides to Bogotá hotels, Bogotá bars, Bogotá experiences, and Bogotá wineries provide context for building a full itinerary around this reservation.
For reference, Le Bernardin in New York City and El Pollo Rico in Washington, D.C. illustrate how different positioning within a cuisine , one maximalist and technically complex, one stripped-back and focused , can both achieve long-term critical standing. Harry Sasson's track record in Bogotá suggests a similar logic: sustained investment in a clear identity, over decades, tends to outlast restaurants that pivot with each season's trend cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
At-a-Glance Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harry Sasson | Colombian | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in South America Ranked #52 (2025); La… | This venue | |
| El Chato | Modern Colombian | World's 50 Best | Modern Colombian | |
| Leo | Modern Colombian | World's 50 Best | Modern Colombian | |
| Celele | Modern Colombian | Modern Colombian | ||
| Andres Carne de Res | Colombian | Colombian | ||
| AniMare | Colombian Fusion | Colombian Fusion |
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