Start a Company in Costa Rica with Clarity, Compliance, and Legal Protection

Costa Rica offers a strong legal framework for investors, entrepreneurs, family offices, real estate buyers, consultants, and international businesses seeking to establish a local corporate presence.

Creating a corporation in Costa Rica can be a streamlined process when the structure is properly designed from the beginning. The real value is not only in incorporating the company, but in making sure it is compliant, functional, bankable, and aligned with your commercial goals.

At Simple Legal Consulting, we help clients create companies that are legally sound, strategically structured, and ready to operate within Costa Rica’s current compliance environment. The usual timing to create a company is anything between 1-2 weeks.

This section is divided into two parts:

  1. A practical overview of the corporate landscape in Costa Rica

  2. A company formation form to begin the incorporation process

Before sending an offer, we review your intended activity, ownership structure, and compliance profile to confirm that the corporation falls within the scope of activities we assist with and that it meets our AML and due diligence standards.


Corporate Landscape in Costa Rica

Costa Rican corporations are no longer passive legal vehicles that can be created and forgotten.

In the past, many companies were incorporated simply to hold assets or operate informally with limited ongoing maintenance. That reality has changed. Today, corporations in Costa Rica are subject to recurring compliance obligations, transparency rules, tax filings, beneficial ownership disclosures, and, depending on the activity, additional regulatory registrations.

This does not mean Costa Rica is difficult. It means that companies must be properly structured and actively maintained.

That is where legal guidance becomes essential. Our role at Simple Legal Consulting (SLC) is to help you:

  • Choose the correct corporate structure

  • Understand your legal and tax obligations

  • Avoid unnecessary fines and penalties

  • Identify permits or registrations required for your activity

  • Keep the company in good standing

  • Create a structure that can actually operate in practice

A company should not only exist on paper. It should be ready to function.

General Overview of Costa Rican Corporations

  • The two most common legal entities are:

    Sociedad Anónima (S.A.)

    A traditional corporate structure commonly used for investments, real estate ownership, operating businesses, and more complex governance models.

    A Sociedad Anónima generally requires a board structure, including president, secretary, treasurer, and fiscal.

    Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (S.R.L.)

    A more flexible and simplified structure, often used for closely held companies, family-owned businesses, consulting operations, investment vehicles, and smaller commercial structures.

    An S.R.L. can be managed with one or more managers and may be more practical for certain private-client structures.

    The right choice depends on ownership, control, liability exposure, banking needs, tax status, and commercial activity.

  • Company Name, Corporate Identity, and Brand Protection

    Costa Rica has moved toward a more simplified system of corporate identification. Legal entities are now primarily identified by their corporate ID number rather than relying on a unique corporate name as the central element of registration.

    This is important because a corporate name is not the same as brand protection.

    If you want to operate publicly under a specific commercial identity, brand, project name, or client-facing business name, that protection should be handled separately through:

    • Trademark registration

    • Trade name registration

    • Intellectual property protection before the appropriate registry

    This distinction matters.

    A corporation allows you to operate legally. A trademark protects how the market recognizes you.

    If your company will have a public-facing brand, we can help you assess whether intellectual property protection should be handled at the formation stage or later.

  • Ongoing Corporate Compliance in Costa Rica

    Every corporation must be actively maintained. The main recurring obligations include:

    1. Annual Beneficial Ownership Declaration

    Costa Rican companies must file an annual declaration disclosing their final beneficial owners through the transparency registry connected to the Central Bank system. This obligation is part of Costa Rica’s broader transparency and AML framework.

    This filing requires proper legal authority and a valid Costa Rican digital signature. If the shareholders, directors, or representatives are foreign and do not have the required local tools, the company may need a legal representative or special power of attorney to complete the filing.

    2. Annual Corporate Tax

    Companies in Costa Rica must pay an annual corporate tax simply by virtue of existing as legal entities.

    The amount varies depending on whether the company is active or inactive before the Tax Authority, but it is commonly within the approximate range of USD $200 to USD $400.

    Failure to pay may create restrictions, penalties, and operational obstacles.

    3. Inactive Company Filing

    Inactive companies must still comply with tax reporting obligations.

    Even if the company does not sell goods, provide services, invoice clients, or generate revenue, it may still be required to file an annual informative declaration regarding its assets, liabilities, and equity position.

    This is a common area of confusion for foreign owners: “inactive” does not mean “free from obligations.”

    4. Active Company Tax Filings

    If the company is registered as active before the Tax Authority, additional filings may apply, including:

    • Monthly VAT returns

    • Annual income tax return

    • Accounting records

    • Deductible expense control

    • Electronic invoicing obligations, where applicable

    Corporate income tax rates vary depending on gross income and applicable tax brackets. Larger companies may be subject to a 30% corporate income tax rate.

    5. Corporate Email and Registry Compliance

    Costa Rica has also moved toward a more digital corporate notification system. Companies must maintain proper registry information and comply with corporate notification requirements, including the official corporate email framework introduced through recent reforms.

    This reinforces a central point: corporate maintenance is now an ongoing obligation, not a one-time event.

  • Not every company requires the same permits.

    The required registrations depend on the company’s activity, industry, location, and whether it will operate publicly, receive clients, sell regulated products, provide financial services, or conduct activities subject to special oversight.

    Municipal Business License

    Most companies carrying out commercial activity in Costa Rica will need a municipal business license, commonly known as a patente municipal.

    This is not a special permit. It is a core operating requirement for businesses that conduct commercial activity from a specific location or within a municipality.

    The requirements may vary depending on:

    • Municipality

    • Type of activity

    • Zoning

    • Public access

    • Health or safety considerations

    • Signage or physical premises

    A company can be legally incorporated and still not be ready to operate commercially until the municipal license is obtained.

    SUGEF and Financial Activities

    Certain financial or quasi-financial activities may require registration, reporting, or analysis under Costa Rica’s financial and AML framework.

    SUGEF is the General Superintendence of Financial Entities. It forms part of Costa Rica’s financial supervision system and is responsible for oversight of regulated financial entities and certain AML-related registrations. Costa Rica’s financial system also includes other supervisory bodies such as SUGEVAL, SUGESE, and SUPEN, depending on the activity.

    Businesses involved in lending, credit facilitation, money transmission, exchange activity, payment-related services, fiduciary structures, or similar financial operations may require careful legal analysis before incorporation or before beginning operations.

    In some cases, registration before SUGEF does not mean the entity is a supervised bank or financial institution. It may instead mean the entity is registered for AML compliance purposes under Law No. 7786 and related regulations.

    This distinction is extremely important for client communication, banking, advertising, and risk management.

    MEIC and Activities Open to Consumers

    Certain consumer-facing activities may require additional review or authorization before the Ministry of Economy, Industry and Commerce, commonly known as MEIC.

    This is especially relevant for business models involving:

    • Timeshare contracts

    • Vacation plans

    • Certain prepaid consumer structures

    • Sales to the public under regulated consumer frameworks

    • Public-facing commercial programs that may require prior authorization

    Costa Rican regulations provide specific authorization rules for timeshare contracts, and MEIC has historically monitored unauthorized vacation plan or tourism-related offerings sold to consumers.

    If your business will offer services directly to consumers, especially through prepaid programs, memberships, vacation products, or similar structures, legal review should be completed before launching the model.

    Other Sector-Specific Requirements

    Depending on the activity, other authorities may become relevant, including:

    • Ministry of Health

    • ICT for tourism-related activity

    • Environmental authorities

    • Municipality

    • Tax Authority

    • Customs authorities

    • Regulatory bodies for professional or technical activities

    The key is not to assume that incorporation alone authorizes the business to operate.

    Incorporation creates the legal entity. Operating may require additional steps.

  • Costa Rican companies can often be incorporated with a relatively low initial capital. However, certain activities, permits, licenses, banking relationships, contracts, or regulated operations may require a stronger capital structure.

    Minimum capital may become relevant for:

    • Regulated activities

    • Licensing processes

    • Banking due diligence

    • Financial or lending-related structures

    • Public tenders

    • Commercial credibility

    • Investor or shareholder arrangements

    For that reason, capital should not be selected randomly.

    A company with insufficient or poorly designed capital may face problems when opening bank accounts, signing contracts, explaining its economic activity, or applying for permits.

    We help clients think through the structure from a legal and operational perspective.

  • How Corporations Act: Legal Representatives and Powers of Attorney

    A corporation is a legal person, but it cannot act by itself. It must act through human representatives.

    In Costa Rica, these representatives are commonly known as apoderados.

    There are two main types:

    General Power of Attorney

    A general legal representative may act broadly on behalf of the company, depending on the scope registered before the Public Registry.

    This power can be structured with:

    • Monetary limits

    • Specific exclusions

    • Joint signature requirements

    • Restrictions on debt, asset sales, mortgages, or contracts

    • Authority limited to public administration, banking, tax, or commercial matters

    Special Power of Attorney

    A special power is granted for a specific purpose, such as:

    • Opening a bank account

    • Filing beneficial ownership declarations

    • Handling municipal procedures

    • Signing a specific contract

    • Managing tax registration

    • Completing a specific administrative process

    Special powers are useful because they allow the company to delegate authority without giving broad control.

    Why This Matters

    Foreign shareholders often face practical barriers when operating a Costa Rican company from abroad.

    Common issues include:

    • No Costa Rican digital signature

    • No local presence

    • Banking delays

    • Inability to sign documents locally

    • Difficulty dealing with public institutions

    • Missed filing deadlines

    That is why we at Simple Legal Consulting offer legal representation and compliance support for clients who need a trusted local structure.

    A well-designed representative structure allows the company to operate while protecting the owner’s control.

  • Our Role: Formation, Protection, and Long-Term Support

    At Simple Legal Consulting, we do more than incorporate companies.

    We help clients create structures that are:

    • Legally valid

    • Properly documented

    • AML-compliant

    • Ready for banking

    • Aligned with tax obligations

    • Prepared for commercial activity

    • Protected from avoidable fines and penalties

    Our approach is simple: build correctly from the beginning, maintain properly over time, and avoid problems before they become expensive.

    We can assist with:

    • Company formation

    • Shareholder and governance structure

    • Powers of attorney

    • Legal representation

    • Annual compliance

    • Beneficial ownership filings

    • Corporate tax coordination

    • Municipal license strategy

    • SUGEF-related analysis

    • MEIC-related analysis

    • Banking support

    • IP and trademark coordination

  • Costa Rica operates under a territorial tax system, meaning that only income generated within the country is generally subject to taxation.

    For international clients, this creates a flexible framework where the effective tax outcome depends largely on how the structure is designed.

    In practice, corporate income tax can range from 0% to 30%, depending on the nature of the activity, where the income is generated, and whether any special regimes apply.

    Corporate Profits and Dividend Tax

    Companies are taxed on net profits (utilidades), not on gross revenue.

    If the company generates Costa Rican-source income, tax rates can reach up to 30%, depending on income levels.

    When profits are distributed, dividends are generally subject to a 15% withholding tax, creating a second layer of taxation at the shareholder level.

    When Tax Exposure May Be Reduced

    Under proper structuring, some companies may reduce or even eliminate income tax exposure, particularly when:

    • Income is generated outside Costa Rica

    • The activity is not considered locally performed

    • The structure aligns with the territorial tax framework

    Additionally, certain regimes may provide further benefits:

    • PyME (SME) certification, which may allow reduced rates or temporary exemptions for qualifying businesses

    • Free Trade Zone regime, which can provide 0% income tax for an initial period and reduced rates thereafter for approved international operations

    The Key Factor: Where the Activity Happens

    Costa Rican tax analysis ultimately focuses on where the economic activity is performed.

    Authorities may evaluate where decisions are made, where services are delivered, and where value is created.

    For international structures, this makes proper legal and operational alignment essential.

    Our Approach

    At Simple Legal Consulting, we design corporate structures that are:

    • Aligned with Costa Rica’s territorial tax system

    • Compliant with regulatory standards

    • Efficient from a tax and operational perspective

    We help you understand your exposure, evaluate available regimes, and structure your company correctly from the beginning.

FILL OUT THE FORM: Start Your Company Formation Process

The form below allows us to understand your intended structure and determine the best legal path for your Costa Rican corporation.

Once you submit the form, we will:

  • Verify that your activity falls within the scope of services we provide

  • Confirm that the structure aligns with our AML and due diligence standards

  • Review the proposed shareholders, directors, and representatives

  • Identify missing information, regulatory considerations, or potential risks

  • Determine whether additional permits, registrations, or authorizations may apply

  • Prepare a tailored legal offer for your incorporation process

If needed, we will contact you to refine specific elements before sending the final proposal.