In the present project we studied the differences in micohabitat in a community of web-building spiders at Susie’s forest (3131 m.a.s.l.), Chingaza National Park, in the eastern Andean mountain range of Colombia. We used different collecting methods, such as sweeping net and direct hand collection in low vegetation and understorey; hand collection in epiphytic plants and trunks and vegetation beating in the low and middle branches of the trees. We found 1354 individuals, 39 morphospecies and 6 families. In spite of the bias imposed by comparing the results of different collecting methods, we here preliminarily and tentatively compare the differences in microhabitat use by different spider guilds. We observed that Trunks and epiphytic plants are important microhabi tats because they showed unique compositions of guilds and families. The most diverse families were Theridiidae and Linyphiidae whereas the most abundant family was Thetragnathidae. It was also observed that in this community there is an apparent substitution of the Araneidae family by its ecological equivalent: Tetragnathidae.