Retire to Panama
Retire to Panama : A collection of Articles
Get great advice, learn from Experts and Licensed Professionals about how to retire to Panama, buying Beach Front property, purchasing a home, rental deals, visas etc. Follow the Links below:
Retire to Panama : Panama Information Purchasing Property February 2006 Courtesy of the
Panamanian Embassey The following is general information on purchasing real estate in Panama. It is not to be construed as legal advice. The different categories of land make it imperative to engage professionals for more detailed information. Real estate laws on the mainland can ...
Retire to Panama : Overview of Panama Physicians, Credentials and Training Let us first say there is no shortage of competent physicians in Panama. Panama itself has two medical schools and two dentals schools and ...
Retire to Panama : Panama Internet, TV and Phones Panama is modern when it comes to these things. Actually they are more advanced ...
Retire to Panama : BANKING IN PANAMA: OPENING AN ACCOUNT The Republic of Panama continues to introduce legislation that will enhance its image as an international financial services centre ...
Retire to Panama : Panama Passport, Visa, Residency and Citizenship Programs Panama offers a multitude of programs enabling one to fairly easily obtain a Passport, Visa, Residency and Citizenship....
Retire to Panama : Panama Passport, Visa, Residency and Citizenship Programs Panama offers a multitude of programs enabling one to fairly easily obtain a Passport, Visa, Residency and Citizenship. Panama is...
Retire to Panama : Panama Residency, Citizenship & Passports Panama is now rated as the #1 Retirement Haven in the world. The cost of living is extremely low, the crime rate is
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Retire to Panama : Panama Reforestation Visa Program $40,000 Investment - Permanent Residency leading to Panama Passport
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Retire to Panama : Panama Visas, Residency and Citizenship Panama is now positioning itself as the "New Costa Rica". It has put together the most appealing program of special ...
Retire to Panama : U.S. Passport Primer: A Guide to the New Passport Regulations Thanks to new federal passport proposals, the cost of a Caribbean cruise, a Cancun honeymoon, or a Vancouver theater weekend ...
Retire to Panama : Panama Real Estate Shopping: How You Can Mix Business With Pleasure Have you ever wanted to live in an area that is affordable, safe, popular, and beautiful? If so, you are urged to examine what...
Needed: Retirement Financial Planning
The next wave of retirees will be the Boomers. We need retirement financial planning.. But.. we'd rather not bother.Boomers, The New Retirees
If you read much about retirement, you'll know that all and sundry expect Boomer retirement...
Retire to Panama :
Retiring to Panama – 10 Reasons you Should Consider It
More people than ever are considering retiring to Panama - and it’s already one of the top destinations for adventure and eco-tourism ... MORE ...
Retire to Panama : Retiring to Panama 10 Reasons you Should Consider It [2006-07-18]
More people than ever are considering retiring to Panama - and it's already one of the top destinations for adventure and eco-tourism - and it's now becoming a top retirement destination. In the USA 78 million Baby Boomers will reach retirement age in the next 10 years ? and they'll be looking to maintain their standard of living by retiring abroad, where their pensions will go much further.
By Stephen Todd
Retire to Panama : Retirees Are Moving to Panama Central America[2006-05-10]
Another Panamanian secret has been revealed during the past few years, it is a great place to retire to.
By Kenneth J. Jones
Retire to Panama : Retiring Overseas A Better Lifestyle Close To Home [2006-08-28]
More people than ever are retiring overseas, as they cannot maintain the same lifestyle at home as medical costs soar, inflation depletes their savings and state support declines. For most people they want a quality lifestyle at a cheaper cost, but they don?t want a culture shock. They still want to be close to home with all the comforts and there is one country that offers this:
By Sacha Tarkovsky
Retire to Panama : MSN Articles
"With the stock market recently approaching new milestones, you may have revived your dream of retiring early. The only question is how.
The answer for a growing number of Americans making the leap into early retirement is moving to a country with a lower cost of living. The U.S. State Department estimates some 4 million Americans live abroad, not counting military and embassy folks. About a quarter of those are estimated to be retirees.
Poke around on the Web, and you'll find a whole industry devoted to retirees looking to live like a despot on $15 a day -- usually under tropical skies with daily maid service and umbrella-bedecked drinks thrown in for good measure.
From a financial perspective, spending your golden years overseas is certainly tantalizing. Consider how far your Social Security checks might go:
* In Ajijic, Mexico, a community near Guadalajara that's home to more than 3,000 expatriate Americans, where you can rent a sprawling three-bedroom, two-bath hacienda for about $700 a month.
* In English-speaking Belize, where retirees don't have to pay taxes on the first $75,000 of income and where property taxes on a $500,000 home run about $90 a year.
* In Spain, where the weather is good, health care is affordable and the rest of Europe is at your doorstep.
The cost of living may even be low enough for you to retire years earlier than you might otherwise.
Louisiana banker Tom Vidrine, for example, fell in love with Belize on his first trip to the Central American country in 1990. He bought a vacation home and spent the next seven years saving money so that he could retire in 1997 at the ripe old age of 45. He says an American can live a comfortable life on one of Belize's many tropical islands for $2,000 a month, or half of that on the mainland.
"My only regret," said Vidrine, "is that I did not come sooner."
If you're the kind of person who considers only the financial aspects, however, then retiring abroad could be an absolute disaster. Ruth Halcomb, who runs the LiveAbroad.com Web site from Santa Fe, N.M., has seen it many times.
"Some people sell their stuff, move and try to settle," Halcomb said, only to "change their minds and come back."
At a minimum, people who consider retirement abroad should be adventuresome, flexible, tolerant and patient, the expats I interviewed agreed.
Here are some other traits that come in handy:
You're willing to make new friends
"The people who do well are couples who depend on each other a great deal," Halcomb said, "and who don't have a great sense of community or good friends they're going to miss terribly."
That's not to say you won't make new friends, particularly in areas that attract a lot of other foreign retirees.
"There are enough retired people here who are looking for friends and new acquaintances," said Chuck Svoboda, a former diplomat who retired to Spain's northern coast, "that there's no difficulty in building a fairly large circle of them in a short time."
Improved cell phone networks and Internet access also have made it easier for expats to stay in touch -- so much so, Svoboda grouses, that it sometimes "keeps people from enjoying what this country has to offer."
But you'll still be hundreds if not thousands of miles away from family and friends, who probably won't visit nearly as often as they would if you were still in the States. You may not mind watching a grandchild grow up in photos, but if you want to be there in person, overseas retirement probably isn't for you.
You're open to experiencing a new culture
It seems obvious, but the rest of the world really isn't like the United States. Some people never adapt to the strangeness or to the notion that they'll always be foreigners, no matter how many other expats live in their chosen community.
"I met a Frenchman who said, 'You Americans, you welcome me with open arms, but in my country, it wouldn't be the same,'" Halcomb said. "'You would never be French.'"
In most countries, language barriers can pose a problem even to the most intrepid. Hildreth Serrano, an American registered nurse who lived for more than a decade in Germany, thought she'd do fine living and working in the Czech Republic -- until she got there. Although she loves living in Europe, learning a new language has been daunting.
"I would have to say the worst thing (about living abroad) is being reduced to having absolutely no language ability -- going from being a fairly articulate professional to total mute non-comprehension," Serrano said. "It is bewildering, disconcerting and adds to a sometimes overpowering feeling of isolation."
You're not a Type A personality
If you're the kind of person who gets impatient waiting in line at the post office, for example, then dealing with bureaucracies in other countries could drive you up a wall.
A simple banking transaction in Mexico can be an afternoon-long affair, while getting a phone installed in many countries can take months. Utilities and other bills often must be paid in person in countries with iffy postal systems -- and that means long periods standing in lines. Stores might be open only a few hours a day, and closed for innumerable holidays, making you long for a 24-hour mini-mart.
"There was a huge culture shock when we first went to Ecuador," said Suzan Haskins, an Omaha native who has worked for International Living, a newsletter and Web site, in Ecuador and Mexico. "We'd have five or 10 things we wanted to accomplish in a day and we'd be lucky if we got one of those done."
You're willing to do some research
Some of the Web sites, magazines and newsletters about international living are also in the business of promoting real estate or tours, which means they have a vested interest in painting the best possible portrait of living abroad. They can also help you to find out about special programs that some countries have to attract retirees and any restriction that may exist on buying real estate.
You can use those resources for preliminary research, of course, and to get in touch with Americans who have moved to the country of your choice. Contact these expats to get a clearer idea of what life is really like there."
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