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Luxury homes for sale in Panama

luxury guide

27 houses for sale in Panamá make this one of the most active residential markets in Latin America. Not condos, not towers: actual standalone houses with private gardens, garages, and room to live. That distinction matters here. Panamá attracts buyers from Colombia, Venezuela, the United States, and Europe who want a real home in a stable, dollarized economy with no foreign income tax. The residential spread is wide. Clayton and Albrook sit inside the city, green and spacious. Costa del Este is the choice for families who want newer construction near the financial district. And beyond the capital, Coronado on the Pacific coast, Boquete in the highlands of Chiriquí, and the beaches of Santa Clara offer a completely different pace of life, all within two hours of the city.

How much does a house cost in Panamá

House prices in Panamá start at PLN 1,844,899 for peripheral or inland properties and reach PLN 45,741,310 for premium homes in established neighborhoods with pools, large gardens, and high-end finishes. The average sits at PLN 8,663,835. Floor areas range from 258 to 130000 sqm, averaging 5372 sqm, with bedroom counts between 2 and 9. What drives the price up: proximity to international schools, private pool, double garage, lot size, and security infrastructure. What makes Panamá different from most markets is the fiscal framework. Foreign-source income is not taxed. The Jubilado program gives retirees discounts on a wide range of services. And the dollar, the local currency, removes any exchange rate risk entirely. For buyers coming from volatile currencies, this is a serious advantage.

Where to buy a house in Panamá

Clayton is the neighborhood that serious buyers come back to. Former U.S. military grounds, now converted into a leafy residential area with wide streets, mature tropical trees, and houses on generous lots. It feels calmer than most of the city. Costa del Este is the modern alternative, with newer construction, gated communities, and fast access to the financial center. Albrook suits buyers who want space and convenience, close to the Marcos A. Gelabert domestic airport and the protected forests of the Canal Zone. For larger properties with cooler temperatures, Cerro Viento to the north of the city is worth considering: the altitude drops the heat and the views over the skyline are real. Outside the capital, Coronado draws the expat crowd looking for Pacific beachside houses. Boquete, up in Chiriquí, is the mountain alternative: fresh air, coffee farms, and a well-established international community. Ma the Azuero Peninsula is where the next wave is forming.