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The Relocation Guide

Relocating to Costa Rica, without the regrets.

Moving your life is different from buying a view. Here's the honest version — logistics, community, and the things listings never tell you.

8 min readBuyer-side · honestCR Property Insider

Relocating to Costa Rica can be the best decision your family ever makes — and the people who thrive almost all did the unglamorous work up front. They understood the logistics, chose a community that fit their actual life, and arrived with realistic expectations. This guide is the honest version, both the pura vida and the paperwork.

Residency

You don't need residency to own — but you'll want a plan.

You can own property and spend significant time in Costa Rica as a tourist, but to live here long-term most people pursue legal residency. The common paths are the Pensionado (for those with qualifying pension income), Rentista (for those who can show stable income/savings), and Inversionista (for qualifying investors, including in real estate). Each has its own income or investment thresholds and benefits.

Residency is a process, not a formality — it takes time and paperwork, and it's worth starting early with help. Our Residency guide goes deeper, and we connect families with residency specialists who do this daily.

Daily Life

The logistics nobody puts in the brochure.

Fit

Choose the community, not just the house.

For a relocating family, the town quietly decides everything — your commute, your kids' school options, your social life, your access to healthcare. A house is about a view; a relocation is about a life, and that only reveals itself in the rhythm of a place.

This is the single biggest reason we built the Exploration Concierge — to let families experience the communities they're considering, meet people already living there, and choose with confidence instead of hope. If you have kids, the Schools guide is essential reading first.

Honesty

The trade-offs, stated plainly.

We're buyer-side, so here's the honest ledger. The good: lifestyle, nature, a stable democracy, strong healthcare, a welcoming expat community, and a genuinely slower, healthier pace. The friction: bureaucracy and paperwork, slower services, logistics that take patience, a green season with real rain (roughly May–November), and some imported goods that cost more than at home.

None of it is a dealbreaker for the right family — but going in clear-eyed is what separates the people who stay from the people who move twice.

What People Get Wrong

Common mistakes — and how to avoid them.

01

Buying before living the neighborhood

The most common relocation regret. Spend real time in a community before you commit to it.

02

Underestimating logistics

Cars, shipping, banking, paperwork — the unglamorous stuff shapes daily life more than the view does.

03

Ignoring the green season

Visit (or at least research) the rainy months. The dry-season brochure isn't the whole year.

04

Choosing the house over the town

Schools, healthcare access and community fit decide your map. Pick the place first.

FAQ

Questions buyers actually ask.

Do I need residency to move to Costa Rica?

You can spend significant time as a tourist, but for long-term living most relocators pursue legal residency (Pensionado, Rentista, or Inversionista). Owning property doesn't require it.

Is healthcare good for expats?

Generally yes — see the Healthcare guide. Access varies by area, which is a key thing to evaluate in person.

Can my kids go to good schools?

Several private and international/bilingual schools serve the coast. See the Schools guide; the right school often decides the right town.

What's the cost of living?

It ranges widely by lifestyle and area. Our Cost of Living Calculator gives a realistic monthly estimate.

How bad is the rainy season?

The green season (roughly May–November) brings real rain, often in afternoon bursts. Many people love it; just don't be surprised by it.

Ready to move beyond research?

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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