Costa Rica is again being presented to U.S. readers as one of the countries where Americans can still find a practical path to living abroad, after The New York Times included our country in a new service article on golden visa and residency options. The article places Costa Rica alongside Greece, Panama, Portugal and São Tomé and Príncipe in a broader look at countries that continue to offer accessible residency programs at a time when some governments have tightened or shut down similar routes for foreigners.
For Costa Rica, the appeal is familiar: proximity to the United States, an established American expat community, a reputation for stability, access to health care, and a residency system that gives retirees, investors and people with steady outside income more than one way to formalize a long-term stay.
The New York Times mention is not a tourism ranking. It is closer to a relocation checklist. The focus is on residency rules, costs, tax considerations and the chance to eventually seek permanent residency or citizenship. For Americans seriously weighing a move, that distinction matters. Costa Rica is attractive, but buying a plane ticket or a condo does not automatically settle the legal side of life.
One of the main routes is the inversionista, or investor, category. Costa Rica lowered the minimum investment threshold to $150,000 under Law 9996, which was designed to attract investors, rentistas and pensionados after the pandemic. The investment can include real estate, registered assets, shares, securities or productive projects that meet the legal requirements.
The pensionado category remains one of the best-known options for retirees. Applicants must show at least $1,000 a month in lifetime pension or retirement income. For many Americans, that can include Social Security, a government pension or another qualifying retirement payment. The category is popular because the income threshold is relatively low compared with many other countries competing for foreign residents.
The rentista route is aimed at people who are not retired but can prove stable outside income. La República, citing the New York Times piece, described the structure as a $60,000 deposit with monthly transfers of $2,500 to a Costa Rican account over two years, after which a new deposit is required if the person wants to continue under that status.
These categories generally begin as temporary residency. Residency by investment is typically granted for two years and may be renewed. After three years, residents may seek permanent residency, and after seven years of legal residence, many foreign residents may be eligible to apply for citizenship. The citizenship timeline can be shorter for citizens of Central America, Ibero-America and Spain.
The tax angle also helps explain why Costa Rica keeps appearing in relocation stories. Costa Rica taxes income generated in Costa Rica, not income earned abroad, a territorial model that can be appealing to retirees and remote-income households. That does not erase U.S. tax obligations. American citizens generally remain subject to U.S. tax filing rules even while living outside the country, so relocation planning usually requires advice on both sides.
The renewed attention comes as more Americans say they are open to leaving the United States. Gallup reported in late 2025 that about one in five Americans said they would move permanently to another country if they had the opportunity, with interest especially high among younger women. That does not mean one in five Americans will actually move. But it does show a larger audience is at least thinking about life abroad.
For Costa Rica, the opportunity is clear. Americans who relocate bring spending power, buy homes, use private services, enroll in health care, hire attorneys and accountants, and support local businesses. In beach towns, the Central Valley and expat-heavy communities, foreign residents already shape the real estate market and service economy.
The pressure points are just as real. Foreign demand has pushed up housing prices in some coastal areas, especially places such as Tamarindo, Nosara, Santa Teresa and parts of the Nicoya Peninsula. Costa Rica is also no longer the low-cost retirement secret it once was. The strong colón, rising insurance costs, private school tuition, vehicle prices and imported goods can surprise newcomers who arrive expecting a bargain.
That is why the latest New York Times mention is best read as a reminder of Costa Rica’s continued draw, not a guarantee of an easy move. The country remains one of the more accessible relocation options for Americans, especially compared with countries that have raised investment thresholds or ended real estate-based residency routes. But the move still requires paperwork, patience, legal advice and a realistic budget.
For Americans looking abroad, Costa Rica’s pitch has changed less than the world around it. Our country still offers beaches, mountains, health care, familiar expat networks and a legal pathway to stay. In 2026, that combination remains enough to keep Costa Rica firmly in the conversation for Americans thinking about a life outside the United States.





