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🇨🇷 Costa Rica

Stable democracy, no army, territorial tax, and the easiest retiree visa in the Americas

Costa Rica has been an American retirement destination for 50+ years on a remarkably stable formula: territorial tax (no Costa Rican tax on foreign income, period), the Pensionado visa requiring only $1,000/month in pension income, dramatic biodiversity, no standing army, and a public healthcare system (CAJA) you can join as a resident for ~7-11% of your declared income. It's not the cheapest country on this list anymore — gentrification in Tamarindo / Manuel Antonio / Atenas has pushed up rents — but it remains one of the highest-quality / lowest-friction retirement options in the Americas.

Who this fits
  • US retirees with even a modest Social Security check ($1,000/month meets Pensionado threshold) who want a tropical, English-friendly, politically stable base
  • Outdoorsy couples — beaches, cloud forests, surf, volcano hikes are all 2-3 hours apart
  • People prioritizing political stability — Costa Rica has had no military since 1948 and is consistently one of the most peaceful Latin American democracies
  • Anyone wanting territorial tax simplicity — your foreign pension and US brokerage withdrawals are not Costa-Rican-taxable, period
Who this doesn't
  • Budget retirees expecting Mexico prices — CR is materially more expensive than it was 10 years ago
  • People who need consistent dry weather — the rainy season (May-Nov) is real, especially on the Caribbean side
  • Anyone allergic to bureaucracy — the system works but moves at Caribbean pace

The Pensionado visa

$1,000/month from a lifetime pension (Social Security counts) qualifies you for Pensionado residency. Add $250 per dependent. Cheap to apply, fast processing (4-8 months typical). Forces enrollment in CAJA (public health) at ~7-11% of declared monthly income — but that gives you full public healthcare access in return. Pensionado holders are admitted to permanent residency after 3 years, citizenship eligible after a further 7. The bar is genuinely low compared to almost any other developed country's retiree route.

Tax — territorial

Costa Rica only taxes income earned within Costa Rica. Foreign pension, US brokerage gains, US Social Security — none of it touches the Costa Rican tax authority (Hacienda). Costa Rican-source income (rental properties, local consulting) hits a 0-25% progressive scale. There's a 13% VAT on most goods, real estate transfer tax, and a small property tax (~0.25% assessed value). No wealth tax, no estate tax on most retirees. US citizens still file US returns and owe US tax on worldwide income — territorial Costa Rican law doesn't change that.

Where to live

**Central Valley (highlands):** Atenas, Grecia, Escazú (upmarket), Heredia. Eternal-spring climate (60s-70s F year-round), no AC needed, easiest American-style infrastructure, closest to San José hospitals. The most-recommended starting point. **Pacific coast:** Tamarindo (gentrified, English-heavy, expensive), Nosara (yoga/surf), Playa del Coco (cheaper, more local), Manuel Antonio (national park, busy in season), Dominical / Uvita (laid-back, surfer-heavy). **Caribbean coast:** Puerto Viejo, Cahuita — Afro-Caribbean culture, cheaper, more rain. **South:** Pérez Zeledón / San Isidro — cheapest, most authentic, fewer Anglophones.

Healthcare

CAJA (public) is mandatory for residents — you pay 7-11% of declared income and get full access. Quality is good but waits are long. Most retirees layer a private plan (~$80-200/month at 65) for shorter waits at private hospitals like CIMA San José, Clínica Bíblica, Hospital La Católica — all near international standards, many doctors US-trained and English-speaking. Cash medical tourism is a real thing — surgery is 1/3 to 1/2 of US prices.

Honest downsides

Costs have caught up. Tamarindo and Atenas are no longer cheap. Rent on a quality 2-bed in Escazú is $1,500-2,500. Imported goods (electronics, US groceries) carry heavy import duties — Walmart-equivalents are pricier than the US. Rainy season (May-Nov) brings short intense afternoon rain — fine if expected, miserable if not. Driving outside the highway grid is challenging — bad signage, surprise potholes, motorcycles everywhere. Internet is fine in major towns, spotty on the Caribbean coast. The public bureaucracy works but moves slowly — patience is mandatory.

Visa options at a glance

Quick reference. Check the deep dive above for the nuance, and an immigration lawyer for your specific case.

Pensionado Visa
Retirees with verifiable pension
1,000/mo
Presence: 4 months/year minimum to maintain status ·Path: Renewable; permanent residency after 3 years
Official source →
Rentista Visa
Retirees with investment income, no traditional pension
2,500/mo
Presence: 4 months/year minimum ·Path: Renewable every 2 years; permanent at 3 years
Official source →

Healthcare at a glance

Typical retirement-age (65+) cost: ~$180/month · medical inflation premium: 4.5%/year above general inflation
CAJA public + private hospital plan

Legal residents must pay into CAJA (~7-11% of declared income) which gives full public access. Most retirees layer a private plan (~$80-200/month at 65) for shorter waits at CIMA, Clínica Bíblica, Hospital La Católica. Cash medical tourism is common — surgery is 1/3 to 1/2 of US prices.

What to do next

Heads upThis calculator is a planning aid, not financial advice. Tax rules, visa requirements, market returns, and personal circumstances change — what you see here is a directional estimate based on your inputs. Before acting on any number, check with a qualified tax advisor, financial planner, or immigration lawyer who knows your actual situation.