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Foreign buyers exploring property residency Costa Rica options face a critical distinction in 2026: purchasing real estate does not automatically grant immigration status, but a qualifying investment of at least $150,000 USD can open the door to temporary investor residency under the framework established by Law 9996. The legislation, which has reshaped residency by investment Costa Rica pathways, sets clear thresholds, documentation requirements and timelines that every prospective buyer must understand before committing capital. Meanwhile, updated transfer-tax rules and luxury-home tax thresholds effective in 2026 have changed the closing-cost calculus for foreigners.
This guide delivers a practitioner-led legal checklist, covering notary steps, registry procedures, immigration paperwork and common pitfalls, to help foreign investors, immigration advisors and realtors navigate the process with confidence.
The short answer is no, property ownership alone does not confer any immigration status in Costa Rica. However, purchasing qualifying real estate valued at $150,000 USD or more can form the basis of an application for investor temporary residency (Residencia Temporal como Inversionista) through the Dirección General de Migración y Extranjería (DGME). The property must be a genuine, insurable asset registered in the buyer’s name (or in a properly structured trust or company), and the applicant must satisfy additional immigration criteria including background checks, health coverage and proof of economic solvency.
Quick 5-step checklist for property-based investor residency:
Law 9996 consolidated and modernised the legal framework governing foreign investment and residency pathways in Costa Rica. Before this legislation, investor residency rules were scattered across multiple decrees and administrative guidelines, creating confusion about qualifying thresholds and eligible asset classes. Law 9996 brought clarity by establishing a unified minimum investment threshold and defining what counts as a qualifying investment for immigration purposes.
Under the current framework, foreigners who buy property in Costa Rica can apply for investor temporary residency if their investment meets the $150,000 USD minimum. This threshold applies to real estate purchased directly or to a combination of qualifying assets, including property, vehicles and business equipment, provided the total reaches the required floor and all assets are insurable. Industry observers expect that, given ongoing legislative interest in attracting foreign capital, this threshold could be revised upward in coming years, making it prudent for prospective buyers to act while current rules are in effect.
Not every property purchase automatically satisfies the DGME’s requirements. The investment must consist of insurable assets, meaning the property must be capable of being covered by a Costa Rican insurance policy (typically through the Instituto Nacional de Seguros or a licensed private insurer). Vacant lots in certain restricted zones, properties with unclear title or unregistered structures may not qualify.
Valuation is assessed based on the registered purchase price in the notarised deed or, where required, an independent appraisal by a licensed Costa Rican appraiser (perito valuador). The DGME may request an independent valuation if the declared purchase price appears significantly below market rates. Buyers should ensure the declared value in the escritura accurately reflects the true transaction price, underreporting to reduce transfer tax can jeopardise both the residency application and create legal exposure.
Once the property purchase is complete and registered, the applicant files the investor residency package with the DGME. Processing times vary, but the typical trajectory is as follows:
| Investment option | Minimum qualifying value | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Real estate (single property) | $150,000 USD | Temporary residency approval: 6–18 months from filing |
| Combined assets (property + vehicles/equipment) | $150,000 USD combined | Temporary residency approval: 6–18 months from filing |
| Transition to permanent residency | Must maintain investment | After 3 years of continuous temporary residency |
Temporary investor residency is initially granted for two years and is renewable. After maintaining temporary residency status for three consecutive years, the holder may apply for permanent residency. Permanent residents who have resided in Costa Rica for seven years from the date of their initial temporary residency may then be eligible to apply for citizenship through naturalisation.
Foreigners can buy property in Costa Rica with the same rights as nationals in most of the country. There is no requirement for local partners or special permits for fee-simple ownership outside the maritime-terrestrial zone (the first 200 metres from the high-tide line on both coasts). Within that restricted coastal strip, concession-based ownership through a Costa Rican entity or fideicomiso may be required.
A fideicomiso is a trust arrangement where a licensed trust company (typically a bank subsidiary) holds legal title to the property on behalf of the foreign beneficiary. This structure is commonly used for properties within the maritime zone and can simplify estate planning by avoiding probate. However, fideicomiso arrangements add annual trustee fees (typically $800–$2,000 USD per year) and require careful documentation to ensure the DGME accepts the trust-held property as a qualifying investment for residency purposes. The beneficiary must be clearly identified in the trust deed, and the trust must include language confirming the beneficiary’s economic interest in the property at its full appraised value.
Some buyers purchase property through a Costa Rican sociedad anónima (corporation) or sociedad de responsabilidad limitada (limited liability company). This can offer liability shielding and may facilitate future sale (by transferring shares rather than the property itself, though tax authorities scrutinise such arrangements). For investor residency purposes, company-owned property requires a formal audit or independent valuation, and the DGME may request additional corporate documentation to verify the applicant’s beneficial ownership.
| Ownership structure | Residency benefit | Key legal/tax implications |
|---|---|---|
| Individual foreign title | Purchase can be used as qualifying investment for investor residency (if meets threshold) | Simple title; direct taxation; easier immigration evidence; potential estate planning issues |
| Fideicomiso (bank trust) | Trust beneficiary can use trust-held property as qualifying asset (document with bank + deed) | Common for coastal concession ownership; adds trustee costs; must ensure migration accepts trust valuation evidence |
| Costa Rican company | Company-owned asset can be part of investment package (needs proper valuation and anti-abuse checks) | May have corporate tax obligations; more complex for migration to accept unless formally audited |
This section provides the core practical checklist that every foreign buyer needs. In Costa Rica, public notaries (notarios públicos) play a central role in real estate transactions, they draft the deed, verify identities, collect taxes and present documents to the Registro Nacional. Unlike some jurisdictions, the notary is an independent legal professional (always a licensed attorney) and does not represent either party. Buyers should always retain their own independent legal counsel in addition to the closing notary.
Before making an offer or signing any agreement, the following due diligence items are essential:
The opción de compra-venta (purchase-sale option agreement) or promesa de compra-venta (promise to buy and sell) should include the following protective clauses:
On the day of closing, the notary performs several mandatory steps in a legally prescribed sequence:
After closing, the notary presents the deed to the Registro Nacional for inscription. Registration typically takes 10–20 business days under normal processing. Once registered, the buyer receives a digital confirmation of the new title inscription. The following post-closing steps should also be completed:
| Document | Who issues | When required |
|---|---|---|
| Title search certificate | Registro Nacional | Before offer and again at closing |
| Municipal tax clearance | Local municipality | Before closing |
| Water letter (carta de agua) | AyA / ASADA / municipal provider | Before closing |
| Cadastral survey (plano catastrado) | Licensed surveyor / Catastro Nacional | Before offer (verify boundaries) |
| Transfer tax receipt | Ministerio de Hacienda (ATV portal) | At closing |
| Notarised deed (escritura) | Public notary | At closing |
| Registry inscription confirmation | Registro Nacional | 10–20 business days post-closing |
Understanding the full spectrum of closing costs Costa Rica imposes is essential for accurate budgeting. The transfer tax Costa Rica charges on real estate conveyances is the single largest closing expense.
The real estate transfer tax is calculated at 1.5% of the registered property value (the higher of the declared sale price or the fiscal value recorded at the municipality). This rate has remained stable, though the fiscal values used as the assessment floor have been updated in recent municipal revisions. Stamp duties, including fiscal stamps, municipal stamps and bar association stamps, typically add another 0.5–0.7% of the property value.
| Cost item | Who pays | Typical % or amount |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer tax | Buyer (customary) | 1.5% = $3,750 |
| Stamp duties (fiscal, municipal, bar) | Split or buyer (per agreement) | ~0.6% = $1,500 |
| Notary fees | Buyer (customary) | 1.0–1.5% = $2,500–$3,750 |
| Registry fees | Buyer | ~0.05% = $125 |
| Legal due diligence (independent counsel) | Buyer | $1,000–$2,500 (flat fee typical) |
| Escrow fees (if used) | Split (per agreement) | $500–$1,500 |
| Estimated total closing costs | ~$9,375–$13,125 (3.75–5.25%) |
Costa Rica imposes a solidarity tax on luxury residential properties (Impuesto Solidario para el Fortalecimiento de Programas de Vivienda) on homes with a construction value exceeding the annually adjusted threshold. The 2026 threshold and applicable rates are published by the Ministerio de Hacienda. This is an annual tax, not a one-time closing cost, and applies to the construction value (excluding land). Rates are progressive, ranging from 0.25% to 0.55% of the construction value above the threshold. Municipal property tax (impuesto de bienes inmuebles) is assessed separately at 0.25% of the registered fiscal value per year.
Foreigners who rent out property in Costa Rica are subject to income tax on rental earnings at rates ranging from 15% to 25% depending on the income bracket and whether the taxpayer files as a resident or non-resident. Municipal business licences (patente) may be required for short-term rental operations.
Once the property is registered and the buyer holds a clean title, the next step toward property residency Costa Rica is compiling the DGME application package. The following documents are typically required for an investor residency application:
| Migration document | Purpose | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Apostilled criminal background check | Confirms no disqualifying criminal record | Country of origin (apostilled per Hague Convention) |
| Registered property deed (escritura inscrita) | Proves qualifying investment | Registro Nacional |
| Independent property valuation | Confirms investment meets $150,000 USD threshold | Licensed Costa Rican appraiser |
| Proof of investment funds | Demonstrates legitimate source of capital | Bank statements, wire transfer confirmations |
| Health insurance policy | Required for all residency applicants | CCSS (Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social) or approved private insurer |
| Consular registration | Registration with applicant’s embassy in Costa Rica | Relevant embassy or consulate |
| Passport-size photos and biometrics | Identity confirmation | DGME appointment |
| Application forms and filing fees | Administrative processing | DGME |
All foreign-issued documents must be apostilled (or legalised through the consular chain if the issuing country is not a Hague Convention signatory) and translated into Spanish by an official translator (traductor oficial) registered with the Costa Rican Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Common reasons for application rejection include expired apostilles, incomplete translations, property valuations that fall below the threshold, and failure to demonstrate the legitimate origin of investment funds.
Even experienced international buyers encounter risks specific to the Costa Rican property market. The following are the most common closing pitfalls, along with practical mitigations:
In one illustrative scenario, a foreign buyer purchased a beachfront lot through a company without verifying the company’s corporate standing. After closing, it emerged that the company had been administratively dissolved for failure to pay the annual corporate tax, rendering the transfer void. The buyer spent over a year and significant legal fees reinstating the company and re-registering the transaction. The lesson: always verify corporate good-standing and tax compliance before agreeing to purchase through any entity.
The following property residency Costa Rica checklist summarises the full process from initial search through residency application, with recommended timelines:
Navigating property residency Costa Rica requirements demands coordination across real estate law, notarial procedure, tax compliance and immigration filing. Each transaction is unique, and regulatory conditions, including Law 9996 provisions and tax thresholds, are subject to ongoing legislative review. Prospective buyers should engage a Costa Rica-licensed attorney and public notary who can provide case-specific guidance, conduct independent due diligence and manage the closing process to protect their investment and residency objectives. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help you identify qualified Costa Rica real estate lawyers and notaries with the relevant expertise and local licensing to advise on your transaction.
Last reviewed: June 3, 2026. This guide provides general legal information on property residency Costa Rica pathways and is not a substitute for individualised legal advice. Laws, thresholds and administrative practices are subject to change. Consult a licensed Costa Rican attorney for guidance specific to your circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eddy Pérez Jiménez at Blue Zone Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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