Colombia’s migration policy shows how large-scale migration can be managed as both a humanitarian responsibility and a development opportunity. Over the past decade, Colombia has hosted nearly three million Venezuelan migrants and moved from emergency response toward long-term inclusion through legal frameworks, stronger institutions and better use of administrative data.
In 2021, the Government of Colombia introduced the Temporary Protection Statute, a 10-year policy designed to provide regular status for Venezuelan migrants and connect them to essential services and formal employment. The policy aims to reduce informality, improve productivity and support rights-based inclusion for migrants and host communities.
The reform has been implemented through the Single Registry of Venezuelan Migrants and the Temporary Protection Permit. By April 2023, the process had reached 2.46 million pre-registrations and 2.09 million biometric enrollments, creating a major administrative foundation for regularization and service access.
The Inter-American Development Bank supported Colombia’s efforts through a $300 million policy-based loan focused on ensuring that legal status translated into real access to health care, education and formal jobs. This support formed part of a broader financing package exceeding $700 million, complemented by more than $70 million in grants and technical cooperation.
The programme helped strengthen the government’s capacity to turn documentation into practical access to services. More than 1.4 million migrants were enrolled in the national health insurance system, reducing reliance on emergency-only care and improving public health planning.
Education access also improved, with more than 500,000 Venezuelan children enrolled in school each year between 2021 and 2023. Updated protocols helped clarify procedures for school administrators and families, while real-time registry data supported better budgeting, staffing and service planning.
Colombia’s experience shows that legal status alone is not enough. Effective inclusion requires public institutions with the systems, budgets, frontline capacity and interoperable data needed to ensure that migrants can actually access services at the local level.
The policy also supported economic inclusion by addressing administrative barriers that prevented skilled migrants from entering formal employment. Measures such as degree recognition, skills certification and formalization pathways helped employers validate qualifications and enabled migrants to enter payroll, social security and tax systems.
These efforts produced measurable fiscal returns. By 2024, Venezuelan migrants in Colombia contributed an estimated $529 million in tax revenue, representing 1.91 percent of total personal income tax revenues, according to an International Organization for Migration study.
A key strength of Colombia’s approach has been its focus on evidence-driven implementation. Government institutions and partners developed systems to monitor regularization, access to services and labour market inclusion, helping policymakers track progress and target support more effectively.
The experience offers important lessons for countries managing large-scale migration. Migration can support development when policies are long-term, coordinated and backed by capable institutions. Regularization must be linked to actual service delivery, and economic inclusion is essential for building income, fiscal contributions and social security connections.
The IDB’s support demonstrates how policy-based lending and evidence-based implementation can help governments strengthen institutions and turn migration challenges into inclusive development outcomes. Colombia’s model shows that well-managed migration can benefit migrants, host communities and the wider economy.







