Last updated: April 2026

Panama residency: the Friendly Nations Visa and other practical paths

Panama residency is genuinely accessible by the standards of global mobility programs. For people who qualify under the Friendly Nations Visa, and most professionals from North America, Europe, and Australia do, the combination of low investment thresholds, territorial taxation, and a US dollar economy makes Panama one of the more compelling residency options in Latin America.

This guide covers the three main Panama residency pathways in practical terms: what they require, what they cost, and who each one actually fits.

Why Panama: what actually makes it attractive

Panama runs on territorial taxation, meaning only income generated within Panama is subject to Panamanian tax. For remote workers, digital entrepreneurs, and consultants earning from foreign clients, this creates a legitimate tax planning opportunity, though your home country's exit tax rules and reporting requirements still apply, which makes advice from a tax professional non-optional.

Beyond tax structure, Panama offers:

  • The US dollar as its currency, eliminating exchange rate exposure
  • Proximity to North American cities (roughly three hours from Miami)
  • A stable economy with consistent growth over the past two decades
  • A functioning healthcare infrastructure, particularly in Panama City
  • Residency programs that convert to permanent status on accessible timelines

Panama is not a low-cost-of-living destination in the same category as Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe. Panama City costs are comparable to mid-tier US cities. The attraction is the legal structure and geographic location, not cheap living.

The Friendly Nations Visa: the main route for most applicants

The Friendly Nations Visa is the most commonly used Panama residency pathway for citizens of approximately 50 qualifying countries, including the United States, Canada, most EU member states, the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, and others.

Panama residency through this route is accessible for moderate income earners precisely because the investment threshold is lower than most comparable programs and the processing timeline is predictable.

Who qualifies

Citizens of countries on Panama's Friendly Nations list. The list is periodically reviewed and updated, verify current eligibility through Panama's National Immigration Service before proceeding.

The economic solvency requirement

All Friendly Nations Visa applicants must demonstrate economic solvency: $5,000 per primary applicant, plus $2,000 per dependent. This amount must be held in a Panamanian bank account at the time of application. It is not a fee, it's a deposit that remains in your account and can be maintained there indefinitely.

Opening a Panamanian bank account as a non-resident requires a local referral in most cases. Your Panamanian immigration attorney can facilitate this introduction.

The five qualifying pathways

In addition to the economic solvency deposit, you must demonstrate one of the following:

  1. Employment by a Panamanian company, typically requires an established local employer
  2. Company formation in Panama, incorporating a Panamanian company with you as a director or shareholder; this is the most commonly used route for independent professionals
  3. Real estate investment, minimum purchase value of $200,000
  4. Fixed-term bank deposit, minimum $200,000 held in a Panamanian bank
  5. Combination approach, certain combinations of the above may qualify

For most moderate income earners, company formation (cost: $1,000–$2,000 in formation fees plus the $5,000 solvency deposit) is the most accessible pathway. Real estate and bank deposit routes require substantially higher capital.

Documents required

  • Valid passport
  • Birth certificate (apostilled)
  • Criminal background check from your home country (apostilled)
  • Proof of economic solvency (bank certificate)
  • Health certificate from a Panamanian doctor (post-arrival)
  • Proof of qualifying pathway (company registration documents, real estate deed, or bank certificate for deposit)
  • Professional CV or background statement

All foreign documents must be apostilled and translated into Spanish by a certified translator.

Timeline and realistic expectations

The Friendly Nations Visa process involves an initial temporary residence permit (issued within approximately 30 days of complete application submission) followed by final residency approval at five to seven months. Overall from beginning to end, budget six to eight months.

Permanent residency is available after the temporary permit period. After five years of permanent residency, you may be eligible for Panamanian citizenship, though Panama does not recognize dual citizenship with most countries, a significant consideration if you hold citizenship elsewhere.

Success rates for complete, properly submitted Friendly Nations applications are high, generally exceeding 90%.

The Pensionado program: residency on a pension income

Panama's Pensionado (retiree) program is one of the oldest and most established residency-by-income routes in Latin America. The income requirement is low by global standards: $1,000 per month in verified pension income from a government or private pension, retirement fund, or annuity.

What makes the Pensionado program particularly attractive is the associated discount benefits:

  • 25% off airfares on tickets purchased in Panama
  • 15–50% off hospitality, restaurants, and entertainment
  • 20% off medical consultations
  • Significant discounts on utility bills and prescription drugs

The Pensionado program is not limited to retirees in the conventional sense. If you have a qualifying pension or annuity income stream, even from a private retirement account that distributes regularly, you may qualify.

Key limitation: The Pensionado program does not grant work authorization in Panama. It's appropriate for those who genuinely do not need to work locally.

Documents required for Pensionado

  • Pension certification letter from the issuing institution (apostilled)
  • Proof of income amount and frequency
  • Criminal background check (apostilled)
  • Birth certificate (apostilled)
  • Passport copies
  • Health certificate

Self-Economic Solvency Visa: the higher-capital alternative

For those who prefer not to form a company or use the Friendly Nations route, Panama offers the Self-Economic Solvency Visa for applicants who can demonstrate $300,000 in Panamanian bank deposits or real estate holdings valued at $300,000 or more.

This route is less commonly used than the Friendly Nations pathway but is worth knowing about if you have the capital and prefer not to maintain a Panamanian corporate structure.

What Panama residency actually costs

Costs vary depending on the pathway, whether you have dependents, and your legal representation. Here are realistic ranges:

ExpenseEstimated cost
Attorney fees (Friendly Nations)$5,000–$7,000
Government application fees$400–$500
Economic solvency deposit (single applicant)$5,000 (refundable)
Company formation (if applicable)$1,000–$2,000
Document authentication and translation$500–$1,000
Health certificate and related$200–$400
Total (single applicant, company route)~$12,000–$17,000

For a family of three, add $2,000 per dependent to the solvency deposit and additional attorney fees for dependent applications. Budget $20,000–$25,000 for a family application through the Friendly Nations route.

Common challenges in Panama residency applications

Document authentication delays. Apostille processing times vary significantly by country. In some jurisdictions, FBI background checks take 12–14 weeks. Plan your documentation timeline before everything else.

Bank account difficulties. Panamanian banks are subject to US anti-money-laundering compliance requirements and have become more selective about non-resident account openings. Your attorney's referral is usually the practical solution.

Language. Spanish is required for most official interactions. Your attorney handles the official paperwork, but day-to-day life and interactions with government offices require at minimum basic Spanish or interpreter support.

Processing delays. Immigration processing times fluctuate. The five-to-seven-month timeline is a realistic average; individual cases can run longer, particularly if documentation is incomplete or requests for additional information arise.

Who Panama residency works for, and who it doesn't

This works well for:

  • Citizens of Friendly Nations countries with a stable income and $5,000–$7,000 in accessible capital for fees and deposits
  • Remote workers and consultants who earn outside Panama and benefit from Panama's territorial tax system
  • Retirees with qualifying pension income (Pensionado route)
  • Those who want Latin American residency without the complexity of some other programs

Think carefully if:

  • You're not on the Friendly Nations country list, options exist but are more complex and expensive
  • You want the lowest possible cost of living in Latin America, Colombia, Ecuador, and Mexico offer lower day-to-day costs
  • You need a pathway to citizenship with dual nationality maintained, Panama does not recognize dual citizenship with most countries
  • You're looking for a European lifestyle or climate

Conclusion

Panama's Friendly Nations Visa is genuinely accessible for moderate income earners who qualify by nationality and can manage the economic solvency deposit and legal fees. The process is well-established, success rates are high, and the underlying legal structure, territorial taxation, US dollar economy, stable governance, makes Panama a durable choice for long-term residency planning.

The practical path forward is to verify your nationality qualifies, engage a licensed Panamanian immigration attorney before doing anything else, and begin the document authentication process early. Authentication delays are the most common reason timelines extend.

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The information in this guide is for research and educational purposes. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. Immigration rules and tax regulations change frequently, always verify current requirements with a licensed advisor before taking action.

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The information in this article is for research and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. Program rules, investment thresholds, and government fees change frequently — always verify current requirements with a licensed advisor before taking action.