Back to Quepos, Costa Rica

Quepos, Quepos, Puntarenas

Quepos, Costa Rica

Guide Price

$165,000

165,000 USD

PROPERTY TYPE

house

BEDROOMS

2

BATHROOMS

2

Quepos, Quepos, Puntarenas - Photo 2
Quepos, Quepos, Puntarenas - Photo 3
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Description

๏ฟฝ Charming 2-Bedroom Home in Hatillo โ€“ Just Minutes from Dominical Beach ๏ฟฝ

Location

Open in Google Maps

Living in Quepos

Howler monkeys as your morning alarm, surfing before breakfast, and a country that dissolved its army in 1948 so it could spend the money on rainforests and schools instead.

Visa

Digital Nomad Visa โ€” requires $3,000/mo income ($4,000 for families). Valid 1 year, renewable once. Tax-exempt on foreign income. Rentista Visa โ€” for those with $2,500/mo passive income or $60,000 deposit. Pensionado Visa โ€” for retirees with $1,000+/mo pension. Both lead to permanent residency after 3 years.

Learn more: The Complete Guide to Moving to Costa Ricaโ†’

Key Fact

Costa Rica has excellent universal healthcare (ranked above the US by WHO) and no military โ€” the budget goes to education and environment instead. The "Pura Vida" lifestyle is real but imported goods and cars are expensive due to import taxes.

Learn more: Health Insurance for Americans Living Abroadโ†’
See all Costa Rica listings

Costa Rica at a glance

How Costa Rica scores for American expats

๐Ÿ’ฐCost of Living
Affordable
๐Ÿ›ก๏ธSafety
Moderate
๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธEnglish Spoken
Moderate
๐ŸฅHealthcare
Excellent
๐ŸŒฌ๏ธAir Quality
Clean
๐Ÿ“ถInternet
Moderate
๐ŸšถWalkability
Car needed
๐Ÿš‡Transit
Limited

Cost of buying in Costa Rica

Estimated fees and ongoing costs for this property

Closing Costs

4-6% of purchase price

  • ยทTransfer tax: 1.5%
  • ยทLegal fees: 1-1.5%
  • ยทStamps and registration: 0.5-1%
  • ยทNotary: included in legal fees

Annual Costs

Property Tax

0.25% of registered value (very low)

Insurance

$300-800/yr

HOA / Condo Fees

$100-400/mo for condos

Good to Know

Agent Fees

Seller pays (5%)

Foreign Buyer Note

Foreigners have same property rights as citizens. Maritime zone (first 200m from high tide) requires concession, not ownership.

Legal help in Costa Rica

Hire your own attorney โ€” not the seller's. We'll match you with a vetted local lawyer.

Need a local attorney in Costa Rica?

We'll connect you with an independent, English-speaking real estate attorney experienced with foreign buyers. Not the seller's lawyer โ€” yours.

Contact Agent

Luis

Next steps for moving to Costa Rica

Interested in this property? Here's how to move forward.

1

Understand the buying rules

Foreign ownership laws vary wildly by country. Some welcome you, others restrict or ban foreign buyers entirely.

2

Sort out your visa

Owning property doesn't give you the right to live there. Research residency options before you buy.

3

Plan your finances

Understand currency risk, international wire transfers, and whether you can get a local mortgage.

4

Know your tax obligations

US citizens are taxed on worldwide income. You'll need to file US taxes from abroad and may owe local taxes too.

5

Set up healthcare

Medicare doesn't cover you overseas. You'll need international health insurance or a local plan.

6

Run the full checklist

Banking, mail forwarding, power of attorney, pet import rules โ€” the complete pre-move checklist.

Source

Century21CostaRica.com

Portal listings

Currency

USD