If your income arrives in dollars — a pension, Social Security, remote-work pay or rent from a property back home — this week quietly shrank it. The dollar closed at ¢450.63 on the wholesale Monex market yesterday, the lowest level since Costa Rica’s Central Bank (BCCR) began its current series in December 2007. It was the third record low in three days, after ¢451.36 on Monday and ¢451.05 on Tuesday, according to BCCR figures. The previous all-time low, ¢452.74, held only since late May, which shows how fast the colón has kept climbing.
For anyone converting dollars to colones to live here, the effect is the ongoing issue of each dollar now buys fewer colones than it ever has on record. The BCCR reference rate yesterday was ¢447.49 to buy dollars and ¢453.07 to sell them, and today the rate was hovering right at the ¢450 line.
Rewind six months and the difference is dramatic. In early January the dollar traded near ¢497. A colón that strong changes the arithmetic of an everyday budget. Say you bring in $2,000 a month: in January that converted to roughly ₡994,000. At today’s rate it comes to about ₡900,000 — close to ₡94,000 less every month, or more than ₡1 million over a year, for exactly the same dollars. Nothing about your income changed. The exchange rate did.
Where you feel it depends on how your money is arranged. If you earn dollars but pay rent, utilities and groceries in colones — the situation for most retirees and remote workers here — your costs in dollar terms have climbed all year, even where the colón prices on the shelf never moved.
If your rent is written in dollars, as many expat leases are, that line of your budget is unchanged, but the colón expenses around it still cost more dollars to cover. And if you earn colones and occasionally buy dollars, to send savings abroad or to travel, this is the cheapest the dollar has been in years.
The colón’s climb is not a blip. The dollar has stayed below ¢455 since late June and below ¢460 since early June, part of a slide economists tie to more dollars flowing in than flowing out. A strong tourism season, export earnings from free-trade-zone firms and steady foreign investment have padded the supply of dollars, while the Central Bank has bought part of the excess to smooth the swings.
Analysts expect the rate to keep moving within a narrow band rather than snap back sharply, though the colón has surprised forecasters before. For dollar earners, that is the hard part to plan around: the trend has run one direction for months, but exchange rates turn without notice, and locking in a rate today is a bet, not a hedge. If a stronger colón has already reshaped your monthly math, it is worth revisiting a budget built back when the dollar sat comfortably above ¢500.





