No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeCosta RicaCosta Rica Accepts First U.S. Deported Migrants Under New Third Country Deal

Costa Rica Accepts First U.S. Deported Migrants Under New Third Country Deal

Costa Rica received its first group of migrants deported from the United States on Saturday under a new third-country agreement signed in March, marking the start of a policy that allows Washington to send some non-Costa Rican deportees to the country instead of returning them directly to their homelands. The first group included 25 people.

The migrants came from Albania, Cameroon, China, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Kenya, and Morocco. Costa Rica’s government had already said the arrangement could allow for the arrival of up to 25 deportees per week, though the country reserves the right to accept or reject individual cases.

Under the agreement, the migrants are to be processed under Costa Rican migration law with temporary humanitarian protection while officials work on the next step in each case. U.S. funding is expected to cover the program, while the International Organization for Migration is set to provide basic support including food, lodging, and other assistance during the first week of their stay. Costa Rican officials have also said the country would not send people to places where they could face persecution.

The deal deepens Costa Rica’s cooperation with the Trump administration’s expanded use of third-country deportations, a policy that has drawn attention across the region. The agreement was announced in late March after meetings between Costa Rican officials and U.S. representatives, and it was framed in San José as part of a broader migration and security relationship with Washington.

The move is also likely to revive debate inside Costa Rica because the country already faced scrutiny in 2025 after accepting up to 200 migrants deported by the United States. That earlier operation led to criticism over conditions for migrants housed near the Panamanian border, and later forced the government to grant special migratory status to 85 people who remained in the country after repatriation efforts stalled.

Human rights groups and critics in the United States and Costa Rica have argued that third-country deportation deals can leave migrants stranded in unfamiliar countries, far from family networks and often without language support. Supporters of the policy say it gives governments another tool to manage deportations when countries of origin are unwilling or slow to receive their nationals. For Costa Rica, the arrival of this first group means a controversial agreement is now no longer theoretical but active on the ground.

Trending Now

Panama Could Be the Next Costa Rica 2014 Says Dely Valdés

Panamanian soccer legend Julio César Dely Valdés believes his country’s national team can be a breakout story at the 2026 World Cup. His title...

U.S. State Department Keeps Costa Rica Travel Warning

The U.S. State Department has kept Costa Rica at Level 2 in its travel advisory system, urging Americans to exercise increased caution due to...

The Cologne Scent Scientists Use to Photograph Jaguars in Costa Rica

Civetone is a powerful macrocyclic ketone and the primary odoriferous constituent of natural civet. Known for its warm, intensely animalic, and powdery-musky scent, it...

Online Scams Are Becoming Costa Rica’s Biggest Crime Threat

For most of us that live here, the standard safety advice was simple: do not flash your phone on the bus, do not walk...

Waldorf Astoria Costa Rica Makes Esquire Best New Hotels 2026 List

Costa Rica picked up a place on Esquire’s Best New Hotels in the World 2026 list this week, with Waldorf Astoria Costa Rica Punta...

Marie Bouzkova rallies past Panna Udvardy to win Bogota title

Marie Bouzkova captured the Copa Colsanitas title in Bogotá on Sunday, battling back from a set down to defeat Hungary’s Panna Udvardy 6-7(7), 6-2,...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica