No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveProposed Luxury Home Tax Would Aid Slum-dwellers

Proposed Luxury Home Tax Would Aid Slum-dwellers

Owners of luxury homes in Costa Rica may soon face a new tax, the proceeds of which would be used to improve conditions for slum dwellers, President Oscar Arias announced Monday.

The country has “39,000 families living in shantytowns. The idea is to move at least 50% of those (to better housing) in the next four years,” Arias said, speaking to reporters during a press conference at Juan Santamaría International Airport before he left for Europe (see separate article).

The tax is a new addition to a bill presented during the last legislative term by Social Christian Unity Party (PUSC) legislator Rodolfo Delgado. The law would allow the Housing Mortgage Bank (BAHNVI) to invest ¢10 billion ($19.6 million) to help eradicate shantytowns, or tugurios.

The proposed law would allow BAHNVI to assign up to 50% of the annual income of the Housing Subsidies Fund (FOSUVI) to shantytowns.

The tax Arias proposed on luxury houses would help pay for the increased funding provided to FOSUVI, said Fernando Fernández, spokesman for the Housing Ministry. The tax rate and the definition of a luxury home have not been finalized.

The Legislative Assembly is split over Delgado’s bill, the daily La Nación reported.

The Libertarian Movement Party and Citizen Action Party (PAC) say the bill does not include controls to ensure the quality of construction or selection of beneficiaries, while PUSC and the National Liberation Party (PLN), which support the bill, claim it would help eradicate shantytowns and additional controls could be defined once the bill is passed.

Housing Minister Fernando Zumbado, who is also the president of BAHNVI’s board of directors, said that the regulations created for the application of the law would include the controls the bill’s critics have mentioned, La Nación reported.

Housing Ministry statistics show that Costa Rica is home to 402 shantytowns, classified as groupings of approximately five families and up where housing conditions do not meet basic health requirements. Of these settlements, 70% are in the greater San José area.Many shantytowns are also classified as precarios, where people live on land that does not belong to them (TT, April 28).

Trending Now

Costa Rica Voted for Change Now It Must Decide What Kind

The people have spoken. Laura Fernandez is our new president. The next four years in Costa Rica will be interesting. As the handpicked successor...

Under U.S. Influence, Venezuela Eases State Grip on Oil for Economic Revival

Venezuela's National Assembly has passed a landmark reform to its hydrocarbons law, marking a significant shift toward opening the country's vast oil reserves to...

Costa Rica Upholds Inmate Voting Tradition in Crime-Focused 2026 Presidential Race

Thousands of inmates across Costa Rica cast their ballots on Sunday, February 1, during the presidential and legislative elections, as authorities set up polling...

Infantino Says Football Is Growing Exponentially in Nicaragua

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said football is growing “exponentially” in Nicaragua, a country he visited ahead of a Concacaf congress on Sunday and where...

Voter Turnout Rises in Costa Rica as Abstention Drops

Sunday’s election day brings good news for all of Costa Rica: voter abstention decreased. This means that more people decided to participate in these...

Laura Fernandez wins Costa Rica Presidency in the First Round

Laura Fernández won Costa Rica’s presidential election in the first round today, after early official results showed her clearing the 40% threshold required to...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica