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Latin AmericaResidency

Panama

A dollar-denominated economy, US East Coast time-zone alignment, and three structured residency routes that cover the full spectrum from $1K-per-month rentista income to $300K-plus investor capital.

Population
4.5 million
Language
Spanish (English in business)
Currency
Balboa pegged 1:1 to USD (USD circulates)
Time zone
EST (UTC−5, no DST)
Capital
Panama City
GDP per capita
~US$17K
  1. The US dollar is the operating currency

    Panama dollarised its economy in 1904 and has run on the US dollar ever since. The Balboa is pegged 1:1 and exists primarily as coinage; bills circulating are US dollars. Your earnings, savings, banking, and spending all happen in USD from day one. No FX risk, no devaluation cycle, no peso conversion gymnastics.

  2. Same time zone as the US East Coast

    Panama sits on UTC−5 year round, no daylight saving. Same as US Eastern Standard Time in winter, one hour behind in summer. Remote work, US business operations, and family calls all run on cadence without calendar gymnastics.

  3. Three routes covering three different profiles

    The Qualified Investor Visa for those deploying meaningful capital. The Friendly Nations Visa for those with US employment or moderate property investment. The Rentista Visa for those with stable passive income. We map applicants to the structure that fits the financial picture, then build the engagement around it.

  4. Territorial taxation

    Panama taxes only Panama-source income. Foreign-source earnings, including most US-sourced income, are generally not taxed by Panama at all. The Panamanian side is materially lighter than worldwide-tax peers, which makes the planning math clean for Americans whose income is US-sourced.

  5. An established American community

    Panama City's Costa del Este, Punta Pacifica, and El Cangrejo districts, plus Coronado on the Pacific coast and Boquete in the highlands, host substantial American expat communities. International schools, English-speaking healthcare, bilingual legal services, and visa-savvy attorney networks are all well established.

  6. Two-and-a-half hours from Miami

    Panama City's Tocumen International is a major Latin American hub with daily direct service to most US cities. Two and a half hours from Miami, four from Houston, five from New York. The Hub of the Americas connectivity opens onward routes across Central and South America that few alternative bases match.

Programs

Three routes into Panama

Each route below is a live client engagement we have advised. Figures and timelines reflect the current state of each program; we update them whenever policy moves.

  • Qualified Investor Visa

    Residency

    Direct permanent residency on initial grant through one of three qualifying investment routes: $300K in Panamanian property, $500K in Panamanian-listed securities, or $750K in a five-year Panamanian bank deposit. Single-trip processing on the fastest timeline in the program. Five-year clock to citizenship by naturalization.

    Financial requirement
    $300K property · $500K stocks · $750K bank deposit
    Timeline
    30 to 90 days
  • Friendly Nations Visa

    Residency

    Two-year temporary residency for nationals of treaty countries (the US is on the list) through one of three routes: a contract with a Panamanian employer, $200K in qualifying Panamanian property, or $200K in a Panamanian bank deposit. Permanent residency at year two on conversion.

    Financial requirement
    Employment or $200K property or bank deposit
    Timeline
    4 to 6 months
  • Rentista Visa

    Residency

    Long-running residency for those with stable foreign-source passive income, with a $1K/mo threshold that scales modestly for dependents. Permanent residency at year five. Built for retirees and rental-income holders who do not need the speed of the Qualified Investor route.

    Financial requirement
    $1K/mo passive income
    Timeline
    4 to 6 months

Several routes, several ideal profiles. Which is right for you? The Freedom Consult is where we figure out your ideal path forward – and whether Panama is even the right country.

A taste of Panama

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Which of the three visas fits me?

The Qualified Investor Visa is the right route when you can commit $300K+ in qualifying Panamanian property, securities, or term deposit and you want direct permanent residency on the fastest timeline. The Friendly Nations Visa works for clients with US employment, a contract with a Panamanian employer, or $200K to deploy into property or a bank deposit. The Rentista Visa is the cleanest route for retirees and clients with stable passive income who do not want to lock up significant capital. We map the right structure during the consult.

How long until I can hold a Panamanian passport?

Five years of legal residency for most Americans. The clock runs through both temporary and permanent residency phases depending on which visa route you took. The application requires a Spanish-language test and a basic Panamanian-civics exam. Petition-to-decision typically runs 12 to 24 months after the five-year clock matures.

Do I have to learn Spanish?

Daily life in Panama City's expat districts, Coronado, and Boquete runs comfortably in English at most professional and service contexts. Outside those zones, Spanish becomes essential. The naturalization application requires a Spanish-language assessment, which most clients build through immersion plus formal tutoring during the five-year residency window.

What is Panama's tax position?

Panama runs a territorial tax system: only Panama-source income is taxable to Panamanian residents. Foreign-source income, including most US-sourced earnings, is generally not taxed by Panama. This produces a clean position for Americans whose income is US-sourced. US worldwide-income filing continues regardless; we coordinate with US-licensed counsel.

Can my family come with me?

Yes. Spouses or registered partners, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify under a single application. Each family member receives proportionate residency rights and the same five-year clock to citizenship. The income or capital threshold scales modestly for additional dependents.

What about dual citizenship?

Panama has historically required renunciation of prior citizenship for naturalization, but the United States does not recognize foreign declarations of renunciation as binding on US citizenship. In practice, US citizens who naturalize in Panama retain both citizenships. We coordinate with US and Panamanian counsel to map the technical position properly during the engagement.

Is it safe to live in Panama?

The established American expat zones – Panama City's Costa del Este, Punta Pacifica, El Cangrejo, plus Coronado, Boquete, and Pedasí – are statistically safer than many US small cities. Other parts of the country require care, particularly the Darien Gap region near the Colombian border. We brief on geography during onboarding and steer engagements toward the established expat hubs.

How life compares

Eight factors, against the US baseline

The dimensions that decide whether a place is workable once the visa lands.

English

Strong in expat zones and business

Panama City's expat districts, the resort-belt of the Pacific coast, and Boquete run in English at most professional and service contexts. International schools and major hospitals operate bilingually. Outside those zones, Spanish is essential.

Cost of living

Below US, varies by zone

Outside the most fashionable Panama City districts, Panama runs 30-50% below US coastal-city benchmarks. A comfortable expat-zone life for a couple costs $3,000 to $4,500 a month. Coronado and Boquete run materially cheaper still.

Taxes

Territorial system

Panama taxes only Panama-source income. Foreign-source earnings are generally not taxed by Panama, which produces a clean position for Americans whose income is US-sourced. US worldwide-income filing continues regardless.

Quality of life

Urban and coastal options

Panama City delivers a modern Latin American capital with skyline-grade urbanism. The Pacific coast offers resort-belt living. Boquete and the highlands deliver mild climate at elevation. The microclimate menu is unusually wide for a country of this size.

Safety

Expat zones are secure

Major expat neighborhoods and the Pacific resort belt are statistically safer than many US small cities. The Darien Gap region near the Colombian border requires care. We steer engagements toward the established expat hubs during onboarding.

Travel connectivity

Major Latin American hub

Tocumen International is the Hub of the Americas. Daily direct service to most major US cities and across Central and South America. Two and a half hours from Miami. Limited direct service to Europe; most routes connect via Madrid or Amsterdam.

Infrastructure

Strong in cities, basic outside

Panama City delivers modern utilities, internet, and a developed financial-services infrastructure. Outside the major cities, infrastructure is functional but uneven. The Canal corridor and the Pacific resort belt are well-developed.

Healthcare

High quality private system

Private healthcare in Panama City is high quality and inexpensive by US standards; major hospitals routinely treat medical tourists from the US. Comprehensive private insurance runs $150 to $350 per month per adult.

The Panama briefing

The facts, programs, and comparison

A four-page PDF covering everything on this page plus the comparison framework we use internally. Delivered to your inbox, and the next briefing every week.

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