Weeks of bouncing between Spanish-only government portals, condensed into one well-researched guide. The key permits, tax obligations, and insurance gaps a new Airbnb host in Costa Rica should understand — written for the foreigner who just signed the deed. Not a substitute for professional advice, but the clearest starting point available in English.
Key permits, tax forms, insurance requirements, and filing workflows distilled into plain-English research guides — with direct portal links to verify everything yourself.
Direct links to the main Costa Rican government systems relevant to short-term rental compliance, with English explanations of what each portal is for.
Average around 14,000–16,000 active Airbnb listings across Costa Rica. Average host revenue: ~$1,200 to ~$1,800 /month nationally.
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Gross nightly rate is not what lands in your account. Here's what Airbnb deductions and Costa Rica's 12.75% tax withholding actually leave you with — by province.
Based on average nightly rates · Airbnb host fee: 3% · CR tax withholding: 12.75% · Combined deduction: ~15.75%
Using an insurance broker costs the same as going direct to INS — their fee is built into the premium.
A well-researched English-language guide to get you oriented before you hire an attorney — and help you ask the right questions when you do.
We are a small research group focused on making complex regulatory environments legible for foreigners who operate short-term rental properties in Latin America. We do not represent any government agency, law firm, or platform.
Every module in this toolkit was built by cross-referencing primary sources: official Hacienda circulars, Ministerio de Salud permit guides, ICT registration documentation, INS policy terms, and CCSS employer obligations — then tested against the actual government portals to verify links and procedures were current as of May 2026.
We also interviewed expat hosts across Guanacaste, Puntarenas, and San José to identify the gaps that catch most foreigners off guard — insurance exclusions, municipal Patente timing, and the NITE registration workflow being the most common failure points.
In Costa Rica, licensed attorneys and accountants treat regulatory knowledge as a billable commodity — and rightfully so within their professional context. That means freely shared expert review simply isn't how information flows here.
So we did it the harder way: every claim in this toolkit was verified directly against official primary sources — government circulars, Hacienda publications, ICT regulations, INS policy documents, CCSS employer guides, and municipal permit frameworks. If it isn't in a published official source, it isn't in this guide.
Walter S. — 15 years in enterprise IT, former US airline crew member, and Costa Rica-based expat — built this guide after personally navigating the compliance maze for his own property.
The research is primary-source grounded, verified against official government portals, and backed by a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. If the content doesn't meet your needs, email us for a full refund — no questions asked.
Costa Rica's STR regulations change faster than most hosts realize. Join our list and get notified when we update the toolkit — new tax rules, permit changes, platform policy shifts, and new province data — before they catch you off guard.