The monthly budget breakdown for Puerto Viejo Costa Rica is the spreadsheet that turns the general cost-of-living conversation into a concrete plan. Three complete scenarios below — built from real current market data, not aspirational estimates — covering every line item from rent to the occasional beer. Read through all three even if your target is the comfortable level: understanding the budget scenario shows you where you can cut if needed, and understanding the well-off scenario shows you what premium life here actually costs. 💰
How This Was Built — Methodology Note
These budgets are based on current 2026 market prices in Puerto Viejo for a single person. They assume a furnished rental (the standard for nomads and expats), a bicycle as primary transport, cooking most meals at home supplemented by local sodas, and a social life that includes activities and occasional dining out. Healthcare is estimated for someone without pre-existing conditions using a mix of CAJA (if enrolled) and occasional private clinic visits. These are averages — your actual numbers will vary based on specific rental, lifestyle choices, and how efficiently you navigate the local market.
Budget Level — $1,200/Month
| Category | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (studio) | $580 | Basic furnished studio, decent WiFi, no A/C |
| Groceries | $200 | Market-focused, cooking all meals at home |
| Eating out | $60 | Local sodas 2–3x/week only |
| Transport | $25 | Bicycle only, occasional taxi-bike |
| Utilities | $70 | Internet + water + electricity, no A/C |
| Phone/Data | $15 | Local SIM data plan |
| Healthcare | $40 | Basic CAJA contribution or minor clinic visits |
| Activities/Social | $80 | One or two activities/month, modest social |
| Buffer/Misc | $130 | Unexpected costs, small purchases |
| Total | $1,200 |
This works but leaves little room. One unexpected expense — a medical visit, a bike repair, a bus trip to San José — eats the buffer. It is sustainable for someone who is genuinely frugal and comfortable with minimal social spending. Not recommended as a permanent budget without income room to grow.
Comfortable Level — $2,000/Month
| Category | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (1-bed) | $880 | Good furnished 1-bed in Cocles, solid WiFi |
| Groceries | $280 | Market + supermarket, cooking most meals |
| Eating out | $180 | Sodas + mid-range restaurants, 4–5x/week |
| Transport | $60 | Bike + taxi-bikes + occasional bus to Limón |
| Utilities | $110 | Internet + water + electricity, some A/C |
| Phone/Data | $20 | SIM + backup data plan |
| Healthcare | $80 | CAJA + private clinic access |
| Activities/Social | $200 | Tours, nightlife, beach activities, social |
| Travel/Day Trips | $80 | Occasional Bocas trip or Limón day out |
| Buffer/Savings | $110 | Cushion plus small monthly saving |
| Total | $2,000 |
This is genuinely comfortable. A nice apartment, good food, a real social life, activities, occasional trips — everything a person needs for a life that feels full rather than managed. The vast majority of long-term nomads and expats in Puerto Viejo operate somewhere in this range. 🌴
Well-Off Level — $3,000/Month
| Category | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (premium) | $1,500 | Nice house, garden, good location, full A/C |
| Groceries | $350 | Quality ingredients, some imported items |
| Eating out | $350 | Mix of sodas and nicer restaurants freely |
| Transport | $150 | Taxi-bikes + occasional car rental |
| Utilities | $180 | Full A/C usage, all utilities |
| Phone/Data | $25 | Full setup |
| Healthcare | $120 | Private insurance or regular private clinic |
| Activities/Social | $350 | Frequent activities, good nights out |
| Travel | $150 | Regular day trips, overnight Bocas |
| Savings/Buffer | $125 | Building a cushion |
| Total | $3,000 |
What Surprises People
The A/C electricity bill. On the Caribbean coast — humid, warm year-round — a unit running 8+ hours daily adds $80–$150/month to electricity that people forget to include when planning. Choose a property with good natural ventilation and you can avoid this entirely. Second surprise: imported goods. The olive oil, wine, specific foods from home — all cost 50–150% more than in your home country. Adjusting your shopping to local products eliminates this. Third: the cost of having a vehicle. If your location requires a car, budget $400–$600/month more for vehicle operation or car rental. 💡
Budget for Two
A couple in a one-bedroom apartment lives comfortably at the $2,500–$3,200/month level. The per-person saving comes primarily from shared rent — a couple in a $950/month one-bedroom pays $475/person in rent versus $880 for a solo person in the same apartment. Food scales up moderately for two rather than doubling. For the full comparison with other expenses, see the 💰 cost of living hub.
If you're imagining yourself here already, you're not alone. Dive into our Ultimate Guide to Puerto Viejo Costa Rica to see what it's really like to spend more time on the Caribbean coast.