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Pensionado Visa: Same threshold, different path
Panama: $1,000/month lifetime pension. Immediate permanent residency. 97% approval rate. Only 1 day/year in-country required. No CSS (social security) enrollment required for Pensionados.
Costa Rica: $1,000/month lifetime pension. Residency status (not immediate permanent). Must renew DIMEX every 2 years. 1 day/year minimum stay. Mandatory CCSS Caja enrollment ($70–$200+/month) required for all residents.
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Cost of Living: Very similar overall
Panama City: Most expensive in Panama — comparable to Escazú, Costa Rica. $2,200–$2,800/month couple.
Boquete (Panama): $1,700–$2,200/month couple. Cool highland climate, strong expat community.
Central Valley CR (Escazú/Santa Ana): $2,000–$2,800/month couple. Larger expat infrastructure.
Guanacaste CR (beach): $2,400–$3,200/month couple — slightly more expensive than Boquete.
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Healthcare: Both excellent — different structure
Panama: Private healthcare at 25–50% of US prices. Punta Pacífica (Johns Hopkins affiliate), Hospital Nacional. Pensionados get 20% off medical consultations and 15% off hospital bills. CSS enrollment is optional for Pensionados.
Costa Rica: Both a public system (Caja/CCSS) and strong private sector (CIMA, Clínica Bíblica). Mandatory Caja adds $70–$200/month but provides access to the full public hospital network. Private care is comparable quality to Panama at similar prices.
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Property: Costa Rica has the Maritime Zone trap
Panama: Foreign property rights are strong. Property within the "Maritime zone" (sea to coastline) uses right of possession, but this is better-defined than Costa Rica's. Foreigners own property freely in most areas including beach areas via titled land. Restrictions are near borders (10km) and certain indigenous zones.
Costa Rica: Maritime Zone Law (Law 6043) prohibits foreigners from owning the first 200m from the high-tide line outright unless resident for 5+ years. Most "beachfront" is held via municipal concession — not title. This is the single biggest property risk for Americans in Costa Rica.
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Pensionado Discounts: Panama wins on scope
Panama discounts: 50% entertainment, 25% airline tickets, up to 50% hotels Mon–Thu, 15–25% restaurants, 20% medical consultations, 15% hospital bills, 20% prescriptions, duty-free car import every 2 years.
Costa Rica discounts: 50% entertainment, 25% professional services, 20% utilities, 15% medical bills, 20% prescriptions, 25% CR transportation. Strong discounts, but no duty-free car import and slightly fewer restaurant discounts than Panama.
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Banking: Both challenging — Panama slightly easier
Panama: FATCA-compliant banks are cautious with Americans but Banistmo, Banco General, and Mercantile regularly open accounts. Process typically requires pension letters, bank references, and proof of address.
Costa Rica: State banks (Banco Nacional, Banco de Costa Rica) are most accessible. Private banks (BAC, Scotiabank) are more restrictive. The process is broadly similar to Panama but some expats report more consistency at Panama's private banks for account opening.
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US Taxes: Identical exposure (no treaty in either)
Both Panama and Costa Rica: No US income tax treaty. No totalization agreement. Full SE tax (15.3%) applies to self-employed Americans in both countries. FEIE available in both. FBAR and FATCA apply in both. The US tax situation is essentially the same — choose between these countries based on lifestyle, not US tax strategy.
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Lifestyle: Different vibes — same value
Panama: More urban/modern feel in Panama City. Boquete is a classic mountain retirement town. USD as official currency eliminates exchange rate friction. English is more widely spoken in expat areas.
Costa Rica: Pura Vida culture — more natural/outdoor focus. Greater biodiversity and national parks. More established expat infrastructure in Central Valley. USD accepted widely but Costa Rican Colón is official currency.