New members of the Costa Rica forum, introduce yourselves here - 2021
To anyone wishing to build, find a reputable architect or firm, look at their previous work, try to speak with prior clients.... if they are reputable they will give you numbers. If you see a house you like, ask the homeowners who built it. I owned a B and B which were several cabins in the mountains overlooking the ocean. I am planning on using the same builder to build my next home there if they are available. Some friends are building now in Santa Teresa and found their architect by looking up a local house they liked.....
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My name is Miranda, and my husband and I are from Houston, TX and planning to move to Costa Rica within the next few years. We fell in love with the country on our first visit and after multiple trips, we decided to plan the move. We’ve visited several locations and our next trip will consist of getting a realtor, lawyer, and looking for property in the Nicoya peninsula. We also plan on traveling to the southern costal region as well to see if we like the area. My husband wants to build vacation property to supplement our income since he won’t be able to work. I’m a writer, so I can work anywhere, but his experience is in electronics and chemical refineries. Right now, we’re waiting on money to get us there, so it could be a few months or a few years. We have 3 kids (an adult daughter and 2 teenage sons) and I’m very excited about the school system there. My youngest has severe ADHD and is high functioning autistic. He’s learning Spanish, but I’m still wondering if I should put him in an international school because of the autism. I’m hoping my oldest daughter will eventually join us there to go to college. Since she wants to work in animal conservation and education of endangered species, I think the colleges there would be great for her!
Right now we are mainly considering the Nicoya peninsula, preferably somewhere between Samara and Tamarindo up in the mountains. My husband isn’t sold on the idea yet, but I’d love to be near Montezuma on the southern tip. I hope to get to know y’all over time and find the answers to some of my questions.
Good luck!
kohlerias wrote:Miranda, please be aware that for your children to be included in your residency application, they must be under 18 or attending university/college full time, else they have to apply as an individual which will be expensive.
Good luck!
Thanks for the info! As of right now, only the youngest is coming along. I have a 21 year old on her own staying in the US, and my 15 year old plans to move in with his aunt or grandma till he graduates. Then he’ll be going to either France or Germany to attend college. My youngest is 13, so he’ll be included under our umbrella.
you might have great internet at one house, and the house down the street might not be able to have that same internet. A lot of it depends on line of sight to the Tower. I have very good internet, but my friend a half a mile away can't get that same internet and his is lousy.
My partner and I and our 5 animals are considering moving to Costa Rica.
We love the beauty of the country and the kinder gentler lifestyle.
Considering renting vs. possibly building a home in the Sabana Norte area of San Jose.
Damon
My friend at the US embassy here says the data shows expats last between 1 to 5 years here before throwing in the towel and moving back to the US or Canada
Mom from South Africa, looking forward to embark on my journey to CR.
I will be working as a Digital Nomad with plans to become a teacher at a language school.
Our plan would be for my son to attend a school, if not the same school at which I would teach.
Please guide us on cost of living and any schooling ideas.
This would be great to hear and know before hand.
Take care


Please get in touch. I would love to connect with you and hear about your mission over there. See you soon 🔜🌍
JBuonopane12 wrote:Crate you are correct
My friend at the US embassy here says the data shows expats last between 1 to 5 years here before throwing in the towel and moving back to the US or Canada
Maybe it is usually the case. However, the US and Canada have drastically changed, especially Canada. So, this pattern may change as well depending on how events will unfold....
Taking the first steps to eventually spend at least 1/2 of the year in CR. Found and am purchasing a farm 700m above Uvita. Headed back in 3 weeks for closing. No view of the whale tail but we do have a view of the Pacific and abut against old old growth jungle. My wife and I fell in love with the region 8 years ago and are more than excited for this first step.
Pura Vida!
-Adam
2-month newbie to this forum but never formally introduced myself. I'm a Nature & Animal lover moving to the San Isidro area near Mt. Chirripo in 2022. Looking soooooo forward to a slower pace and sustainable lifestyle, and, getting away from all the drama that's going on in the US.
Pura Vida here I come!!!!
I'm exactly in the same mindset, coming from Europe.
And I'm travelling to CR in October to organize the little traditional Tica home I'm buying in Sámara.
I'm coming in October and I have been many times in tropical areas where it rains a lot during the worse months, but it isn't cold... I used to live in Belgium, for 20 years in the middle of nowhere (250 people in the village, no buses, no public transportation, no shops): it rains there most of the time and in Winter, mud everywhere and freezing.
But I was happy: had a little garden, 2 dogs and a horse and not too much money...
Now, I travel in 'business' over the planet, live in between Normandy, a flat overlooking the Mediteranean sea in Spain and a large home at the outskirts of Brussels (Belgium) and I just sold the home I had for 11 years in Florida. Travel often to France, Italy, and you name it. That shows I can adjust anywhere as I speak French, Dutch, decent Spanish and English and open to other cultures.
I dislike more and more cities (except when they are filled with old homes/monuments) traffic noise and air pollution, people crossing each other without a smile or a hello, everything is now about money ...
I miss the natural beauty of 'nature', not manucured like in my Florida Golf and Country Club, walking to the beach with my Weimaraner, riding a bicycle, a horse or walking down the street to get some organic groceries, talking to my neighbours and to mingle with the ones I like. I'm not coming to start a business nor to invest money. Upon my arrival, I'm going to attend a daily course at the International Language School to improve my Spanish.
I came to the conclusion I wanted my very simple life back and will leave everything behind me without any regrets.
To conclude: referring to the WHO (World Health Organisation) Costa Rica is one of the best places to live (these are scientists and healthcare specialists) I know people who have settled more than 30 years and who are happy. The world is divided in 2 parts: positive people who are almost always happy and the others. Although I know a perfect place doesn't exist, I know this is what I want in my life
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