Costa Rica's Standard
Rentista and Pensionado Program
The Rentista and Pensionado program is available to those individuals
who can prove a permanent and stable income from investments,
pension or retirement benefits. The applicant must live in
the country for a period of no less than four consecutive or
alternate
months, since the date of approval of the status.
1. Pensionado. The Pensionado (Retiree) applicant must demonstrate
a permanent fixed income from a pension or similar retirement
income of at least US
$600 per month. The typical applicant in this category has
a government, private sector pension or social security retirement
benefits.
2. Rentista. The Rentista applicant must demonstrate a
permanent fixed income of at least US $1,000 per month.
Generally, those who seek the Rentista category do not have
a pension source and instead have
investment income.
To apply for this category it is necessary to provide proof
of the investment and it will generate the US $1,000 per month
required under this program.
As such the applicant must provide a letter from the bank
or financial institution where the investment funds
are deposited certifying the existence of that income. It is
not required that the funds be held in Costa Rica.
The letter can be issued by international banks as well as
Costa Rican banks.
The ideal letter issued by the financial institution
should state the following:
(a) The recipient will receive at least US $1,000 per
month in Costa Rica.
(b) The investment generates US $1,000 per month in a
stable, permanent and irrevocable manner
for at least five years.
(c) The financial institution issuing the letter will
notify the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (I.C.T.) if the condition
changes.
Costa Rica's Standard
Rentista and Pensionado Status
The application for Rentista and Pensionado status is filed
directly with the Pensionado / Rentista Departmentat the Costa
Rican Tourism Institute (I.C.T.). Before the application can
be prepared, the applicant must compile
all the supporting documentation that is required as follows:
1. Interpol Background Check: This step is done in Costa Rica.
The applicant first fills out an application form, which is
addressed to the Department of Public Security and signed by
I.C.T. In it is a request
for the background check which requires fingerprinting in Costa
Rica.
The background check takes approximately one month.
2. Birth Certificate: You must provide a certified copy of
your birth certificate and that of your dependents.
The certified copy must be sent to the Costa Rican Consulate
for your jurisdiction for authentication.
The consulate charges
US $40 for each document authenticated. Be advised that I.C.T.
will not acceptany supporting documentation which has not been
authenticated by the Costa Rican Consulate.
3. Marriage Certificate:
Certified copy of a marriage certificate if applicable. Also
must be authenticated by the Costa Rican Consulate.
4. Proof
of Income: If your source is a government pension, then obtain
a letter from your government certifying the income. If the
income is from a Bank
or Financial Institution, then it must issue the letter. All
documents should be authenticated by the Costa Rican Consulate.
5.
Police Certificate of Good Conduct: This certification is obtained
from the police department
where you last resided. This certification also needs to be
authenticated by the Costa Rican Consulate. Note that these
certificates are only accepted in Costa Rica for 6 months from
the date they are issued.
If this document expires while you
are pulling together the rest of the documentation then you
will have to
obtain another one.
6. Photographs: The application requires
photographs and we recommend that you take at least 20 photographs
(10 facing the front and 10 facing the
side).
You will require photographs for the background search, the
I.C.T. application and for the Department of Immigration so
you might as well get them all at
once and keep them in the file as needed.
7. Translation of
Documents: Once you have compiled all of your documentation, all
documents which are in English must be translated into Spanish.
This procedure can generally be handled by the Attorney that
you have retained to process your application.
8. Sworn Statement:
The Applicant and Dependent must appear before a Costa Rican
Notary Public and issue a sworn statement stating that they
agree to abide by the Pensionado / Rentista law.
This statement can be prepared by your legal representative,
in Costa Rica.
Once you have all the documentation set forth above you are
ready to submit your application to I.C.T.
Generally I.C.T. will only receive applications that are accompanied
with ALL the supporting documentation. Keep in mind that all
the original documents that you submit become the exclusive
property of I.C.T.
and will NOT be returned to you.
Once received by I.C.T. the application goes to the Legal
Department within I.C.T. who will reviewall the documentation
for compliance. If all is in order,
the Legal Department will forward the application to the approval
committee for approval.
If their are defects in the application the Legal Department
will notify your legal representative, of the defect and request
that it be corrected before
it will submit the application for approval.
If approved, the I.C.T. will issue a formal resolution indicating
the date on which the application was approved. The procedures
that follow approval are related to obtaining the actual picture
residency
card, and are done directly before the Department of Immigration.
It requires a prior deposit of US
$100 for each applicant and dependent, to pay for your residency
identification card.
Costa Rica's Standard Resident Investor Status
Resident Investor Status. Individuals who invest at least
US $50,000 in a project which has been approved by MINAE, as a priority investment
area may
apply for resident investor status.
If the investment is in a non priority investment area then
the investment required is US $200,000. This category really
involves two different steps. The
first is to qualify the investment by PROCOMER to determine
if it falls within the priority area.
Once this initial process has been completed and the certification
issued, then you can begin the
application process which is done directly before the Department
of Immigration. |