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Foreign Retirees Might Be Scared Off Of by Costa Rica’s High Cost of Living

Esta publicación también está disponible en: Español

Comparing the cost of living across international regions is a popular activity among those who seek to retire abroad. Until a couple of years ago, Costa Rica appeared in just about every list of top places to retire -all of which considered low cost of living a priority. That no longer seems to be the case

Popular consumer financial site BankRate.com recently published a list of “6 cheap places to retire abroad,” and Costa Rica was conspicuously absent.

Earlier this year, the Huffington Post published “Retire Overseas Cheap: 6 Places Where You Can Retire On $1,250 A Month Or Less,” which also took Costa Rica out of the equation.

There is no question that the cost of living in Costa Rica has gone up considerably over the last few years. This is a country that has traditionally thrived on inflation, but the current state of macroeconomic affairs has a few variables that directly affect the cost of living:

 

  • The shift to a consumer economy
  • The sheer popularity of Costa Rica as a prime tourist destination
  • The monetary policy of the Central Bank

The National Board of Tourism (Spanish initials: ICT) has done a masterful job promoting the country as a top visitor destination. The ICT’s strategy has mostly consisted of highlighting two of Costa Rica’s most valuable resources, her natural beauty and the happiness of her people.

This strategy has worked wonders, which in turn has caused the cost of vacations to go up. Side effects from this tourism success have been the Bed & Breakfast Crisis and proposals to impose higher revenue duties from the hospitality and tourism industry.

Although the economy of the United States is gradually recovering from its darkest days circa late 2008, the Harvard-educated governors of Costa Rica’s Central Bank are set in their ways with regard to keeping the U.S. dollar confined to narrow bands that keep it from breaking the currency exchange rate.

If you add Costa Rica’s continuous improvement in industrialization and human development matters, you can understand that the country is becoming less appealing to frugal foreign retirees.

In this regard, Costa Rica can be compared to Uruguay, a country that has vastly improved in human development and quality of life, and the cost of living in that South American nation has gone up considerably as well.

Cheaper regional alternatives to Costa Rica are already emerging among expat and retiree circles. Panama has been a candidate for some time; the new locations are Leon in Nicaragua and Lake Atitlan in Guatemala.

The online resource BankRate has an interesting writeup on this mountainous city:

  • Several waterfront houses are available for rent on the lake; a three-bedroom house costs around $300 per month to rent.
  • For those who require assisted living, a full-time personal nurse can be hired for $15 to $20 per day […] A maid is about $4 (to) $10 per day.

The housekeeping professional mentioned above can still be hired in Costa Rica at a similar rate of pay of $10 per day, but it would have to be a live-in maid, which would entail additional food costs as well as contributions to La Caja (Costa Rica’s public health system), and perhaps legal costs if the housekeeper is from Nicaragua. A full-time personal nurse in Costa Rica will cost a lot more than $15 to $20 per day, particularly if she is a graduate from one of the country’s prestigious public universities.

If we were to conduct an informal survey asking people if they would prefer to live in Guatemala or Costa Rica, people are very likely to think about Costa Rica’s image as a green and peaceful developing country where quality of life is a priority, and they may think about Guatemala as the grand nation where the Maya civilization flourished, but they might also associate Guatemala with political instability, civil strife, poverty, and violence.

For these reasons, Costa Rica has become progressively expensive; she might not be the most affordable place for retirees, but she is certainly still a great country to live in.

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