Panama: The#1 Retirement Haven In The Americas FREE Report

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    Retire In Panama

    Here are some reasons to retire in Panama: A low cost of living, friendly tax system, a growing economy, and amazing retiree benefits.

    Learn more about Panama ​​​and other countries in our free, daily Overseas Opportunity Letter, plus our In Focus: Panama newsletter Simply enter your email address below and we’ll send you our FREE REPORT: Panama: The #1 Retirement Haven In The Americas






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        Why You Should Consider Retiring In Panama

        Panama offers incomparable advantages for the potential retiree or foreign resident. This country has  great weather, a low cost of living. Additionally, it has a foreign-resident-friendly tax system, and one of the best banking systems in the region. The political situation is stable, and it has a bright economic outlook.

        Panama has the world’s best program of discounts and perks for foreign retirees. No wonder Panama’s quickly become a top retirement haven.

        You will fall in love with this multifaceted tropical country. Choose to settle in cosmopolitan  Panama City, a calm sunny beach like Coronado, or in a cool mountainside town like  Boquete. Your options are limitless.

        If you rush south during winter, you’ll appreciate the year-round warm climate in Panama.

        Kathleen

        Reviewed By Kathleen Peddicord

        Kathleen is the Live and Invest Overseas Founding Publisher. She has more than 30 years of hands-on experience traveling, living, and buying property around the world.

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          Table Of Contents

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            Retirement In Panama Has Benefits

            Finding another country with the same level of retirement benefits is difficult. The pensionado visa makes retiring in Panama easy, even if you are well below the typical retirement age. 

            For example, benefits include discounts and conveniences that range anywhere from 15% to 50%. These discounts include restaurants, medications, transportation, and a whole lot more. 

            There’s a  tax  exemption to import your household items when moving to Panama. Other conveniences include special programs at participating businesses and even express lines. Retirees are able to forgo the usual lines at banks and some government institutions.

            Never Get Bored!

            In Panama, you will never be bored. You can go to the theater, catch a movie, attend a concert, or watch the regular sporting matches. 

            Most importantly, enjoy all these activities for half-off when you retire in Panama. Your current entertainment budget could be cut in half.

            Panama, the hub of the Americas, is attracting people from all over the world. The culture and cuisine mix allows you to taste some of the best meals. Enjoy from Caribbean to Chinese cuisine, and from French to Italian cuisine. What’s more, enjoy dining at restaurants and save on the bill. Restaurants give retirees anywhere from 15% to 25% off.

            See the  Panama Visa and Residency Information  section to read more about the benefits of retiring in Panama.

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              Top Reasons To Retire In Panama

              Live And Invest Overseas  readers have heard us go on about Panama. We could have chosen to base our Live And Invest Overseas operation anywhere in the world… 

              Fifteen years ago, we chose  Panama. We made that decision based on the decade-plus of experience we’d already had investing and doing business in this country.

              We know Panama from a foreigner’s point of view like nobody else.

              Here in Panama, over the past nearly three decades, we’ve bought pre-construction for investment and centuries-old French-colonial for renovation…

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                We’ve invested in raw land… both oceanfront and riverside… and commercial rentals…

                Also, we’ve started businesses, formed corporations, and opened bank accounts…

                In short, we’ve acquired full-time residency through the country’s ground-breaking “Specific Countries” visa program…

                For instance, we’ve hired staff, shipped household belongings, put our son through school, sourced architects and carpenters, paid local utility bills, researched which health insurance plan makes most sense for our family, bought cars (because finally we’d had enough of dealing with Panama City taxi drivers!), gotten local driver’s licenses, even started a local franchise (a family project)…

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                  What do we think of Panama today? 

                  We’re more bullish than ever on the prospects for this little isthmus. Our Live And Invest Overseas HQ is thriving in Panama City… Lief and I consider Los Islotes our permanent home base…

                  And, we continue to make new investments in this country that has fully rebounded from the pandemic shutdowns.

                  Why, specifically, do we call Panama the world’s #1 Do Everything Haven?

                  Here you go… Some reasons to retire in Panama:

                  #1: The cost of living is affordable

                  Outside Panama City, it remains downright cheap. You could retire near the beach in  Chitré, for example, on the country’s  Azuero Peninsula, on a budget of US$1,000 per month or even less…

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                    #2: The sun shines year-round.

                    Panama City can be too hot and sticky for some retirees’ tastes, but, again, look beyond the capital, and you find pockets of near-perfect climates in some regions. Plus, if you prefer cool mountain temperatures to steamy sea-level ones, consider Boquete or, less discovered and therefore more affordable, Santa Fe…

                    #3: The retirees’ path is well-marked

                    This country has been attracting foreign retirees in growing numbers for more than a decade. It offers many and very user-friendly options for establishing foreign residency if you want to live here full-time, and it is home to established and welcoming communities of expats and retirees.

                    #4: You can get by without speaking Spanish

                    I don’t recommend it, but, in Panama City, you don’t have to learn to speak Spanish if you don’t want to.

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                      #5:  Health care in Panama  is of an international standard

                      Health care in Panama is of an international standard, and Panama City is home to Hospital Punta Pacífica, the only hospital in Latin America affiliated with and managed by Johns Hopkins Medicine International.

                      #6: The cost of medical care is a bargain

                      Like everything, medical costs are higher in Panama City than elsewhere in the country, but, even in the capital, a doctor’s visit costs US$50 or less.

                      #7: Local Panama health insurance

                      Local Panama health insurance (which can be good, comprehensive coverage, all you need living in this country) can cost US$100 per month or less…

                      #8:  The infrastructure is of a high standard

                      This is a place where things generally work—the internet, cable TV, phone service, etc., are all as reliable as anywhere in the States. The roadways and highway systems are being constantly expanded and improved. ATMs are on every corner.

                      #9: The currency in Panama is the U.S. dollar

                      The currency in Panama is the U.S. dollar, so U.S. retirees have no currency-exchange risk or confusion to worry about.

                      #10: Panama City is an international travel hub

                      Panama City is an international travel hub, very accessible from North America. The flight from Miami, for example, is about two-and-a-half hours.

                      #11: Panama’s  pensionado  program of special benefits and discounts for foreign retirees is the current Gold Standard

                      Retirement in Panama means you can save as much as 50% on everything from restaurant meals to in-country airfares, from prescription medicines to closing costs on your new beach house.

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                        #12: This is a nature-lover’s paradise

                        This is a nature-lover’s paradise, boasting some of the world’s best surfing, snorkeling, diving, sportfishing, birding, hiking, and adventure-travel opportunities anywhere on earth.

                        #13: This is a safe, welcoming place to call home

                        #14: Retirees you meet in Panama aren’t losing sleep over their futures

                        They’re embracing them.

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                          Retire Part-Time In Panama

                          “I can only stay for about an hour. I have a meeting about establishing a food co-op at 10:30, and, right after, I’m getting a lesson on which bus to take to get to the El Dorado shopping center.”

                          Bobette Jones lives like a Panamanian. She walks nearly everywhere, and, to get places too far to walk, she hops on a bus. Bobette makes Panama her home seven to eight months a year and spends the rest of the year at her summer home on an island in Lake Huron.

                          She first came to Panama to learn Spanish before embarking on a two-month-long pilgrimage across  Spain  from the French border to the Atlantic Ocean. Bobette says she didn’t know a single Spanish word before coming to Panama and was disappointed to find that quite a few Panamanians do not speak English, contrary to what she had been told.

                          The expat and Panamanian communities embraced Bobette within her first weeks in the country, so she decided to pack up her life in Seattle and spend most of her time in Panama.

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                            Her first address was an apartment in Punta Paitilla, an upscale oceanfront neighborhood in  Panama City. In Punta Paitilla, she lived with friends, but, after deciding to make Panama a more permanent home, Bobette was looking for more comfortable accommodation.

                            Through a Panamanian doctor friend, Bobette rented an apartment in  El Cangrejo. And, she admits her decision came down to the apartment and not the neighborhood. Now, after calling the neighborhood home for four years, she couldn’t be happier with her choice.

                            The apartment building Bobette lives in is just off El Cangrejo’s main street, Via Argentina. The building is more than 20 years old and was built at a time when apartments were constructed with ample square footage.

                            The apartment has two bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a large maid’s room, which has been converted into an office. The building has an immaculately maintained pool and attentive staff. Also, the building manager lives on-site. For all this space and service, Bobette pays about $1,200 a month in rent.

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                              “I don’t own a car, and, living in El Cangrejo, I don’t need to,” says Bobette. “I walk everywhere. The grocery store, the beauty salon, the movie theater, not to mention I’m within a few minutes’ walk of what I consider to be some of the best restaurants in the country. If I can’t walk somewhere, I take a city bus or the Metro.”

                              Plus, a retired attorney, Bobette spent the later years of her working life in health research and preventative medicine. Impressed with the interest Panamanians and expats in this country have in alternative medicine, Bobette hopes to become involved in that field in some capacity.

                              She says her own natural medicine practitioner in Panama City goes beyond what is expected and even gives her advice over the phone for minor complaints. Bobette has experience with  conventional medicine in Panama, too.

                              When she informed her international medical insurance provider that her doctor was recommending cataract surgery, the insurance company approved the procedure within 45 minutes, recognizing that having the surgery performed in Panama would cost them a fraction what it’d cost if Bobette underwent the procedure in the United States. She gives glowing reviews of Panama’s hospitals and doctors.

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                                But, adjusting to life in a foreign country takes getting used to. The challenge for Bobette in Panama is getting used to the lack of customer service. “When I was living in my first apartment in Panama City,” she explained, “my water heater broke, and it took a month before the service technician came to repair it, even though he called every day and promised he was on the way.”

                                She recounts a handful of other frustrations with the service industry in Panama, but, overall, she is very happy with life in this country.

                                “I feel safer walking after dark in Panama than I do in Seattle. My wallet was taken from my purse once, but that was my fault for making it so accessible. Besides that, I’ve had no problems. I also like that it’s so easy to get to Panama, from just about anywhere in North America, and the airfares are usually cheaper than flying across a couple of U.S. states. The tropical weather doesn’t hurt either.”

                                And with that parting thought, Bobette is off to her meeting to find out how to start a food co-op. She is typical of a growing number of retirees living in Panama. They may have ditched the 9-to-5, but they are not slowing down.

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                                  What You Need To Know To Retire In Panama

                                  Panama is one of the best places in our world to think about living, retiring, investing, or starting over overseas.

                                  The country’s two long coasts—one along the Pacific, the other on the Caribbean Sea—wildflower-covered mountains, and river-crossed rainforest serve up diverse options for living better and retiring well, sometimes on a very modest budget.

                                  And Panama City—with its highway and metro systems and Johns Hopkins-affiliated Punta Pacifica—is without peer in the region.

                                  Plus, this country is home to some of the world’s biggest communities of expats—in Panama City, the City Beaches area, and Boquete, for example—and uses the U.S. dollar, meaning no currency-exchange risk for retirees with U.S. dollar-denominated nest eggs.

                                  Panama’s easy access to the United States and user-friendly residency programs are icing on the cake.

                                  Today, as we wrap up our extended look at living and investing in the country where we’ve chosen to call home ourselves and to base our Live and Invest Overseas business, I’d like to take a step back and regroup.

                                  If you were to decide (as we’ve done) that Panama should play a part in your new life overseas plans, what should you do next?

                                  Here’s a getting-started guide to relocating to Panama…

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                                    Establishing Residency

                                    Panama offers more than a dozen visa options for foreigners interested in taking up full-time residence, including the world’s gold-standard pensionado program, specifically designed for retirees, and its Friendly Nations visa, which is among the easiest residency options available from any country and allows you to work in the country.

                                    Other residency options that could work for you, depending on your circumstances, include a reforestation visa, an investor visa, a small business visa, and an employment visa.

                                    If you’d like to be able to come and go as you like from Panama indefinitely, speak with a licensed Panamanian lawyer to review all relevant residency visa options.

                                    Important considerations to put on the table at the start of the conversation include whether or not you want to start a business or be able to work while in the country and whether or not you’re interested in acquiring a Panamanian passport.

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                                      Finding Your New Home

                                      One important thing to understand as you launch a search for a place to live is that rentals of less than 45 days are illegal in Panama City… though not in the rest of the country.

                                      Nearly all accommodation in the country’s “interior” (that is, everywhere in Panama outside the capital) is rented on a nightly or weekly basis.

                                      Properties both to rent and to buy aren’t hard to come by, but the best way to find them is not online, where listings can be outdated and misleading. It’s better to search by word of mouth.

                                      Setting Up Your Home

                                      The first step to setting up your household is establishing a permanent address. You’ll need a lease agreement or property title to set up utilities.

                                      Most apartments come with gas set up and included as part of the homeowners’ association fees and some include water. And, if you’ll be living in a private home, you can order gas tanks from a local gas company for US$50 for a 25-pound tank.

                                      You’ll need to take your lease agreement or property title to Ensa, Edemet or Edechi, to have electricity installed and to the Instituto de Acueductos y Alcantarillados Nacionales (IDAAN) for water.

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                                        Tips To Retire In Panama: Getting Connected

                                        You can buy a pay-as-you-go chip for your cellphone from any “mini-super” or corner store. These can be recharged with enough minutes and data to last a month for US$15. A typical plan with unlimited data costs about US$45 per month.

                                        The top two providers of cable and internet are Tigo and Cable & Wireless. Do some research before choosing because service levels vary depending on where in the country you’re located.

                                        Furnishing Your Home

                                        In Panama City and City Beaches area, you’ll have no problem outfitting your home in whatever style and according to whatever budget you’d like.

                                        From Conway (think Target) and PriceSmart to high-end and boutique furniture shops, shopping for furniture and housewares in the capital is as easy as setting up a household in any major U.S. city.

                                        Outside these areas, though, the challenge can be greater. Formal shopping options can be much more limited, and your best bet can be to find local craftsmen who can custom-make what you need (following photos torn from a Pottery Barn catalog, for example).

                                        Getting Around Panama City

                                        Panama City is one of the least walkable places in the world. In addition to the heat and rain, pedestrians must also contend with aggressive drivers, potholes, open manholes, lake-like puddles, and sidewalks that end without explanation, leaving you stranded on the side of a road.

                                        Fortunately, you have alternatives for getting around town, including taxis, Uber, Metro Bus, and the Metro rapid transit system.

                                        Getting A Panamanian Driver’s License

                                        The Pan-American Highway passes right through Panama and begs you to hit the road.

                                        You can drive in Panama on your current U.S. driver’s license for three months. After that, you’ll need to apply for a Panamanian driver’s license. To do this, you’ll need to visit your country’s consulate or embassy and take vision and hearing tests.

                                        Tips To Retire In Panama: Connecting With Other Expats

                                        Connecting with people who have gone through the same process can make the relocation experience much easier.

                                        Panama’s biggest concentrations of expats are in Panama City, Coronado, Boquete, Santa Clara, El Valle, and Pedasí. In these communities you’ll find groups, communities, and forums set up specifically for socializing and networking. You’ll have no trouble finding English-speaking company and making friends.

                                        Keeping Fit

                                        Panama City’s Cinta Costera, the 11-kilmoter stretch of paved oceanfront along the Bay of Panama where you can walk, jog, or cycle, is a great option for exercise outdoors in the capital.

                                        This pedestrian zone is dotted with workout equipment, basketball courts, and soccer fields, as well as parks and gardens where you’ll see groups practicing yoga and tai-chi in the early mornings and evenings.

                                        The popular franchise PowerCLUB, with gyms across the capital and beyond, is a great option for more focused training. Membership is about US$75 per month.

                                        Learning Spanish

                                        You can get by in Panama City, the City Beaches area, Boquete, and elsewhere in Panama without learning to speak Spanish, but we don’t recommend it. An effort to learn even a few words of the local language is appreciated and will go a long way toward helping you connect to your new life.

                                        Arm yourself to start with the basics—buenos días, gracias, con permiso, hasta luego, por favor, and dónde está, for example—then, if you’re up for it, challenge yourself to become more conversant. The country boasts many good Spanish-language schools, including, EPA! Español en Panamá, in Panama City.

                                        Tips To Retire In Panama: Learning To Go With The Flow

                                        In your previous life, you may have taken certain levels of efficiency for granted in everyday interactions. Things work differently in Panama.

                                        When a repairman stands you up for the third time, the electricity goes out for the second time in two days, and another Panamanian taxi driver cuts you off in traffic, it’s important to maintain your sense of humor.

                                        You could let the day-to-day frustrations and struggles of life in the developing world send you screaming into your pillow… or you could laugh it off.

                                        When life in paradise seems like anything but, reach out for support. Get in touch with an expat friend to share tales of challenge and woe.

                                        You can remind each other what attracted you both to life in this sunny Shangri-La in the first place.

                                        Kathleen

                                        Reviewed By Kathleen Peddicord

                                        Kathleen is the Live and Invest Overseas Founding Publisher. She has more than 30 years of hands-on experience traveling, living, and buying property around the world.

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                                          Table Of Contents

                                          Retire In Panama- FAQs

                                          Panama is a fantastic destination for retirement, offering a range of appealing choices. For example, expats can opt for the lively urban scene in Panama City, the serene mountain landscapes of Boquete, or the sunny beaches of places like Coronado or the Azuero Peninsula.

                                          The 1:1 connection between the Balboa and the US Dollar helps keep Panama’s currency strong and steady. This stability positions Panama as a safe choice for financial activities in a region that can be volatile.

                                          Panama has been attracting a growing number of foreign retirees for over a decade. It offers easy residency options for people who want to live here permanently, and it is home to welcoming communities of expats and retirees.

                                          Sign up to receive the FREE daily e-letter, Overseas Opportunity Letter and we’ll immediately email you our editors’ latest research report…

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