Thousands of people crossed the border between Venezuela and Colombia after it reopened for the first time in four months.
More than 37,000 Venezuelans had their documents checked on Saturday near the city of Cucuta, Colombia's foreign ministry said.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro had shut the borders with Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, Brazil and Colombia in February as the opposition tried to deliver food and medical supplies into the country.
He had alleged that the assistance was part of a plot to overthrow him.
In May, the government reopened borders with Aruba and Brazil, but the Simon Bolivar International Bridge and the Francisco de Paula Santander International Bridge with Colombia had remained closed until now.

Rescue work underway after quakes rock Venezuela
Trump asks Congress for more funds to fight Iran, defying rebuke on war powers
Magnitude 6.9 quake strikes Japan's northeast, no tsunami warning
US, Iran at odds on nuclear inspections, frozen assets in deal to end war
Oman establishes temporary shipping corridor through Strait of Hormuz
