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Foreign property ownership

Can a foreigner buy property in Panama?

Foreigners can own property with essentially the same rights as locals in most areas.

Before you buy in Panama, always:

General guidance only — rules change; confirm the current position with a qualified local lawyer.

Our free ownership checker and the Overseas Property Playbook walk through how foreign ownership works step by step — the questions to ask and the traps to sidestep.

What it costs to buy in Panama

The buyer's one-off costs are low, typically about 2.5-4.5% covering their own lawyer (around 0.5-2%), notary and registry fees; the 2% transfer tax is normally the seller's. Titled property completes in a few weeks to a couple of months.

Where foreigners tend to buy in Panama

Boquete for cool, green highlands popular with retirees; Coronado for a beach town within reach of the capital; Panama City for cosmopolitan amenities and healthcare; and Pedasi or Bocas del Toro for quieter coastal life.

Healthcare and everyday life

Private healthcare is good and affordable, centred on Panama City's modern hospitals (one affiliated with Johns Hopkins) with English-speaking doctors; private insurance runs roughly US$50-150 a month at younger ages, rising with age. Care is more limited in rural and highland areas. Panama is among Central America's safer countries and uses the US dollar; they drive on the right, English is widely spoken in the capital and expat areas, and daily life is straightforward for British retirees.

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Everything on Panama

Cost of retiring in PanamaRetirement visas for Panama

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