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Retirement visas

Retiring to Costa Rica: the visa routes

The Pensionado residency suits retirees with at least US$1,000 a month of lifetime pension income, while the Rentista route uses stable unearned income or a bank deposit; both are renewable and can lead to permanent residency.

A few things to line up early:

Visa rules change often — treat this as a starting point and confirm the latest official requirements before you plan.

Remember: buying a home and gaining the right to live there are usually separate steps. See how ownership works in Costa Rica, and what it costs to live there in our cost-of-retiring guide.

Tax as a resident of Costa Rica

Taxation is territorial, so a resident's foreign pension and overseas income are not taxed in Costa Rica, only locally sourced income is. That makes a UK or other foreign pension straightforward to draw here, though you keep any home-country obligations.

Healthcare and everyday life in Costa Rica

Costa Rica is well regarded: legal residents join the public CAJA system by income-based contribution, alongside excellent private hospitals such as CIMA and Clinica Biblica in San Jose. Many keep private cover too, which is good value. Safe by regional standards with everyday care against petty theft; Spanish is the language but English is widely used in expat and tourist areas, and driving is on the right.

Where retirees settle

The Central Valley towns of Escazu, Santa Ana, Atenas and Grecia for a spring-like climate and expat services, plus Guanacaste (Tamarindo, Nosara) and the Central and South Pacific (Uvita, Dominical) for the beach.

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Everything on Costa Rica

Cost of retiring in Costa RicaCan a foreigner buy property in Costa Rica?

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