Tax treatment is one of Panama’s biggest advantages for foreign real estate buyers. Panama uses a territorial tax system — you are only taxed on income earned inside Panama. Here is a complete breakdown of every tax that applies to foreign property owners.
The Key Rule: No Tax on Foreign-Sourced Income
Panama does not tax income earned outside the country. Your US pension, Social Security, investment dividends, rental income from foreign properties — none of this is taxable in Panama. This is a legal, well-established feature of Panama’s territorial tax system, in place for decades.
Taxes When Buying Property in Panama
| Tax / Fee | Rate | Who Pays | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property Transfer Tax (ITBI) | 2% of registered value | Seller (usually) | Paid at closing, registered value may differ from purchase price |
| Legal / Attorney Fees | ~1% of purchase price | Buyer | Varies by attorney |
| Registry Fees | ~0.1–0.3% | Buyer | Public Registry inscription fee |
| Real Estate Agent Commission | 3–5% | Seller (usually) | Buyer rarely pays commission in Panama |
Annual Property Tax in Panama
Panama has a progressive annual property tax based on the registered value of the property:
| Registered Value | Annual Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $120,000 | 0% (exempt) |
| $120,001 – $700,000 | 0.5% |
| Over $700,000 | 0.7% |
Primary residences (Finca Raíz) under $120,000 registered value pay zero property tax. Panama property taxes are very low by international standards — a $300,000 property pays roughly $900/year.
Tax on Rental Income in Panama
If you rent out a Panama property and earn rental income within Panama, that income is taxable in Panama. Standard rate for individuals is 15–25% on net rental income (after deducting expenses). However, many small-scale individual landlords structure rentals informally and the enforcement for small residential landlords is light.
If you are a non-resident renting a Panama property, the tenant is required to withhold 10% of rent as a remittance tax. Consult a local accountant if you are renting out a Panama property while living abroad.
Capital Gains Tax on Property Sales
Panama charges a 10% capital gains tax on the profit from a property sale (selling price minus purchase price and documented improvements). However, sellers can elect to pay a 3% flat tax on the gross sale price instead — and most do, since it is simpler and often cheaper.
US Tax Obligations for American Buyers
US citizens are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. Owning a Panama property does not exempt you from US tax obligations. Key points:
- FBAR (FinCEN 114) — if your Panama bank account exceeds $10,000 at any point during the year, you must file an annual FBAR report
- FATCA — Panama banks report US account holders to the IRS under FATCA agreements
- Rental income — Panama rental income must be reported on your US tax return; you can claim a foreign tax credit for any Panama tax paid
- Capital gains — profit on Panama property sale is reportable on your US return; again, foreign tax credit applies
The US-Panama tax treaty is limited; work with a US expat tax specialist (not a general US accountant) for your specific situation.
Summary: Tax Advantages for Foreign Retirees
For retirees living in Panama on a Pensionado visa, the practical tax picture is very favorable: zero Panama tax on US pension/Social Security income, very low property tax, and no capital gains tax on your primary residence sale in most cases. Compared to many other retirement destinations, the after-tax math strongly favors Panama.
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