Nomad Almanac2026 Edition

Costa Rica

San José

Digital nomad's guide to San José, Costa Rica in 2026: where to rent and what it costs, the lease rules and channels like Encuentra24, the neighborhood breakdown from Escazú to Barrio Escalante, coworking and Central Valley fiber, the dating scene, the honest safety picture, and the eternal-spring climate.

IK
Igor KukoljEditor & Researcher
Updated May 2026. Reviewed by Pending legal review.

Nomad Score

3.4/5

Affordability
3/5
Internet
4/5
Safety
3/5
Walkability
2/5
Coworking
4/5
Nightlife
3/5
English
3/5
Weather
5/5
Air quality
3/5
Nomad community
3/5
Population
340,000
Solo budget
$2,000/mo
Couple budget
$3,000/mo
Rent, 1-bed center
$850/mo
Internet
100 Mbps
Avg temp
16 to 25°C
Best months
Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr
SIM
Kölbi / Claro / Liberty
Airbnb long-stay
Pricey vs lease

Housing & renting

Budget Studio

Furnished

$450 to $700/mo

Mid 1-bed

Furnished

$600 to $950/mo

Premium 1-bed

Furnished

$900 to $1,400/mo

Budget Room

Furnished

$300 to $550/mo

Lease norms

Typical term
12 months
Deposit
1 months
Registration
Not required
Contract language
Spanish (contrato de arrendamiento)
Furnished norm
Sometimes

Where to search

Furnished and short-term rentals run 20% to 30% above a long local lease, and Airbnb in the city is a markup tool best used only to land before signing long

Rental scams to avoid

  • Deposit before viewing

    Red flag: Below-market rent, an owner conveniently abroad, pressure to wire a deposit to reserve it

    Avoid it: Never pay before an in-person viewing and a signed contrato de arrendamiento

  • Fake listing

    Red flag: Photos lifted from another ad, a price too good to be true, refusal to meet

    Avoid it: Reverse-image-search photos and insist on viewing the actual property

Nomad tip

Land in a mid-term furnished place in Escazú or Barrio Escalante through Airbnb or Facebook, then sign a long contrato in person once you know the neighborhoods. Search Encuentra24 and the expat Facebook groups above all, expect to be quoted in US dollars, and pick your neighborhood for safety and walkability rather than headline price, because the cheapest central districts are also the roughest.

Neighborhoods

Escazú

premium

The premier expat suburb, leafy and hilly with malls, international restaurants, private security, and a large foreign community

Who lives here: Affluent locals, established expats, families, corporate transfers

$1,100/mo 1-bedWalk 2/5Safety: highNomads: hubNightlife: medium

Best for: first-timers, safety and comfort, families

Santa Ana

premium

A greener, calmer extension of the Escazú expat belt, a little more value and a small-town feel with modern amenities

Who lives here: Expats, families, professionals wanting space and quiet

$1,000/mo 1-bedWalk 2/5Safety: highNomads: someNightlife: low

Best for: quiet, value within the expat belt, families

Barrio Escalante

mid

San José's foodie and café heart, a walkable urban district that turned from residential to the city's best restaurant and coworking scene

Who lives here: Younger professionals, creatives, urban-minded nomads

$800/mo 1-bedWalk 4/5Safety: mediumNomads: hubNightlife: high

Best for: walkability, café and coworking density, city life

Rohrmoser

mid

An embassy district with a US-style suburban feel, calm tree-lined streets, parks, and an established residential community

Who lives here: Diplomats, professionals, settled expats and locals

$850/mo 1-bedWalk 3/5Safety: highNomads: someNightlife: low

Best for: quiet residential living, safety, longer stays

Los Yoses and San Pedro

mid

Central, university-flavored districts beside the Universidad de Costa Rica, bookshops, cafés, and a younger energy

Who lives here: Students, academics, budget-aware nomads

$700/mo 1-bedWalk 4/5Safety: mediumNomads: someNightlife: high

Best for: value, walkability, a local urban feel

Barrio Otoya and Amón

mid

Historic central barrios of old mansions and tree-lined streets, atmospheric and close to the museums, central but uneven block to block

Who lives here: Creatives, a transient central crowd, some expats

$700/mo 1-bedWalk 4/5Safety: mediumNomads: someNightlife: medium

Best for: central character, walkability, old-town atmosphere

Cost of living (USD)

Lean

$1,500/mo

Comfortable

$2,200/mo

Baller

$4,000/mo

Rent, 1-bed center$850
Rent, 1-bed outside$620
Utilities$100
Coworking hot desk$190
Meal, inexpensive$11
Meal, mid-range$66
Beer$3
Coffee$4
Transit pass$50
Taxi per km$1.6
Gym$70
SIM data plan$18

Internet & coworking

Home internet

Median speed
100 Mbps
Top speed
600 Mbps
Install time
10 days
Monthly
$55
Providers
Kölbi (ICE), Claro, Liberty, Tigo

Mobile

Primary provider
Kölbi
eSIM
Supported
5G
Yes
Data plans
prepaid plans from roughly $15 to $20 a month, with Kölbi the widest coverage

Coworking spaces

  • Impact Hub San José

    50 Mbps$14/day$200/mo

    One of San José's most established hubs, in La California, strong startup and community focus

  • Gracias Coffee & Cowork

    50 Mbps$20/day$200/mo

    Specialty-coffee-forward coworking in trendy Barrio Escalante

  • Republic Workspace

    50 Mbps$17/day$100/mo

    Clean, light-filled space in San Pedro with 24/7 access

  • Socialtel San José CoWork

    20 Mbps$14/day$170/mo

    The former Selina CoWork in historic Barrio Otoya, rebranded in 2025

  • Become Work Center

    100 Mbps$20/day$210/mo

    Corporate-feel coworking in the Escazú expat belt

Cafe culture

Laptop-friendly
Welcome
Avg cafe wifi
40 Mbps
Power outlets
Common
Recommended
Franco Barrio Escalante, Cafeoteca, Kalú, Gracias

Dating & social

Dating apps

Tinder: highBumble: medHinge: low

Local apps: Badoo, LatinAmericanCupid

Warm and family-centered under the relaxed Pura Vida tone, more traditional than Europe. The international scene concentrates in Escazú and Barrio Escalante, where an English-speaking social and dating life assembles quickly, while the wider local world opens with Spanish. Tinder leads the apps, Bumble is solid, and meeting people runs as much through friends, gyms, and the outdoors as through the phone.

The expat community is sizeable and concentrated in the Escazú belt, so a social life comes together fast in English. Integrating with Ticos is very doable but rewards Spanish and patience with a more traditional, family-led courtship rhythm than nomads from northern countries may expect.

Where to meet people

  • Barrio Escalante cafés and restaurants
  • coworking socials at Impact Hub and Gracias
  • language exchanges (intercambios)
  • gym and CrossFit communities in Escazú
  • running and cycling groups
  • weekend trips to the beaches and volcanoes

Communities & meetups

  • Costa Rica Digital Nomads · general nomad meetups
  • Internations San José · expat networking events
  • San José Spanish-English intercambio · language exchange
Nomad community: someLGBTQ+: high

Nightlife

Relaxed and low-key, centered on Barrio Escalante's restaurants and bars, the university district around San Pedro, and the upscale spots in Escazú, rather than a big club scene

Cost: MidClosing: Bars to 2am, later on weekends

Where: Barrio Escalante, San Pedro (Calle de la Amargura), Escazú, Avenida Escazú

Food & dining

Gallo pintoCasado at a sodaCosta Rican coffeeFresh tropical fruitCevicheChifrijo
Street food
Safe to eat
Vegan-friendly
High
Delivery apps
Uber Eats, Rappi, PedidosYa

Safety

Overall
medium
Women, solo
cautious
At night
medium
Common petty crime
Pickpocketing in the centerTheft from parked carsOpportunistic home break-insOnline rental scams
Emergency number
911

By area

  • Escazú, Santa Ana, Rohrmoser (low risk) · Calm residential and expat zones with private security, comfortable day and night
  • Central San José by day (medium risk) · Busy and walkable but watch belongings closely against pickpockets and snatch theft
  • Downtown core at night, Pavas and Hospital districts (high risk) · Avoid quiet central streets after dark and the rougher districts flagged by the US embassy

Scams to avoid

  • Pickpocketing and snatch theft

    Where: Central markets, transit, crowded areas

    Avoid it: Keep your phone and wallet secure, do not flash valuables

  • Car and home break-ins

    Where: Parked cars, ground-floor apartments

    Avoid it: Never leave valuables visible in a car, choose a secure building

  • Rental deposit fraud

    Where: Listings with absent landlords

    Avoid it: Never pay before viewing and a signed contrato

Healthcare

Public system
Good
Private system
Very-good
English-speaking doctors
Common
Pharmacy access
Excellent

Hospitals

  • Hospital CIMA San José (private)
  • Hospital Clínica Bíblica (private)
  • Hospital México (public, CCSS)

Private health or nomad insurance is recommended here — public care is not automatically available to short-term foreign residents.

Getting around

Walkability
2/5
Transit modes
bus, train (commuter), taxi
Transit pass
$50/mo
Ride-hail
Uber, DiDi (~$5/trip)
Airport to center
~30 min, $25
Car needed
No
Bike-friendly
low

Practical logistics

Power plug
Type A/B, 120V
Tap water
Safe to drink
Banking ease
Medium
ATM fees
Medium

Cash vs card: Card and contactless are accepted across the city and expat areas, and US dollars circulate alongside the colón. Carry some colones for sodas, small vendors, and buses. Tap water is safe to drink in the Central Valley.

Climate

Tropical climateBest: Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr

Jan

24°/15°

1 rain d

Feb

25°/15°

1 rain d

Mar

26°/16°

2 rain d

Apr

26°/17°

4 rain d

May

26°/17°

14 rain d

Jun

25°/17°

16 rain d

Jul

25°/16°

14 rain d

Aug

25°/16°

15 rain d

Sep

25°/16°

18 rain d

Oct

24°/16°

19 rain d

Nov

24°/16°

9 rain d

Dec

24°/15°

3 rain d

The 30-second verdict

San José is the practical base for working in Costa Rica, not a postcard, and the distinction matters. It is the Central Valley capital where the fiber is fast, the coworking is real, the healthcare is excellent, and the climate is close to perfect year round, the eternal spring of roughly 24 to 26 degrees Celsius by day with cool nights. It is also a sprawling, traffic-heavy, car-oriented city with patchy walkability, a downtown core you treat with care after dark, and a cost of living that runs high for Latin America. The honest framing is that nomads do not come to Costa Rica for San José; they come for the country, and they base in or near San José because it is where the infrastructure is. It lands in the middle of this guide, a solid working hub held back by walkability and a safety picture that has slipped.

What lifts it is the combination underneath the surface. The climate is as good as it gets, the coworking scene is deeper than the city's size suggests, the Central Valley internet is dependable, the private healthcare is among the best in the region, and the beaches and volcanoes that drew you to Costa Rica are two to four hours away for the weekend. What drags it is real and worth naming: you will likely use Uber or a car more than your feet, the central districts are uneven and some are rough, petty theft is a constant low-level nuisance, and prices bite harder than in Mexico or Colombia. Base in the Escazú belt or Barrio Escalante, capture the tax-free visa, and San José works well as the engine room of a Costa Rican year.

Where to rent, and what it actually costs

Housing in San José is shaped by one decision that overrides price: which neighborhood, because the cheapest central districts are also the least safe and the least walkable, while the expat belt costs more but delivers comfort and security. A furnished one-bedroom in central San José runs roughly USD 500 to 950 a month, the urban-and-walkable Barrio Escalante lands around USD 700 to 1,000, and the premium Escazú and Santa Ana belt climbs to USD 900 to 1,400 furnished. A room in a shared place runs USD 300 to 550. As across the country, the gap between a short-term furnished rental and a long local contrato is meaningful, 20 to 30 percent, so the move that saves you most is to land short and sign long.

Two features of the local market are worth knowing. First, rent is very often quoted and paid in US dollars, especially in the expat zones, which removes the currency guesswork but means you feel the dollar price directly. Second, Costa Rican tenancy law, the Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos, is genuinely protective: a standard lease runs three years with regulated annual increases, and eviction requires cause, which gives a settling nomad real security once the contrato is signed. The deposit is typically one month, agency fees are modest and often absent on private rentals, and landlords usually want a deposit plus proof of income, which foreigners satisfy with extra months upfront or evidence of remote earnings.

For the search, the dominant channel is Encuentra24, the local classifieds portal, where you should spend most of your time, backed by the expat Facebook groups, Facebook Marketplace, and local realtors. Airbnb is useful only as a mid-term tool to land before you sign a real lease, never as a long-term home, because the markup is steep. The scams are the universal ones: the below-market listing with an absent owner who wants a deposit to hold it, and the fake ad using stolen photos. Never pay before an in-person viewing and a signed contrato, and reverse-image-search anything that looks too good. Above all, choose your neighborhood for safety and walkability first, because in San José that decision matters more than the rent figure.

The neighborhoods, ranked by who they suit

Escazú is the default expat landing and the safest comfortable choice: a leafy, hilly suburb of malls, international restaurants, gyms, and private security, with the largest foreign community in the metro area. It is car-dependent and not walkable, and it is the priciest of the options, but for a first-timer who wants safety and convenience it is the path of least resistance. Santa Ana is its greener, calmer neighbor, a touch better value with a small-town feel and modern amenities, ideal for families and anyone wanting quiet and space within the expat belt.

For city life rather than suburb life, Barrio Escalante is the standout and the most nomad-aligned district: a genuinely walkable urban neighborhood that turned over the last decade from residential streets into San José's best restaurant and café scene, with coworking on the doorstep and a younger energy. Rohrmoser offers an embassy-district calm with a US-style suburban feel, tree-lined and safe, good for longer residential stays. The central university districts of Los Yoses and San Pedro, beside the Universidad de Costa Rica, bring value, walkability, and a young local feel, while the historic central barrios of Otoya and Amón offer old-mansion character close to the museums, atmospheric but uneven block to block. Whichever you choose, weigh safety and walkability over headline price, and remember that San José's sprawl means a car or steady Uber use is part of life almost everywhere except the walkable central pockets.

The dating and social scene

San José's social life is warmer and more traditional than a European nomad expects, wrapped in the relaxed Pura Vida tone, and it comes together fastest in the international pockets. The expat and nomad scene concentrates in Escazú and Barrio Escalante, large enough that an English-speaking social and dating life assembles quickly, with Tinder clearly leading the apps, Bumble solid, and Badoo and LatinAmericanCupid widely used, the last especially among foreigners hoping to meet locals. The pools are deepest in the Central Valley, and the apps spike on weekends as people move between the city and the coast.

The richer path, as everywhere in Costa Rica, is integrating beyond the bubble, and it rewards two things: Spanish and patience with a more traditional rhythm. Ticos and Ticas tend to value family and committed relationships highly, courtship runs slower and more led by men in the early stages than northern nomads may be used to, and social life flows through friends, family gatherings, gyms, and the outdoors as much as through apps. The natural routes in are the city's strengths: Barrio Escalante's cafés and restaurants, coworking socials at Impact Hub and Gracias, language exchanges, the strong gym and CrossFit communities in Escazú, running and cycling groups, and the weekend trips to beaches and volcanoes where the nomad crowd mixes. Spanish is the key that opens the wider local world, and even improving Spanish is warmly received. On LGBTQ life, San José is the most welcoming part of a country that legalized same-sex marriage in 2020, the first in Central America, with an established and visible urban scene, relaxed by regional standards if more reserved than Spain.

Coworking, internet, and getting work done

Connectivity is one of San José's real strengths and the main reason it is the country's working base rather than the beach towns. Home fiber from Kölbi, Claro, Liberty, and Tigo delivers around 100 to 600 Mbps for roughly USD 55 a month, installed within a week or two, and the Central Valley median sits near 100 Mbps, which comfortably handles calls and heavy uploads. Mobile is solid too, with broad Kölbi coverage, expanding 5G in the city, prepaid plans around USD 15 to 20 a month, and clean eSIM support. This dependability is exactly what the coasts cannot guarantee, and it is why working nomads cluster here.

The coworking scene is deeper than the city's size suggests. Impact Hub in La California is the established community hub at around USD 200 a month, Gracias Coffee & Cowork brings a specialty-coffee-forward space to Barrio Escalante, Republic Workspace in San Pedro offers 24/7 access at a friendly USD 100 a month, the former Selina space now called Socialtel sits in historic Barrio Otoya, and Become Work Center serves the Escazú belt with a more corporate feel. Café culture is laptop-friendly, with Barrio Escalante spots like Franco and Cafeoteca happy to host a working morning. Between home fiber, coworking, and cafés, getting work done in San José is genuinely easy, the clearest practical argument for basing here.

Cost of living, safety, and getting around

Budget honestly and San José is not cheap for the region. A lean single life runs near USD 1,500 a month, a comfortable one around USD 2,200, and an indulgent lifestyle past USD 4,000. Rent leads, and the rest is mixed: a local casado lunch at a soda is cheap, fresh fruit and Costa Rican coffee are a bargain, but imported goods, a mid-range restaurant meal for two near USD 66, a quality coffee around USD 4, and anything branded from abroad push the total up because of steep import duties. The dollar circulates alongside the colón, so prices are often quoted in dollars, and the overall number lands closer to southern Europe than to San José's Latin American peers.

Safety needs the honest version. The expat zones, Escazú, Santa Ana, and Rohrmoser, are calm, residential, and comfortable day and night, backed by private security. Central San José is busy and walkable by day but demands attention to your belongings against pickpockets and snatch theft, and the downtown core after dark, along with rougher districts like Pavas and Hospital flagged by the US embassy, is best avoided. Costa Rica's national homicide rate rose to around 16 per 100,000 in 2025 and San José is the province with the most cases, though the violence is overwhelmingly drug-trade related rather than aimed at residents. The day-to-day discipline is petty-crime hygiene: do not flash valuables, never leave anything visible in a parked car, use Uber or DiDi after dark, and choose a secure building. Women generally report San José as manageable with caution rather than carefree. The emergency number is 911.

Getting around is the city's weakest practical point. San José is sprawling, traffic-clogged, and built for cars, with patchy sidewalks and poor walkability outside the central pockets and Barrio Escalante. There is no metro; public transport means buses and a limited commuter train, which are cheap but not always convenient. Most nomads lean on Uber and DiDi, which are affordable at around USD 5 for a short trip, or rent a car for freedom and weekend trips, accepting the traffic. The airport is about 30 minutes out by Uber or official taxi. For a nomad used to a walkable European city, San José's car dependence is the daily adjustment, and it is the main reason getting around is the weakest part of daily life.

The climate, the rains, and the weekend escapes

San José's climate is the quiet star of the pitch and the reason the weather is as good as it gets. The Central Valley's elevation, around 1,170 meters, gives it that eternal-spring feel: daytime highs of roughly 24 to 26 degrees Celsius all year, cool nights that need a light layer, and none of the coastal heat and humidity. The year splits into a dry season from December to April, when San José is at its sunniest and best, and a green season from May to November, when reliable afternoon downpours arrive and September and October are the wettest. The rains are predictable rather than oppressive, usually clearing the mornings for work and arriving in the afternoon.

The other half of the appeal is what surrounds the city. San José's real luxury is its position: the Pacific beaches, the cloud forests, the volcanoes, and the national parks are all two to four hours away, close enough for a weekend and far enough to feel like a different world. This is the rhythm many nomads settle into, working the week on the Central Valley's good internet and escaping to the coast or the mountains on weekends. It is the best of both halves of Costa Rica, and it is the strongest case for treating San José as the base and the rest of the country as the reward.

The bottom line

San José earns its standing as a working hub rather than a destination in its own right, and that is the honest frame for it. It is excellent where it counts for a remote worker, dependable Central Valley fiber, a deeper coworking scene than its size implies, excellent private healthcare, and a near-perfect climate, and it is weak where lifestyle cities shine, with poor walkability, heavy car dependence, prices high for the region, and a safety picture that rewards caution and the right neighborhood. The move that makes it work is specific: base in the Escazú belt for comfort or Barrio Escalante for city walkability, run on Uber or a car, and use the weekends to reach the coast and the volcanoes. For the legal and financial layer underneath, read the country pages on the visa, tax, and residency rules, and note especially that the Estoy de Paso digital nomad visa leaves your foreign income untaxed but does not count toward permanent residency, so settlers switch to the Rentista or Pensionado routes.

Costa Rica: the legal layer

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Frequently Asked Questions