Fitch Ratings downgraded Colombia’s outlook from stable to negative on March 6, 2025, while maintaining its ‘BB+’ credit rating.
The rating agency pointed to worsening fiscal conditions and uncertain corrective measures as primary concerns for the South American nation. Colombia recorded a central government fiscal deficit of 6.7% of GDP for 2024, significantly exceeding Fitch’s projected 5.6%.
Revenue shortfalls combined with failure to implement offsetting spending cuts caused this underperformance. The government’s debt-to-GDP ratio climbed to 58% in 2024 from 53% in 2023.
The fiscal outlook continues to deteriorate. Fitch raised its deficit projections to 6.2% of GDP for 2025 and 5.8% for 2026. These numbers represent substantial increases from previous forecasts of 5.1% and 4.7% respectively.
Analysts doubt Colombia’s ability to meet even these revised targets. Debt metrics show troubling trends. Government debt will likely reach 62% of GDP by 2026, moving further from the ‘BB’ median of 55.4%.

The interest-to-revenue ratio will rise to 15.7% in 2025, well above the ‘BB’ category median of 10.1%. The Petro administration demonstrates reluctance to sacrifice spending priorities, according to Fitch.
Growing expenditure demands and budget rigidities will hinder deficit reduction beyond 2026 without new tax reforms. Fitch sees no additional tax reforms coming during President Petro’s remaining term.
Colombia still maintains some economic strengths. The country benefits from macroeconomic stability, central bank independence, and a flexible exchange rate policy.
The central bank has built reserves to USD 61.9 billion as of late 2024. The IMF also provided an USD 8.1 billion flexible credit line in April 2024.
Further debt deterioration or weakening growth prospects could trigger a full rating downgrade. Successful fiscal consolidation that stabilizes the debt ratio would provide a path toward a positive outlook revision.

