How would you like to retire in Costa Rica? The retirement Costa Rica offers right now is not organized but that is going to change very soon. Wouldn’t it be great to have a community retirement Costa Rica? A place where your friends live and organized around a central care facility for its residents. For Lou Aguilera, retirement Costa Rica has all the makings of a retirement destination: a comfortable climate, top-notch health services, close proximity to the United States and Canada, and a stable democracy.
While the country has been successful at marketing itself as an eco-friendly destination and a go-to place for medical tourism, retirement Costa Rica has not been marketed and persists as an untapped market.
"This represents a bigger potential for Costa Rica than recreational tourism represented 25 yea21rs ago," said Aguilera, who moved to Costa Rica in 2006 to begin work on an over-age 55 development in Guanacaste. "The graying of America is irreversible," and retirement in Costa Rica is a viable solution for population.
An estimated 7,918 Americans turn 60 years old daily, according to 2006 United States census statistics. They represent the age group with the greatest purchasing power and the group that spends the most on health care.
Recognizing the potential of this population for retirement Costa Rica, Aguilera connected with several government agencies to create a nationwide initiative designed to transform the country into a retiree haven. Last week, representatives from the Competition Ministry, along with the Foreign Trade Ministry, signed a declaration of intent to further explore opportunities to cater retirement Costa Rica style to the US market. Look out Florida, retirement Costa Rica has a profitable future.
"(Targeting retirees) is a new concept for Costa Rica," said Minister of Competition Jorge Woodbridge. "We have to learn how to position ourselves in the market."
Woodbridge, who proposed international marketing campaigns and streamlined processes for developers, discussed Lake Arenal, in the north central part of Costa Rica; Miramar, in the central Pacific province of Puntarenas; Cartago, east of San José; and Rincón de la Vieja, in the northern Pacific province of Guanacaste. These locations are among eight viewed as possible destinations for retirement Costa Rica communities, or ‘clusters.’ Plans for several senior living communities already have been drawn on paper, but the worldwide economic crisis and the shortage of capital have kept them from becoming a reality.