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HOW (step-by-step instructions) to apply for a pensionado visa

dwilhelms1

Hello all,

I cannot find any information on a goverment or otherwise reliable-appearing site on how to apply for a pensionado visa. And the consulate in Denver is evidently closed. Any ideas on where to find such a place? Or is that not even possible? In that case, who is honest and who is cheapest?


Thank you.

See also

Visas for Costa RicaDocument Legalization for Reunification Visa ApplicationHow to get a Costa Rica Digital Nomad Visa?To apply for rentista visa do my wife need a birth certificate also ?Visa process to live in Costa Rica at least 1 year
rainagain

@dwilhelms1

I highly recommend using a Residency Service unless you are already living in CR and speak fluent Spanish.

Google Residency Services in Costa Rica... there are more than a few.   

If you ask for recommendations... you'll get some specific names on this forum, and others will tell you not to use 'that' service because of their own bad experience.  You are an adult, just read their sites and them send some Q's or make some calls.  If they are willing to answer simple questions without a fee... then they are probably legit. 

There is an Application process that includes, primarily,

1 The application itself... it has to be in Spanish.  My service sent me the questions in English... and they applied them to the Spanish version ... which is the only version that Migration accepts.

2   A series of documents such as:

One copy (not photocopy) of your Birth certificate.;   I recommend, also, having a few copies HERE in CR with you... you may need them for residency renewals, changes from temporary to Permanent applications; etc.

A copy of your passport's 'info' page,

An up-to-date FBI or Police background check (requires a set of fingerprints);   FBI, for many, is easier.

Two passport sized color photos

Proof of SS or other pension GUARANTEED income (minimum of $1,000 USD per month) .. such as your SS Benefits letter; signed and dated by somebody in a SS office.

Another set of Finger Prints for the Gov't here in Costa Rica (you can get that done here) and...

An official CR Lawyer's letter or Notary here that is approved by the gov't that testifies that you are who you say you are... you have to have that done HERE in CR, in person.  that fee is paid directly to the lawyer.  My service here arranged that and took me to his office.  It took less than 20 minutes.


Everything that is coming from your home country must be Apostilled at a Costa Rican Consulate in your country. That Consulate will provide you with a certified Translation 'service' (not free) that will translate all of the apostilled documents from English into Spanish... of whatever your native tongue is.  All of that must be put together, with a set of fingerprints for CR, the Lawyer's document, and your completed application (in spanish) and walked into the Migration office.  A service will and can do that for you... but you must give them the $$ for the Gov't fees that are required to get the application turned in.


Very good to have a service... if they are 'good' they will make sure that you have all of your ducks in a row, and will walk your application to Migration for you and most importantly, They will speak Spanish and can let you know if there are any issues.  The service will be the official liaison between Migration and You... so they will get news from Migration and thus forward it to you and hopefully explain everything.

After The application is turned in, you may wait up to (timing changes constantly) four months just for the Application to be Accepted for PROCESSING ONLY.   During that time/wait, if you are in CR and your passport entry stamp expires, YOU MUST LEAVE and then return to get a renew'd entry stamp.   Once you hear that itisaccepted for Processing, you'll receive a document called "Expediente" (generally a pdf in an email from your service) .... and with that document (make copies and keep one ALWAYS with your passport) you will now wait again... (9 months or more)   BUT!!!  That  Expediente document means that you DO NOT HAVE TO LEAVE Costa Rica if your passport entry stamp/visa expires.  But you will always need that Expediente document with your passport because crap happens.   So you can start living here, buy a house, get a dog, learn Spanish, grow weed, whatever, while you wait. 

Eventually, you'll get news from your service that your application has been Officially Accepted... and you'll get a new document to replace the Expediente... which is called a 'Resolucion'.   Your service will then instruct you to immediately go to a CCSS office to join the National Healthcare system or 'Caja' (which is mandatory for your Pensionista Residency to exist) ...  remember to take any and all documents and Resolucion with you; and you will join the Caja while you are there and pay the first month.  With a receipt of that.. you can then go to a Correos of Costa Rica or to a BCR (Banco de Costa Rica) .... both have on-line reservation options... you can't just do a walk-in; to apply for and get photographed for, your official Costa Rican ID... called the 'Cedula'...  it generally gets sent to your local (closest) Correos of CR office for you to go and retreive... about 2-4 weeks later... so know where your closest Correos office is.  Most big towns have them. 

BTW... by that time you should have a phone with an 8-digit Costa Rican phone number, and Whatsapp on that phone (most phones here have the app already) so that you can get messages from Correos.   


I did the whole process from down here in CR... where I had purchased a home before even applying for residency... I had things sent to a family member in the states (birth certificate copy; etc) and she forwarded to my Service who took care of doing the Consulate visits; apostille process, and translations.   The service here went with me to the Police station in San Jose for finger prints (passport photo shop was across the street) and to the lawyer's office for the notarized document....  she then walked my application into the Migration office without me... I never went there.   The whole thing took half a day... so I was able to get back up to western San Carlos without having to stay in a hotel.

Not all services have persons in both countries... but whomever you select to use will assist you with how to go about doing all of this.

Good luck.

daveandmarcia

A couple of additional details . . .


First, it will be easier if you deal with an attorney/notary close to where you live in Costa Rica. Post a question in this Forum asking for an experienced (it's important) representative near you to handle the process. Among other things, you're going to have to swear before a notary that your documents and applications are valid. Better to do that close to home.


Second, all the documents you'll need MUST have been originated within six months of their submission to Immigration. That means new birth certificates from the state where you were born, a new marriage certificate (if applicable) from the state in which you were last married (if applicable), new proof of lifetime guaranteed income (Social Security, military or government pension, and some (but not all) private annuity accounts), and a FBI criminal record check. If you're a couple, both must apply and provide the necessary documents although if you're legally married, only one needs to meet the income requirement.


The easiest way to get these documents is to Google them (i.e, google "State of <wherever> birth certificate" and "State of <wherever> marriage certificate") and opt to have the online service have the new documents apostiled for you. It's not cheap, but these outfits have the connections to the states' Office of Vital Records and Secretary of State and can save you a lot of headaches. Many States won't deal with you directly any longer.


You can Google the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica. On their website (maybe Federal Benefits Unit), there's a place where you can request a Social Security proof of income which will be emailed back to you at no cost. Print it out and that will make Costa Rican Immigration happy.


NOTE: What we're talking about here is legal temporary residency, not a "visa".

rainagain

@daveandmarcia

All good points from Dave... especially his second point about your documents not being older than 6 months.


I will add to his final Point... All original Residencies will be Temporary and it will say so on your CR ID card.  You will have to renew after the first 2 years as per the expiration date on your ID card.   However, after you have completed year number three... you can go to Migration and apply to change your Residency status to Permanent.  Quite easy.  I recommend going immediately after the +++++3rd year has terminated.  Getting that change to Permanent doesn't require proof of income or anything like that... just some fees and writing a short letter.  But !! it can take more than a year to wait for the +change.... thus, your fourth year runs out and your Cedula (ID card) will expire.  It happened to me and I went to Migration and asked what I should do... the +woman said that it is 'normal' ??  for that to happen and when you DO get the Permanent Residency 'solucion'... you just pay an extra $25 to cover that expired cedula. 

I suppose I could have renewed the 2 year temporary residency again... but I didn't want to have TWO applications running into each other at Migration.   I just had to live with an expired Cedula for a few months... so I layed 'low' and tried not to do anything that required an ID during that period of time.  Why??  you ask???  Because with an expired Cedula and a Passport Entry stamp that was also expired (because you don't need to update that 'stamp' if you have Residency) I could have been flagged for being here longer than my stamp allowed, and my Cedula/Residency card was expired.  I didn't worry... I had my copy of my application from Migration that was stamped and signed.  But not everybody in CR knows about these things (and why would they??)... like people at the bank, or at a car rental service; etc.  Some of them love calling the police if they think you are illegal (it happened to me during my first wait ... but I had my Expediente document with me; the car rental guy had no clue what it was and called the Migration police anyway... they arrived and were pissed that he called... false alarm). 

Interesting... my final Resolucion letter even had a paragraph regarding the 4th year of Cedula expiring during the 'wait' to achieve Permanent Residency...and it noted that letting that happen wasn't the END OF THE WORLD and you would simply pay an extra $25 in addition to the final fee.

Permanent Residency must be renewed after the first three years; and after that, every 5 years.  Easily done at BCR

gatorleach

@rainagain

Thank you for such a detailed explanation.

Coladas

Better check with the consulate you plan to use. The CR consulate in Miami does not provide Apostille services. The forms need to be sent to DC. Starting my residency journey very soon!

daveandmarcia

When you order the new documents you'll need (birth and marriage certificates, a FBI criminal record check, income verification, etc), you're likely to find yourself dealing with a company who has exclusive access to those records -- at a fee. They are likely to offer you the service of having those documents apostiled, too. If they do, bite the bullet and pay the fee. It'll be much faster and much simpler than trying to do it yourself.


Note: The apostiling process is performed by the legal authority who issues the document. It is an authenticating process in which the issuer confirms that the document is genuine. The Costa Rican consulates in the U.S. or elsewhere have no part in apostiling documents from (say) Florida or California. That's done by the Secretary of State in each U.S. state typically in their Office of the Great Seal.


So, if you were born in Florida, it's Florida's state government which must apostile your newly issued Florida birth certificate. If you were married in California, it's their state government which must apostile your newly issued marriage certificate. It doesn't matter where you're living now.

rainagain

@daveandmarcia

Interesting...  I was born in Wisconsin and all of my Documents were apostilled by the Consulate in Los Angeles... or at least, I thought they were. 

Perhaps, because many of my documents were  'embossed' with, or stamped with, Official seals and included signatures; dates stamps; etc., from the Departments that issued them., the consulate considered that to be a 'genuine' document. 

I always learn something from Dave.

daveandmarcia

There is an international treaty that forms the basis and establishes the requirements for the apostiling process. Many, but not all, countries have signed on. This treaty is a relatively recent development. It's come into existence during the twenty years that we've lived in Costa Rica.


Before apostiling, individual states in the U.S. had their own procedures for authenticating the documents that their governments issued. In those days, the Costa Rican consulates authenticated U.S. states' documents but no more. That explains why rainagain's Wisconsin documents were authenticated (not apostiled) by the Costa Rican consulate in Los Angeles. So used to be a three-step process: first, get the newly issued document, then have that state's Office of the Great Seal authenticate it, and then have the Costa Rican consulate administer its bureaucratic blessing. Apostiling eliminates that last step.

rainagain

@daveandmarcia

You go deep, Prof. Dave.

Gracias .

For those 'in' process or thinking about it...Probably good 'fodder' for hiring a Residency Service or Migration Attorney. 

daveandmarcia

Dunno about a "Residency Service" (see above), but an experienced attorney, one who has done a number of residency applications for others before you, will save you a lot of headaches. One slip up and your application will expire (remember the requirement that your documents be less than six months old when submitted) and you'll have to begin anew.

rainagain

@daveandmarcia

Folks...   Tons of Residency Services exist that aren't law firms. 

There is only ONE item required for the initial Residency application (Pensionista, Rentista, Digital Nomad) that requires a Lawyer, and that lawyer doesn't have to be a Migration Attorney.   

My service was excellent and nobody on their team was a lawyer.  A retired teacher, or bookkeeper, or insurance agent could do it. 

They worked on 'residencies' and residencies only... so I'm guessing, they knew what they were doing and weren't busy with other legal ³¾²¹³Ù³Ù±ð°ù²õ.Ìý

And ...  just a stab in the dark, but I'm guessing they didn't charge legal type fees either.

Whether you use a lawyer or a residency service, keep in mind that all they do is compile your documents, make sure that everything is copacetic, and then, hopefully, they will walk your application to Migracion for you, and keep you informed as to the status as things progress. 

I suppose that if you 'think' you will have special circumstances that require a lawyer (bad marks on FBI background check, issues with passports/past residencies, issues with past marriage and divorce crap, etc.)  then hiring a migration attorney would be worth it.  But for the simple due diligence of filling out an application and compiling your required documents...  a 'service' is just fine... or you could even do it yourself... but that would most likely require excellent Spanish skills, and already living reasonably close to the/a  MIgracion office.

daveandmarcia

rainagain, above you wrote, ". . . or you could even do it yourself... but that would most likely require excellent Spanish skills . . ." and you're right on all but one detail. The documents submitted to Immigration in support of a residency application must be in Spanish, and they must have been translated into Spanish by an authorized Spanish translator. Not just any bilingual person will do.

Anneski

Which part needs to be done by a lawyer? I have a close friend, a tico, who is also a paralegal. She will get my docs to an accepted translation service, (process of getting my FBI apostille/ birth cert is already done because I live in the state capitol where I was also born) and I have a state pension. I’ll also get some SS but just plied- fingers crossed it isn’t gutted by then. She will also go to migracion with me. What would I need from a lawyer?

oh, and I had a misdemeanor DUI in 1993. It’s on the FBI check. I’ve had about five attorneys tell me that could be a problem and so I need an attorney. Not one residence service OR my friend or the attorney she works for thought a 32 year old misdemeanor would present a problem, esp since my pension comes from the teachers retirement system- I’ve been teaching high school since 1999 so I’m clearly not getting into any more trouble, what with having to recertify every few years

But would appreciate understanding which part requires a lawyer?

daveandmarcia

I think your paralegal friend could handle all of this without any participation from an attorney. Applying for legal residence is a simple and straightforward process as long as you adhere to the details.

TerrynViv

I agree wholeheartedly about the use of a lawyer, we had to step in 1/2 way through our initial application and finish it up ourselves.

Permanent Residency, we did ourselves, and it was a breeze.  We even managed to get our initial deposits for temporary residency refunded although it took three years!

Just received citizenship without using a lawyer.  No more changes for us!!!!!

Best of luck Anneski.

rainagain

@daveandmarcia

Stop Cherry picking.  What I meant, and hate to have to actually write this, is that an Individual can be their own 'service' and compile their own documents, and take them to the consulate and 'deal' with the translations, as instructed by the Consulate, etc....   WITHOUT help from anybody. Not a service, and not a lawyer.   If one of the documents needs to be 'from' a lawyer, here in CR, then they can go to a lawyer for that without paying somebody else to do it.  I just recently read a testimonial from a guy who did it without a service/attorney... and even though he wrote that he would never do it again... doesn't mean that it is impossible.  You don't need to pay anybody to do this 'leg work' for you if you are up for the challenge.   I hope we hear from others that have done it... that will no doubt cause you to blow a fuse.

People have written about doing it themselves.. even though you, Dave, haven't read those particular posts... whether here, or on other forums... it doesn't mean they didn't do it.   Just because you don't have first hand knowledge of the person who did this without a Migration attorney, doesn't mean it can't happen. I know, according to many of your posts, that it is Dave's Way or the highway..  but not everybody thirsts and grasps to be the smartest guy in the room.

There are all kinds of people coming here and doing their thing and living quite differently from each other... I fondly remember when you actually 'doubted' my ability to live on the shoe-string budget that I've allowed myself so that I have the freedom to travel and do other things... like how would you know?????  if it's possible, or IMPOSSIBLE, to 'do things' or live differently from how you've 'chosen' to do it unless you have tried it ALL ???   

I guess... if you've never been to Angola, then it must not exist... or it is impossible to go there, or that living there is impossible according to you because it didn't make it into your "My Way or the Highway" bag of boring.

rainagain

@Anneski

Hello.   i'm not sure what the 'document' was... but my service took me to a lawyer here in CR where he looked at all of my identification docs... Passport, Birth Certificate, and any other ID that I have, to verify that I am me.

I didn't ask any questions, I just assumed it was part of the process.  The woman from my service told me that it was the final 'thing' needed to complete the package of documents to be turned in with my Application.

Sorry, but I didn't ask because I was paying somebody else to do it for me.  I paid the lawyer myself... it took about 20 minutes, and he said that he does this regularly for various services.

Suggestion... perhaps go to Migration and pick up a copy of the actual application... that, more than likely, has the LIST or instructions as to what items/documents are required.    If it still isn't clear, then perhaps, because I used a Residency 'service' and not a certified Attorney, that the document from that attorney was some sort of verification that everything being done by the Service was kosher.   Like I said, I really don't know.   When you hire a professional, you're not privy to everything they're doing.   I don't know everything my Doctor does and i don't want to know... nor does he have any interest in teaching every patient a 'free' med school class.   Same with an auto mechanic or the guy who serviced my Sub Zero refrigerator back in the states... I just wanted it done.

Or... Maybe go to the source with your question, and ask a Migration Attorney or send a Q to one of the services.

That's all I've got.   My gut says you can do it.

And... best of luck.  I hope that 30+ year old misdemeanor gets ignored... I'm guessing you aren't the only one.  I had some arrests in college for 'protesting'  Apartheid, etc... (now a days, I'd get shot by T's paramilitary 'boys')  and I had no issues.

peace.

rainagain

@TerrynViv

Wow... three years.     I think I'm going to give up on 'chasing after' my $200 deposit for Permanent Residency...  which wasn't applied to the final fees.   I don't want to jinx my current status with Caja as somebody who doesn't pay into the CR pension plan.   

But yeah...  going to Migration and doing the change over from Temp to Permanent was basically painless and easy... it was just the 15 month wait that caused some sleepless nights. 

Cudos !! to you guys for getting things done.