Free Resources · 2026
Legal ownership structures, due diligence, escrow, closing costs, and the top 5 mistakes to avoid — written by licensed Costa Rican notary-attorneys for foreign buyers.

Turrialba · Eastern Central Valley
Market intelligence · 2025 data
Gross rental yield ranges for short-term vacation rentals, based on 2025 occupancy data from Airbnb/VRBO comparables across Costa Rica's three main investment zones.
Gross rental yield (annual)
9.4 % avg. appreciation (2020–2025)
Tamarindo, Nosara, Flamingo, Potrero
Gross rental yield (annual)
5.1 % avg. appreciation (2020–2025)
Escazú, Santa Ana, San José CBD
Gross rental yield (annual)
12.6 % avg. appreciation (2020–2025)
Uvita, Dominical, Drake Bay
* Yield ranges based on short-term rental comparables. Actual returns depend on property management, seasonality and occupancy rate. Long-term residential rentals typically yield 3–5%.
Legal framework
Foreign ownership is protected under Costa Rican law — but the type of land and its proximity to the coast determines which ownership structure applies.
The first 50 metres from the high-tide line is public domain — it can never be titled or owned by anyone. The next 150 metres is the Restricted Zone and requires a municipal concession. Always verify land category before negotiating.
| Zone / Structure | Foreign Ownership | Capital Gains Tax | Transfer Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
Private Property (inland) | Direct — 100% foreign | 15% on profit | 1.5% of registered value |
Maritime Zone (50–200 m) | Concession only — no direct title. Foreigners require a Costa Rican partner (≥ 50% CR citizenship) unless property predates 1977 law | 15% on profit | 1.5% + concession transfer fee |
Maritime Zone (0–50 m) | 🚫 Public domain — cannot be owned | N/A | N/A |
Corporate hold (S.R.L.) | Foreign shareholders allowed 100% | 15% corporate capital gains | 1.5% + corporate registry fees |
Step-by-step process
Identify your property and submit a Carta de Intención (letter of intent). Not legally binding, but establishes negotiated price, contingencies and timeline before committing.
Title search at the Registro Nacional (must show no liens, encumbrances or boundary disputes). Verify plano catastrado, permits, HOA, utilities, environmental restrictions and SETENA compliance.
Sign the preliminary purchase agreement before a licensed notary. Pay the arras deposit (typically 10% of purchase price held in escrow). This is the binding commitment from both parties.
Your notary-attorney drafts and executes the deed at closing. Funds released from escrow. Title registered at the Registro Público within 30–60 days. You receive the official folio real number.
BuyEnjoy coordinates steps 2–4 for you — title verification, notary assignment, and escrow release — from a single dashboard, so nothing falls through the cracks.
Avoid these
Most problems in Costa Rican real estate transactions are 100% avoidable with the right preparation. Here's what to watch out for.
How BuyEnjoy helps
BuyEnjoy's process includes a licensed notary-attorney review, Registro Nacional title verification, and a secure escrow flow for every transaction — eliminating all five pitfalls by design.
Skipping the Registro Nacional search
Unresolved liens and ownership disputes are invisible until you search the public registry. Always get a full title history before paying any deposit.
Paying the seller directly — no escrow
All funds should flow through a licensed escrow or notary's trust account. Wire fraud and seller fraud are real risks in unregulated transactions.
Ignoring the maritime zone rules
A beautiful beachfront lot within 200m of the high-tide line may be a concession or public land — not a titled property. Always verify with INDER and local municipality.
Using the seller's attorney
In Costa Rica the notary technically represents both parties, but any conflicts of interest must be disclosed. Engage your own independent legal counsel.
Underestimating closing costs
Budget 3.5–4.5% of purchase price: notary fees (~1.5%), transfer tax (1.5%), registry stamps (~0.5%), municipal levy (0.5%). These are non-negotiable and payable at closing.

Buyer's Intelligence · 2026
The right knowledge
+ the right team
changes everything.
Foreign buyers who complete due diligence with a licensed notary-attorney and use regulated escrow close faster — and avoid 100% of the most common pitfalls. Our full guide shows you exactly how.
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