Back to Turrialba, Costa Rica

Turrialba, Turrialba, Cartago

Turrialba, Costa Rica

Guide Price

$54,000

54,000 USD

PROPERTY TYPE

house

Turrialba, Turrialba, Cartago - Photo 2
Turrialba, Turrialba, Cartago - Photo 3
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Description

Casa en venta cerca de Platanillo, Turrialba. โ‚ก27.000.000 ๏ฟฝ8830 4140 Century 21 La Campiรฑa

Location

Open in Google Maps

Living in Turrialba

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

Roy Solano

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