Costa Rica Real Estate Legal Support

Transaction coordination and legal-process guidance for buyers and sellers of property in Guanacaste, Costa Rica.

Real estate transactions in Costa Rica should involve qualified legal counsel for title review, escrow, due diligence, corporate ownership questions, closing documents, and registration. Epic Property CR helps coordinate the process and connect clients with appropriate professionals.

We are not a law firm and do not replace independent legal advice. Our role is to help clients understand the steps, gather the right documents, and keep the transaction moving with the attorney, escrow provider, buyer, seller, and closing team.

Legal Steps in a Costa Rica Property Purchase

Title and Ownership Review

Confirm titled ownership, liens, annotations, surveys, boundaries, corporation ownership if applicable, and whether the property can transfer cleanly.

Escrow and Closing

Coordinate escrow instructions, purchase agreement terms, closing funds, notary work, transfer documents, registration, and final closing timeline.

HOA and Due Diligence

Review HOA rules, fees, reserves, rental restrictions, water, utilities, permits, property taxes, and any issues that could affect ownership or resale.

Why Legal Coordination Matters

For Buyers

Legal review helps confirm what you are buying, how ownership will be structured, what obligations transfer, and whether the property matches the seller's representations.

For Sellers

Clear documents, title status, corporation records, HOA details, and closing coordination help avoid delays once a qualified buyer is ready to move forward.

Legal Support FAQ

Do I need a lawyer to buy real estate in Costa Rica?

Yes. Buyers should use qualified Costa Rica legal counsel or a notary for title review, closing documents, escrow coordination, and registration.

Can foreigners own property in Costa Rica?

Yes. Foreigners can own titled property in Costa Rica, but ownership structure, title status, and due diligence should be reviewed before closing.

What documents should be reviewed before closing?

Common items include title, survey or plano, purchase agreement, escrow instructions, HOA documents, corporation records if applicable, property tax status, permits, water, utilities, and closing statements.