
Lowest pensioner threshold in the region
Demonstrate $1,000/month for the main applicant – among the lowest pensioner thresholds in Latin America. Most US Social Security recipients clear it on the SSA payment alone.

Costa Rica's retirement residency. $1,000/month in qualifying pension or annuity income clears it, territorial tax system, US-aligned time zones, and a seven-year path to a Costa Rican passport.

The Pensionado Visa is Costa Rica's long-running retirement residency for non-Costa Rican citizens with stable foreign-source pension or annuity income. You demonstrate monthly income of at least $1,000 – among the lowest pensioner thresholds in the region – apply through the Costa Rican consulate, register at the Dirección General de Migración within 90 days of arrival, and receive a two-year renewable temporary residency. The visa converts to permanent residency at year three; citizenship petition becomes possible after seven years of legal residency.
Costa Rica delivers one of the most accessible retirement residencies in the region with the lowest income threshold, the most stable democracy, the strongest healthcare-to-cost ratio, and a territorial tax system that does not tax foreign-source income. The seven-year naturalization clock is longer than Argentina or Brazil, but the lifestyle quality and institutional reliability make the trade clear for clients who actually plan to live there.
The outcomes the Pensionado Visa actually delivers, beyond the headline numbers. The six that matter most to our clients.

Demonstrate $1,000/month for the main applicant – among the lowest pensioner thresholds in Latin America. Most US Social Security recipients clear it on the SSA payment alone.

Costa Rica taxes only Costa Rica-source income. SSA, US pensions, US property rent, and foreign-source dividends are not taxed by Costa Rica. US worldwide-tax filing continues regardless.

Seven years of legal residency unlocks naturalization. Five years for citizens of Spanish-speaking countries and Spain. The clock runs from the date your initial residency is approved.

Costa Rica sits on UTC-6 year-round. Same time as US Central in summer, one hour behind US Eastern in winter. Family calls, SSA correspondence, and US administrative work stay on cadence.

Universal public coverage (CCSS) available to legal residents at a flat monthly fee. Most expats add comprehensive private insurance at $150-300/month. Private healthcare in San José is high quality.

Atenas, Escazú, Santa Ana, Tamarindo, and Nosara have decades-old American expat communities. International schools, bilingual healthcare networks, and visa-savvy attorneys already exist.
The financial threshold to qualify, with the documentation we walk every client through.
$60,000
An alternative route for applicants without a lifetime pension: deposit $60,000 in an approved Costa Rican bank as a two-year certificate that pays out at $2,500/month over 24 months. Technically a separate visa category (Rentista), but practically used as the Pensionado's second route by clients who don't have qualifying pension income. Recoverable as the deposit matures; renewable by re-depositing for the next two-year cycle.
$1,000/month
Demonstrate stable foreign-source passive income of at least $1,000/month for the principal applicant (plus modest additional amounts per dependent). Eligible sources: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with documented twelve-month history.
Choosing the right route is half the work. We model the comparison against your portfolio in the Consult.
Reach out and tell us about your situation. From there, you’ll either book a 60-minute Freedom Consult (if you’re weighing options across countries) or get started on this route directly (if you already know it’s the right fit).
We coordinate the document pack: FBI background check (apostilled), birth and marriage certificates, SSA award letter and pension confirmations, US tax returns, and the Costa Rican-counsel power of attorney.
Submit your visa application through the Costa Rican consulate covering your US state. Most consulates process complete Pensionado files in 30 to 60 days.
You enter Costa Rica on the visa stamp. Within 90 days of arrival, register at the Dirección General de Migración and apply for your DIMEX. The DIMEX arrives within 60 to 120 days.
Enroll in the CCSS (universal healthcare system) – this is mandatory for Pensionado holders. Enter Costa Rica at least once per calendar year. Renew at year two. Convert to permanent residency at year three.
After seven years of legal residency, file for naturalization. The application includes a basic Spanish-language assessment and a Costa Rican civics exam. Most clients prepare for both in the final eighteen months.
Processing
Temporary residency
Permanent residency
Citizenship
3-5 months
Years 1-3
Years 3-7
Year 7+
How this program stacks against the closest credible options for the same visitor. We don’t earn more if you choose one over another.
| Dimension | Costa Rica Pensionado | Costa Rica InversionistaLearn more | Costa Rica Digital NomadLearn more |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum financial bar | $1,000/mo passive income | From $100K (forestry, property, or business) | $3,000/mo active income |
| Presence required | Once per year | Once per year | 180+ days / year |
| Processing | 3-5 months | 6-8 months | 2-3 months |
| Time to citizenship | 7 years | 7 years | 7 years (post-conversion) |
| Right to work in Costa Rica | No (passive income only) | Yes (your own business) | No (foreign income only) |
| Family inclusion | Spouse, children, parents | Spouse, children, parents | Spouse, children |
| Capital recoverable | Income-based (n/a) | Property: yes. Business: equity | Income-based (n/a) |
The Pensionado fits retirees and pensioners. The Inversionista fits clients deploying capital. The Digital Nomad Visa fits remote workers in the short term. We don't earn more if you pick one over another.
Want a four-page Costa Rica PDF covering everything on this page plus the comparison framework we use internally?
Three reasons families pick Freedom Files over the do-it-yourself path or a single-jurisdiction agent.

We know which consulates move SSA-only files cleanly and which bounce them for additional pension documentation. The Pensionado looks simple until the consular review.

About a third of Pensionado inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when Panama, Mexico, or Argentina fits cleaner.

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. Medicare gap planning, treaty mechanics, and territorial-tax interaction are mapped before you move.
Stable, regular, foreign-source passive income: US Social Security, defined-benefit pensions, military or federal pensions, annuities with documented twelve-month history. The consulate weights stability heavily – twelve months of consistent statements matter more than a single large balance.
Yes – most US Social Security recipients clear the $1,000/month threshold on the SSA payment alone, and the SSA award letter is the cleanest single piece of evidence the Costa Rican consulate sees. SSA continues to pay regardless of where you live.
To maintain the Pensionado, you need to enter Costa Rica at least once per calendar year. To keep the seven-year citizenship clock running and demonstrate the genuine connection naturalization requires, you need substantial Costa Rican presence.
Pensionado holders are required to enroll in CCSS, Costa Rica's universal healthcare system. The monthly contribution is roughly 7-12% of declared income, capped modestly. Most expats use CCSS for routine care and add comprehensive private insurance ($150-300/month) for faster specialist access. Medicare doesn't pay for routine care outside the US.
Costa Rica's territorial tax system means foreign-source income (SSA, pensions, US property rent) is generally not taxed by Costa Rica. US worldwide-tax filing continues regardless. US-licensed counsel maps your specific picture before residency is triggered.
Plan on $1-2K in government and administrative fees (visa, DIMEX, family-member fees), $4-6K in Costa Rican legal fees through our partner counsel, and $500-1,000 in translation and apostille costs. Total cash outlay for a clean single-applicant engagement typically lands in the $6-9K range.
Yes, though it's rare. The Pensionado runs the same seven-year citizenship clock as the Inversionista, so switching mid-stream resets nothing but the visa category. Most Pensionado clients stay on the Pensionado because the costs are lower.
Two paths in. If the Pensionado Visa is clearly the right program for your family and you’re ready to engage, contact our team directly. If you’re weighing this against other programs and want an honest read on the right move, the Freedom Consult is the sixty-minute conversation that ends the loop.
We take a small number of new families each quarter.
Most people spend 100+ hours researching residency and citizenship options before they realize they were looking at the wrong programs. We compress that into 10 questions, 90 seconds, and a single report.