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.
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.
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.
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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