Section 01

Bank Financing Options in Costa Rica

BCR · BAC · Scotiabank · Davivienda · Bansol · State vs. Private Banks

Costa Rica’s banking system offers construction and mortgage financing through both state-owned and private banks. The two state-owned banksBanco de Costa Rica (BCR) and Banco Nacional de Costa Rica (BNCR) — offer the most competitive interest rates for colones-denominated loans (7–10% fixed in 2026), guarantee deposits through state backing, and serve both residents and qualifying non-residents. However, their loan approval processes are slower (4–8 months from application to disbursement) and require more extensive documentation than private banks.

The leading private banks for real estate and construction financing include BAC Credomatic (the largest private bank in Costa Rica, competitive USD rates, faster processing), Scotiabank Costa Rica (strong for foreign national borrowers, USD and colones products), Davivienda (Colombian-owned, active in residential and development lending), and Bansol (specialist savings and mortgage institution with competitive residential mortgage products). Private banks process faster (2–4 months) but at slightly higher interest rates than state banks and with stricter requirements for non-resident borrowers.

Interest rate context (2026): Colones-denominated construction loans from state banks run 8–11% annually. USD-denominated construction loans run 7–10% annually. Private bank rates are typically 0.5–1.5% higher than state bank rates for equivalent loan structures. Costa Rica’s BCCR (central bank) monetary policy directly affects colones rates — tracking BCCR policy rate announcements helps anticipate rate movements during a construction period. USD rates are influenced by US Federal Reserve policy and Libor/SOFR benchmarks used by international banks operating in Costa Rica.

State vs. Private Bank Comparison
State banks (BCR, BNCR): Lower rates, slower process (4–8 months), strong for residents, challenging for non-residents, full deposit guarantee.

Private banks (BAC, Scotiabank, Davivienda): Faster (2–4 months), better foreign national service, slightly higher rates, deposit insurance through SUGEF framework.
Section 02

Construction Loan Structure & Terms

LTV · Disbursement Schedule · Interest Reserve · Conversion to Mortgage

A construction loan in Costa Rica is typically structured as a line of credit secured by the property, with disbursements tied to verified construction progress rather than as a lump sum. Loan-to-Value (LTV) for construction loans is typically 60–75% of the appraised completed value (or appraised land value plus construction cost, whichever is lower). A property where land is valued at $400,000 and construction budget is $1,200,000 — total appraised completed value of approximately $1,800,000 — would typically qualify for 65–70% LTV, or approximately $1,170,000–$1,260,000 in loan proceeds. The owner must fund the remaining 30–35% as equity contribution.

Disbursements from a construction loan are made in phases corresponding to verified construction milestones — typically 5–8 disbursements over the construction period. Before each disbursement, the bank’s technical inspector visits the site to verify that work matching the disbursement amount has been completed. This means your contractor cannot receive payment for work not yet done — a protection for the bank that also protects you from contractors who front-load payments. The CFIA Regente’s bitácora reports serve as supporting documentation for disbursement approval.

During the construction period, most borrowers draw the loan as needed and pay interest only on the disbursed balance — reducing financing cost compared to drawing the full loan on day one. An interest reserve — a portion of the loan committed to pay construction-period interest — is often built into the loan structure so that construction-period interest does not require out-of-pocket cash from the borrower. At project completion and occupancy, the construction loan converts to a permanent mortgage with principal and interest amortization over the agreed loan term (typically 15–25 years for residential mortgages in Costa Rica).

Appraisal Drives the Loan
The bank’s appraisal of completed value — not your construction cost — determines the loan amount. If the appraiser values the completed property below your total project cost, the LTV calculation produces a lower loan amount than your financial model assumed. Commission an independent appraisal before applying for the construction loan to avoid this surprise. Discrepancies between cost and appraised value are a signal to revisit the project scope or site selection, not to look for a more generous appraiser.
Section 03

Foreign National Borrowing in Costa Rica

Non-Resident Requirements · SUGEF Regulations · Income Documentation · Alternative Structures

Foreign nationals can obtain mortgage financing in Costa Rica, but requirements vary significantly by bank and residency status. Legal residents (pensionado, rentista, inversionista, or permanent residency) have access to the full range of local financing products at essentially the same terms as citizens. Non-residents have access to financing primarily through private banks (Scotiabank and BAC Credomatic are most active in this segment), with additional documentation requirements and typically slightly higher rates or lower LTV than for residents.

SUGEF (Costa Rica’s banking regulator) requires banks to verify the source of all funds and income used for loan qualification — anti-money laundering compliance is rigorous and applies equally to domestic and foreign borrowers. Typical documentation required from foreign national borrowers: passport and proof of immigration status; last 3 years of tax returns from country of residence; last 3 months of bank statements demonstrating income source and savings; evidence of income (employment letter, business ownership documentation, or investment account statements); and a credit report from the borrower’s country of residence (SUGEF accepts Experian, TransUnion, Equifax reports).

Alternative financing structures used by foreign buyers who cannot access or prefer not to use Costa Rican bank financing: Home equity line of credit (HELOC) from a US or Canadian bank — using equity in a US or Canadian property to fund the Costa Rica purchase; Portfolio loans from international banks — some international private banking divisions offer mortgage products secured by a Costa Rica property for high-net-worth clients with existing banking relationships; Developer financing — for phased developments, the developer sometimes offers seller financing for a portion of the purchase price, typically at 6–9% USD for 3–5 years; and Equity-only / all-cash purchases — still common for Guanacaste luxury properties where US and Canadian buyers avoid local financing complexity entirely.

Bank Readiness Checklist for Foreign Buyers
✓ Passport and proof of legal immigration status in Costa Rica.
✓ Last 3 years of tax returns from country of residence.
✓ 3 months of bank statements showing income source.
✓ Credit report from home country (Experian/TransUnion/Equifax).
✓ Employment letter or business income documentation.
✓ Property appraisal by bank-approved Costa Rican appraiser.
✓ Clear title report from Costa Rican attorney.
Section 04

Developer Equity & Phased Development Structure

Equity Requirements · Pre-Sales · Phased Construction · Private Lenders · JV Structures

For development projects (building multiple units for sale, or a hospitality asset), the financing structure is more complex than a single residential construction loan. Banks typically require the developer to demonstrate: minimum 30–40% equity contribution (cash or land value); pre-sales commitments for a portion of units (typically 30–50% pre-sold before bank will disburse construction financing); developer track record (for first-time developers in Costa Rica, this is the most significant hurdle — banks want evidence of prior development experience or a strong guarantor); and a complete project budget with quantity survey basis and CFIA-ready construction documents.

Pre-sales reduce the bank’s risk by demonstrating market demand before construction begins. In the Guanacaste luxury residential market, pre-sales at 10–20% below expected completion value are standard — buyers receive a price discount in exchange for committing capital before the product is finished. Pre-sale contracts in Costa Rica must be carefully drafted to protect both buyer and developer — include construction completion dates with penalty clauses, deposit escrow with a qualified escrow agent (not directly to the developer), clear specification of what is included in the purchase price, and buyer’s rights if the project does not meet completion milestones.

Private lending is a significant part of the Costa Rica real estate financing ecosystem for development projects. Private lenders (individuals or investment funds) offer faster approval and more flexible terms than banks, at higher cost: typically 9–14% USD annually with 1–2% origination fees and terms of 12–36 months. This cost is justified for bridge financing (to fund the gap between breaking ground and bank disbursement) or for developers who need speed over cost. Private lending in Costa Rica is not regulated by SUGEF in the same way as bank lending — all terms must be carefully negotiated and documented, and counterparty due diligence is essential.

PDC Financing Coordination
PDC’s construction documents and cost estimates are prepared to the standard required by Costa Rican banks for construction loan applications — detailed quantity surveys, CFIA-stamped drawings, and phase-by-phase disbursement schedules that align with bank technical inspection milestones. We work with our clients’ chosen banks and legal counsel throughout the financing process to ensure documentation requirements are met without delaying loan approval or construction start.
Discuss your financing structure
Financing Your Project

Documents That Satisfy Your Bank from Day One

PDC prepares construction documents and quantity-survey-based cost estimates to the standard required for Costa Rican construction loan applications — eliminating the documentation gaps that delay loan approval and construction starts.

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