
The Buying Guide
Foreigners can own property here outright — but the process is different from home. Here's how it actually works, and how to protect yourself.
Buying real estate in Costa Rica is genuinely accessible to foreigners — you get the same fee-simple ownership rights as a citizen. But the transaction works differently than in the US or Canada: there's no MLS, no buyer's agent built into the system, and the responsibility to verify what you're buying falls on you. This guide walks the whole path, honestly.
Ownership
This surprises a lot of buyers: as a foreigner, you have the same ownership rights as a Costa Rican citizen for titled (fee-simple, or propiedad) property. You can own it in your own name or, very commonly, through a Costa Rican corporation (Sociedad Anónima or SRL) for liability and estate-planning reasons.
The one major exception is the Maritime Zone — the first 200 meters from the high-tide line, which is mostly concession property (a long-term lease from the local municipality, with restrictions on foreign ownership percentages), not titled. Concession can be a fine investment, but it's a different legal animal — know which one you're buying before you fall in love with a beachfront view.
The Process
The transaction is notary-driven and methodical. At a high level:
Due Diligence
There is no MLS and no automatic buyer-protection here — due diligence is how you avoid the horror stories. A competent real-estate attorney will verify, at minimum: clear title and the seller's legal right to sell; no mortgages, liens, or judgments; that the registered boundaries and survey (plano catastrado) match reality; water rights and utility access (critical outside town); HOA standing and fees; and any environmental or zoning restrictions.
This is also exactly why buyer-side representation matters here more than at home. In Costa Rica the listing agent works for the seller. Having someone whose only job is to protect your interests — and who knows which questions to ask — is the difference between a clean purchase and an expensive lesson.
Closing Costs
Budget roughly 3.5%–4% of the purchase price in closing costs, typically split or negotiated between buyer and seller. That generally includes the property transfer tax, documentary stamps, the notary/legal fee, and registration. Annual carrying costs are low by US/Canada standards: the base property tax is a modest fraction of registered value, and there's a separate luxury-home (Solidarity) tax only on higher-value homes above a set threshold.
Exact figures depend on the property and how it's held — we connect you with vetted attorneys who give you precise numbers for your specific deal, not ballparks.
What People Get Wrong
The single most expensive mistake. Never buy on trust — verify clear title and boundaries at the Registry, every time.
That dreamy beachfront might be Maritime-Zone concession with foreign-ownership limits. Know which you're buying.
Convenient, but they don't work for you. Engage independent, buyer-side legal counsel.
Always use a regulated escrow agent. Money that leaves before closing is money at risk.
FAQ
No. You do not need residency, citizenship, or even to live in Costa Rica to own titled property. Ownership and immigration status are completely separate.
Many foreign buyers hold property through a Costa Rican corporation for liability, privacy, and estate-planning reasons — but it's situational. Your attorney will advise based on your goals.
A straightforward, cash purchase with clean title can close in a few weeks once due diligence is complete. Financing or title issues extend it.
Yes, but they're modest — a small percentage of registered value annually, plus a separate luxury-home tax only on higher-value properties above a threshold.
Title insurance is available in Costa Rica through international providers and is worth discussing with your attorney, especially on higher-value purchases.

The Exploration Concierge was built for people who want to experience Costa Rica before making a major decision — with local, buyer-side guidance every step.

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