Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: "You can live in Panama like a king for $1,200 a month!"
Ten years ago? Maybe. In 2025? Let’s be real.
While Panama remains significantly more affordable than North America or Europe, the "post-inflation" reality of 2025 has shifted the goalposts. Prices have stabilized (and even dipped slightly in late 2024), but the days of dollar beers in the city center are largely gone.
The truth is, your budget in Panama depends entirely on how willing you are to adapt.
Here is the honest, updated breakdown of what it actually costs to live here right now—from the "Gringo Tax" on groceries to the hidden utility bills no one tells you about.
The "average" cost of living is meaningless because a retired couple in Las Tablas spends a fraction of what a young professional in Panama City spends.
Who: Professionals, City Lovers.
Housing: A modern 2-bedroom apartment in San Francisco or Costa del Este with a pool and gym.
Lifestyle: AC on 24/7, Uber everywhere, imported groceries, dinners out 3x a week.
2025 Budget (Couple): $3,500 - $4,800 / month.
Who: Retirees, Families seeking space.
Housing: A 3-bedroom home in a gated community (Coronado) or a mountain condo (Boquete).
Lifestyle: AC used only at night, one car, mix of local markets and supermarkets.
2025 Budget (Couple): $2,200 - $3,000 / month.
Who: Budget-conscious retirees, adventurous solo expats.
Housing: A modest local-style home (no gated community fees) in places like David, Chitré, or Penonomé.
Lifestyle: Fans instead of AC, "Fonda" lunches ($4), local produce.
2025 Budget (Couple): $1,500 - $2,000 / month.
The biggest shock for new expats isn't rent—it's the grocery store. Panama imports a lot of its "comfort foods." If you insist on eating exactly like you did in the US, you will pay US prices (or higher).
Here is the 2025 price comparison:
| Item | The "Local" Choice | Cost | The "Expat" Choice | Cost |
| Coffee | Local Duran Ground Coffee (1lb) | $5.50 | Starbucks Latte (Tall) | $3.75+ |
| Breakfast | Local Eggs (Dozen) | $1.90 | Imported US Cereal (Box) | $6.50+ |
| Produce | Pineapple (from a street truck) | $1.00 | Imported Strawberries (Supermarket) | $7.00 |
| Lunch | "Menu Ejecutivo" (Soup, Rice, Chicken) | $5.00 | Burger & Fries at a Bistro | $14.00 |
| Beer | National Beer (Atlas/Balboa) | $0.80 | Craft Beer / Imported | $4.00+ |
The Lesson: If you buy Heinz Ketchup, Kraft Mac & Cheese, and Napa Valley wine, your grocery bill will be 30% higher than in the US. Swap to local brands (Maggi, local cheeses, Chilean wines), and it drops by 40%.
Rent is easy to calculate. These are the variables that catch people off guard:
Electricity (The "AC Tax"): Electricity in Panama is not cheap.
City Apartment (Central AC): If you run it all day, expect a $250 - $350 monthly bill.
Beach/Mountain (Split Units): Using them only for sleeping? $60 - $100 monthly.
Internet: Surprisingly affordable and fast. You can get 400 Mbps fiber optic for $45/month.
Healthcare:
A visit to a specialist (dermatologist, cardiologist) at a top hospital like Punta Pacifica is roughly $50 - $80 (cash pay).
Full coverage health insurance for a couple (age 60s) ranges from $250 - $400/month depending on deductibles.
Panama City: Rents have crept up slightly due to demand from multinational companies. A nice 1-bedroom in a good building is now $1,100 - $1,400.
Coronado: Stable. You can still find great walk-to-beach condos for $1,000.
Boquete: Rising. The secret is out, and inventory is tight. Expect to pay $900+ for something modern that used to be $700.
Can you live in Panama for $1,500? Yes, if you are single and live simply in the interior.
But for a couple wanting a "comfortable" North American standard of living with health insurance, a car, and some travel? Budget $3,000 a month.
It is still a bargain compared to Miami or Toronto—but only if you learn to live a little more like a Panamanian.