Panama Passage guide

Living in Panama

Panama ranked #1 on the InterNations Expat Insider index in 2024 and 2025. The US dollar is legal tender, healthcare in Panama City is internationally accredited, and internet speeds are the fastest in Central America. But the country is not one lifestyle: Panama City, Boquete, Coronado, Bocas del Toro, and David differ sharply in climate, cost, healthcare access, and daily pace.

What This Section Covers

Living in Panama is the practical, day-to-day side of being a resident: where to base, what it costs, how the healthcare system works, how to rent, and how safety and daily logistics actually feel on the ground. This hub frames those questions and points to the dedicated guides that carry the detail. Panama is not one lifestyle (the capital, the highland towns, the Pacific beach communities, and the Caribbean coast differ sharply in climate, cost, healthcare access, language exposure, and pace), so most living decisions start with location fit.

A few things hold across the country. Panama uses the US dollar as legal tender (Balboa coins circulate alongside, but there is no Balboa paper currency), which removes currency-conversion risk for dollar earners. The country is hurricane-free and sits roughly nine degrees above the equator, giving about 12 hours of daylight year-round and a dry season (roughly December to April) followed by a wet season. Spanish is the official language; English is strong in Panama City’s private hospitals, hotels, and larger restaurants but thinner in government offices and smaller towns, where functional Spanish matters for bureaucracy and daily errands.

The child guides below carry the specifics. Location-specific cost pages break down rent, food, utilities, and assembled budgets for Panama City, Boquete, and Coronado, with a national overview tying them together. The healthcare pages cover the two-tier public/private system, the private hospitals, insurance options, and where access is good or thin. Renting, safety, and the visa pathways each get their own treatment.

Buying Property in Panama: Title, Registry, Due Diligence, and the Residency Tie-In

Buying property in Panama is a transaction that sits at the intersection of three things the country does well: a recorded-title system that makes ownership secure, a set of residency pathways that let a qualifying investment double as a right to live there, and a dollar-denominated market that is open to foreign buyers. The process has its own local characteristics (a public registry, a notarial and legal tradition, and specific due-diligence steps), and it rewards a buyer who understands them. This page explains the purchase process, the title framework, the tax position, and the residency tie-in. It is background, not legal advice; a property purchase should be made with a qualified Panamanian attorney.

Cost of Living in Boquete: A Highland Retiree Town in Western Panama

Boquete is the highland counterpart to Panama City’s expensive lowland life, and the cost difference is the point. A mountain town at about 1,200 metres elevation in the western province of Chiriquí, it offers a cool climate, a coffee-growing economy, and one of the country’s oldest foreign-resident communities, at rents that run from roughly $600 to $1,800 a month and a comfortable all-in expatriate budget around $1,600. This page breaks down the costs of living in Boquete specifically, distinct from the national overview and from the capital and the coast.

Cost of Living in Coronado: Panama’s Closest Pacific Beach Town

Coronado is the beach option for people who want the Pacific coast without giving up easy access to the capital. A coastal resort city in the province of Panamá Oeste, about 87 kilometres southwest of Panama City on the dry arch of the Pacific coast, it was the country’s first resort development and remains its principal beach destination for both visitors and resident foreigners. Rents run from roughly $1,000 to $5,000 a month, a wide range that reflects the split between beachfront resort living and the surrounding community. This page covers the Coronado cost picture specifically.

Cost of Living in Panama City: Rent, Food, and Utilities in the Capital

Panama City is the expensive end of the country’s cost-of-living range, and the reason is the concentration. The capital holds the financial district, the waterfront towers, the international hospitals, and the bulk of the services jobs, and the prices reflect that demand. A one-bedroom in the central districts rents from roughly $800 to $1,870, a three-bedroom from $1,300 to $3,320, and a comfortable single-person budget lands somewhere around $1,700 to $3,200 a month. This page breaks the capital’s costs down line by line, distinct from the national overview and from the cheaper interior towns.

Cost of Living in Panama: What an Expatriate or Retiree Actually Spends

Panama’s cost of living is the reason many foreigners move there, and the structure of it is the thing that decides whether the move works. Prices are in dollars, which keeps them stable, and the overall level runs well below the United States, commonly put at roughly 40% lower, but the spread within the country is wide. A retiree in the highlands can live comfortably on a fraction of what a corporate household in the capital spends, and the difference is driven less by prices than by location, housing choice, and how much imported product a household consumes. This page gives the national picture; the city- and town-specific pages carry the local detail.

Health Insurance for Panama Residents: Private Cover, the Public Option, and What to Insure For

Health insurance in Panama is the financial bridge between a resident and the two-tier healthcare system, and the right arrangement depends on how the household uses the system. A resident using the private hospitals typically carries private insurance at roughly $100 to $200 a month; one who contributes through employment is covered by the public CSS; and anyone living far from the capital has to think carefully about evacuation and repatriation cover. This page explains the insurance options, what they should cover, and the gaps to watch for. It is background, not a recommendation; for personal coverage decisions, consult a qualified insurance adviser.

Healthcare in Panama: A Two-Tier System of Public Coverage and Private Hospitals

Healthcare in Panama runs on two parallel tracks, and which track a resident uses largely determines both the cost and the experience. The public side is provided through the Ministry of Health (MINSA) and the Social Security Fund (CSS), which operate separate facilities and cover most of the population at low cost. The private side is a smaller but high-quality set of hospitals and clinics concentrated in the capital, used by those who carry private insurance or pay out of pocket. This page explains how the system fits together, where access is good and where it is thin, and what a resident, especially a foreign resident or retiree, needs to plan for. It is background, not medical advice; consult a qualified clinician for personal health decisions.

Hospitals and Healthcare in Panama

Panama's hospital system runs on two tiers, and understanding the split is the key to navigating care as a resident or visitor. The public tier, the Ministry of Health (MINSA) and the social-security fund (the Caja de Seguro Social, CSS), provides the bulk of care to the population. The private tier, private hospitals such as Hospital Nacional and Pacífica Salud in Panama City, offers a different service model, with international accreditations and advanced equipment, and it is where most expats and medical travelers actually receive care. This page covers the two-tier structure, the institutions, what accreditation means, and how to approach both planned and emergency care, with facility details date-stamped as of 2026-07. It is descriptive; readers should consult a physician and confirm current facility status before any care decision.

Opening a Bank Account in Panama

Opening a bank account in Panama, particularly as a non-resident, is shaped less by any single bank's policy than by the Superintendencia de Bancos de Panamá (SBP), whose know-your-customer and anti-money-laundering norms every bank applies at onboarding. The result is a process that is documentation-heavy and slower than a resident domestic account opening: the bank must establish who the customer is, where their funds come from, and who the beneficial owners are, to standards the SBP supervises. This page covers the regulatory framework, the resident-versus-non-resident distinction, the documents typically required, and the realistic process and timeline, with the framework date-stamped as of 2026-07. It is descriptive; readers should confirm current requirements directly with the chosen bank.

Panama for Canadians: Complete Guide

Canada and Panama have maintained formal diplomatic ties since 1961 and have been linked by a free trade agreement in force since April 1, 2013, which gives Canadians a distinct legal and commercial footing in the country compared with other nationalities [^PP34-043]. This page helps a Canadian reader weigh whether, and how, to relocate to Panama, covering the bilateral relationship, the residency paths Canadians most often use, and the pension and tax mechanics that determine whether Canadian retirement income follows them across the border. It does not give individual advice, and because Old Age Security portability, non-resident withholding, and residency rules change, every pension and tax decision on this page must be confirmed with Service Canada, the Canada Revenue Agency, and a qualified cross-border advisor before acting [^PP26B-002].

Panama for UK Citizens: Complete Guide

British citizens considering Panama for retirement or remote work face three rules that diverge sharply from the EEA-resident baseline: the UK State Pension is claimable abroad but is not annually uprated while the recipient lives in Panama, so it is frozen at the rate first paid [^PP34-044]; UK visitors may enter visa-free for up to 3 months with a passport carrying 6 months' validity [^PP34-045]; and because Panama is outside the EU/EEA reciprocal healthcare arrangements, private medical insurance is essential rather than optional [^PP34-044]. This page covers those UK-specific points, pension portability, entry, and healthcare, and does not cover the Pensionado visa steps, US-dollar tax treatment, or cost-of-living detail, which sit on their own pages. Pension, tax, and entry rules are volatile; confirm each with the relevant authority before acting.

The Panama Friendly Nations Visa

Panama's Friendly Nations Visa, formally the residency pathway for nationals of "Países Específicos" (specific countries), is one of the country's most-used legal-residency routes, created in 2012 for nationals of roughly fifty countries that maintain amicable diplomatic and economic relations with Panama. It works as a two-step arrangement: a provisional residency period, after which the holder can apply for permanent residency. As of 2026-07, the Servicio Nacional de Migración (SNM) lists "PAÍSES ESPECÍFICOS" under its permanent-residency categories, confirming the pathway is currently offered, but the specific document requirements and any monetary thresholds move with each updating of the SNM requirements, so this page states what is structurally stable and flags what must be re-verified. This page is descriptive; applicants should consult a qualified Panamanian immigration attorney and the current SNM Trámites page before acting.

The Panama Pensionado Visa

Panama's Pensionado visa, the Jubilado Pensionado residency category, is the country's established retirement-residency program: it grants permanent residency to foreign retirees who can show a lifetime pension of at least US$1,000 per month, and it layers on top a long-standing statutory schedule of retiree discounts across entertainment, hospitality, transport, utilities, medical care, and import duties. The program's legal basis runs through several decades of Panamanian law, and the SNM lists Jubilado Pensionado as a permanent-residency category. The income threshold and the discount schedule are the load-bearing figures on this page, and both are date-stamped as of 2026-07 because they are set by statute and regulation that can be amended. This page is descriptive; retirees should consult a qualified Panamanian immigration attorney and verify current figures before acting.

Renting in Panama: The Market, the Process, and What a Renter Should Expect

For most foreigners moving to Panama, renting is the first housing step, and it is the right one: it is the low-commitment way to learn the country, the neighbourhoods, and the market before deciding whether and where to buy. Rents run from roughly $600 a month in the highland towns to several thousand for a capital waterfront tower, the market is dollar-denominated and well-supplied, and the process, while it has its own local characteristics, is navigable for an informed renter. This page explains the rental market, the process, and what to expect as a resident tenant.

Safety in Panama: Where the Risks Concentrate and How Residents Manage Them

Panama is, in most of the places a resident or a visitor actually goes, a country where normal security precautions are sufficient, and the foreign-travel advisories reflect that baseline. The risks that do exist are concentrated rather than spread evenly: higher street-crime levels in specific districts of the capital, a curfew-affected corner of the Bocas del Toro archipelago, and a hard avoid-all-travel zone across the Darién gap to Colombia. This page maps where the risks sit, what the advisories say, and how residents and travellers manage them in practice.

Visa and Residency in Panama: The Main Pathways from Tourist to Permanent Resident

Panama runs one of the more deliberately welcoming immigration systems in the Americas, built around a set of residency pathways each aimed at a different kind of applicant. A tourist from most Western countries enters visa-free for up to three months; a retiree with a qualifying pension can take the Pensionado programme; a professional or investor from a qualifying country can use the Friendly Nations visa; a larger investor can take the Qualified Investor route to fast permanent residency; and a remote worker can take the Digital Nomad short-stay visa. This page is the map of those pathways. It is background, not legal advice; residency decisions should be made with a qualified Panamanian immigration attorney.

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