Remodeling in Panama — Part 4 of 9

What You Must Know
Before You Buy to Remodel

The legal checklist, the physical inspection list, the budget reality check, and the questions that nobody puts on a listing — but that change everything about what you’re actually buying.

BK
Brian & Kent  ·  GayExpatsPanama.com  ·  April 2026 Research Trip

We’re not there yet. We haven’t bought a property in Panama — we’re still in the research phase, and this series has been the written record of that research in real time. But between Parts 1, 2, and 3, we’ve covered enough ground to know what questions we need answered before we make an offer on anything. This final article is the checklist we’re taking into our property search. It’s organized into four layers: legal due diligence, physical inspection, renovation-specific assessment, and the numbers you need to have before you negotiate price.

We’ve verified what’s here from multiple sources — Panamanian attorneys, government tax databases, expat accounts of transactions, and the building materials research from earlier in this series. Where something is still uncertain, we say so. This is not a substitute for your own attorney. It’s the preparation that makes that attorney conversation more productive.

Non-Negotiable: You Need a Panamanian Attorney

Panama requires a licensed attorney for all property transactions. The notary who certifies the deed does not represent your interests — they certify the transaction. Your attorney runs title searches, reviews contracts, verifies liens and tax status, and registers your deed. Legal fees run roughly 1%–1.5% of purchase price. This is not optional and not a place to economize. Get referrals from other expats who have completed purchases, not from the real estate agent selling you the property.

The Buying & Remodeling a Home in Panama Series

If you’re thinking about buying an older home in Panama and remodeling it, this series walks through the practical questions we’ve been exploring along the way. Each article focuses on one part of the process, from understanding local construction methods to hiring contractors, paying safely, and learning the Spanish terms you’ll hear during a renovation.

  1. Panama Construction 101
  2. Wires & Pipes: The Concrete Problem
  3. Panama Construction Materials
  4. What You Must Know Before Buying You are here
  5. Who’s Licensed?
  6. Finding Contractors: Tips
  7. Paying Contractors in Panama: Tips
  8. Panama Construction Spanish
  9. The Attorney Question: When You Need One, When AI Helps, and What It Costs

Layer One: Legal Due Diligence

These are the checks your attorney performs — but you need to understand what they are and why they matter, so you can confirm they’re actually happening and ask intelligent questions when something comes back unexpected.

Legal Checks — Before Any Deposit Changes Hands

Title verification in the Public Registry (Registro Público) Confirms the seller is the legal owner, the property is correctly registered, and no one else has a claim. Panama’s Public Registry is searchable online — a major asset compared to many Latin American countries. Your attorney gets a certified search (certificación) dated within 30 days of closing.
Lien and encumbrance search (gravámenes) Confirms no mortgages, liens, or legal encumbrances on the property. Unpaid debts can follow the property to the new owner. This is part of the Public Registry search but should be explicitly confirmed as a separate line item in your attorney’s scope of work.
Titled property confirmation — not Right of Possession (ROP) Titled property is registered in the Public Registry and carries full legal protection. ROP property is not registered, cannot be mortgaged, carries overlapping claim risk, and is harder to resell. For a renovation investment, only titled property is appropriate. Ask this question at the very first conversation, before you visit.
Property tax status (paz y salvo) A “paz y salvo” (good standing certificate) from the DGI confirms all property taxes are current. Unpaid property taxes attach to the property and become the buyer’s responsibility at transfer. Your attorney collects this from the seller before closing. Also ask about any HOA fees if buying a condo or gated community — same logic applies.
Utility bills in good standing Verify that electricity (ENSA/Elektra Noreste), water (IDAAN), and any other utility accounts are current. Unpaid utility balances don’t transfer to the new owner the way tax liens do — but outstanding balances can complicate service activation and are a signal of a financially distressed sale.
Cadastral map verification (ANATI) Cross-check the property’s physical boundaries against the cadastral records at ANATI (Panama’s land authority). Boundary disputes are not common but they exist, particularly in older properties or those near natural features like streams. If the property hasn’t been surveyed in the last 10 years, a resurvey is worth the cost.
Zoning compliance and building permits If the property has been renovated, extended, or modified, ask whether those changes were permitted. Unpermitted construction is common in Panama and creates complications at resale and with any future permitted renovation work you plan to do. An architect’s permit check is straightforward — make it part of your pre-offer due diligence.
Three-day cooling-off period after signing a promesa Panama law gives buyers a three-day right to cancel after signing a Promise to Purchase (promesa de compraventa) without penalty. Know this before you sign anything. The promesa is the document that locks in price and terms and is accompanied by a 10% deposit — typically non-refundable unless the seller breaches or something material surfaces in due diligence.

The Same-Property, Different-Price Problem

Panama has no true MLS system. The same property is often listed by multiple agents at different prices simultaneously. When a seller tells all agents they’ll pay a commission to whoever brings a buyer, the incentive to provide you with objective advice evaporates. Verify what you’re paying is a reasonable market price independently — talk to expats who have recently bought in the same area, check listings yourself, and do not rely solely on your agent’s assessment of value.

Layer Two: Physical Inspection

Home inspections are not standard practice in Panama the way they are in the United States, but they are available and they are worth every dollar. Professional inspection fees in Panama run approximately $100–$500 depending on property size — substantially less than U.S. prices for equivalent work. Get references from other expats who’ve used the inspector, not from the real estate agent.

Physical Inspection — What to Look For, What to Ask

Knock on every interior wall and note the sound A dead thud is solid concrete block. A hollow knock is Plycem over studs or drywall. Something in between may be M2/Covintec. Knowing which you’re dealing with is the single most important renovation variable — it changes labor costs, timeline, and what’s possible without structural work. (See Parts 1 and 3 of this series.)
Electrical panel — amperage, condition, and age Open the panel box. Look for the amperage rating — 100 amp service is marginal for modern use; 200 amp is the current standard. Check for obvious signs of amateur work: mixed wire gauges, double-tapped breakers, any evidence of the panel having been modified outside a licensed contractor’s hands. Ask the age of the panel and the wiring.
Test every outlet for grounding and polarity Bring a $10 outlet tester. Ungrounded outlets and reversed polarity are common in older Panamanian construction and represent both a safety issue and a rewiring cost. If more than a handful fail, budget for significant electrical work regardless of what the listing description says.
Roof condition — panels, fasteners, ridge cap, carriolas On a zinc roof: inspect the fasteners (corroded or missing fasteners are the primary failure mode, not the panels themselves), the ridge cap flashing, and any penetrations. If access is possible, check the carriola condition — wood purlins in older construction can be compromised by moisture or termites even when the exterior panels look fine. Look for water staining on any ceiling or wall surfaces below the roof line.
Drop ceiling inspection — look inside the cavity Lift tiles or find the access panel. A clean ceiling cavity with organized conduit runs and PEX supply lines is a good sign. A ceiling cavity full of jury-rigged old wiring, abandoned pipes, and debris tells you a story the seller hasn’t volunteered. No access panel at all is a flag — plan for one.
Water supply: identify material and test pressure Ask what the supply lines are made of — PEX, copper, or galvanized steel. Turn on multiple fixtures simultaneously and check for pressure drop. Galvanized steel is the most problematic finding: it corrodes from the inside out over time, restricts flow, and should be flagged for replacement budgeting.
Hot water system — type and coverage Run hot water at every fixture. Identify whether it’s individual electric shower heads (common in older/standard construction), a central tankless unit, or a storage tank. Electric shower heads typically have poor flow pressure at anything above lukewarm — if hot water quality matters to you, verify before you buy, not after.
Drainage — flush every toilet, run every drain, check for slow clearing Slow drains in a concrete slab home can indicate partial blockages in the under-slab drain system — a much more expensive problem to address than a simple drain snake fix. Gurgling sounds when flushing a toilet suggest venting issues. Either condition warrants investigation before closing.
Moisture and mold — ceiling stains, efflorescence on walls, musty smell Panama’s humidity is relentless. White chalky deposits on concrete walls (efflorescence) indicate moisture moving through the block from outside. Ceiling stains can be old or active — ask when it last rained and whether the stain appeared after. A persistent musty smell in a concrete home, where mold-on-drywall isn’t the culprit, often points to moisture infiltration through the slab or walls.
Crack assessment — structural vs. cosmetic Hairline cracks in repello plaster are extremely common and mostly cosmetic — repello cracks as it cures and with temperature cycling. Wide cracks (more than 3mm), cracks that run diagonally from window and door corners, or cracks that have displaced the wall surface are structural signals requiring engineering assessment. Don’t let a seller wave off diagonal cracking as “just settling.”

Bring Your Own Outlet Tester and a Flashlight

A $10 three-light outlet tester from Do-It or any hardware store tells you grounded vs. ungrounded, correct vs. reversed polarity, and open ground — in about two seconds per outlet. Walk every outlet in a property before you make an offer. A flashlight helps in ceiling cavities, under sinks, and inside panel boxes where the lighting is never adequate. Neither of these requires a contractor. Both give you real information.

Layer Three: Renovation-Specific Assessment

This is the layer that’s specific to buyers who plan to renovate — the questions that don’t appear on a standard home inspection report but that change your budget and timeline significantly.

Renovation Readiness — Ask These Before You Price the Work

Which walls are structural and which are partitions? In a block-wall home, assume structural until proven otherwise by a local engineer. In a Plycem or M2 property, partition walls are more clearly defined by framing. If your renovation vision involves any wall removal or opening, get this confirmed by a local structural engineer before you commit to price — it will either cost you nothing extra or save you a very expensive surprise.
Where are the bathroom drains relative to your renovation plan? If you want to move a toilet, add a bathroom, or relocate a shower, the drain location in the concrete slab is the governing constraint. Ask where the drain penetrations are before you sketch a floor plan. Any renovation that requires new or relocated drain penetrations through the slab means jackhammer, rerouting, repour, and retiling — a meaningful budget addition. (Part 2 covers this in detail.)
Is there a drop ceiling, and what’s in it? A genuine service cavity above the drop ceiling is one of a concrete-construction home’s biggest renovation assets. It allows electrical rerouting and some plumbing changes without wall chasing. If there’s no drop ceiling and you’re planning significant electrical work, add wall chasing and replastering labor to your budget.
What is the electrical panel amperage and location? A 100-amp panel is the minimum for a comfortable renovation; 200 amp is better. Confirm the panel location relative to where you want to add circuits — a panel on one end of a building requiring new runs to the opposite end increases labor costs. If the panel itself needs upgrading, budget that separately from the circuit work.
Has any renovation work been done, and was it permitted? Ask directly whether any construction or renovation work has been done since the property was built. Then ask whether it was permitted. Unpermitted work is common and not automatically disqualifying — but it affects your ability to get permits for future work and can complicate resale. Know what you’re inheriting.
What are contractor labor rates for this specific neighborhood? Labor rates in Panama City are higher than in interior provinces. Rates in expat-heavy neighborhoods (El Cangrejo, Bella Vista, Costa del Este) for English-comfortable contractors who work to North American finish standards are higher still. Get three quotes from contractors with verifiable expat renovation references before you finalize a renovation budget. Don’t use a budget you built from older expat forum posts without verifying it against current local quotes.

Kent’s Renovation Budget Reality Check

The mistake I keep seeing in expat forums is people applying U.S. renovation logic to Panamanian properties. They see lower material prices at Hopsa and Do-It, they hear that day labor runs $20–$35, and they divide and multiply their way to a renovation budget that has almost no relationship to what the work will actually cost.

The number they’re not accounting for is the trade multiplier. A U.S. renovation that involves one contractor — say, an electrician — often involves three in Panama: the licensed electrician, a wall chaser to cut the chase, and a repellador to close and finish the wall. Each of those is a separate quote, a separate scheduling coordination, and a separate quality control problem. The labor rate per day may be lower. The number of labor days to accomplish the equivalent scope is higher. Get scope-based quotes from actual local contractors, not day-rate math from a forum post.

Layer Four: The Numbers — Taxes, Costs & Budget

Panama’s tax structure for property buyers is genuinely favorable compared to the United States. Understanding it before you negotiate means you can make better decisions about offer price, holding structure, and renovation spend relative to registered value.

Property taxes after purchase.

Panama Annual Property Tax — Primary Residence (Law 66, 2019)

First $120,000 of registered value Exempt — $0
$120,001 – $700,000 0.5% per year
Above $700,000 0.7% per year
Example: $250,000 primary residence ~$650/year in property tax
Primary residence exemption requires Declaration filed at DGI — not automatic
Visa-linked purchase (e.g. Qualified Investor) Visa requirements govern title structure — get attorney guidance before structuring ownership

The primary residence exemption is not automatic. You must file a declaration at Panama’s DGI (Dirección General de Ingresos) after registering as the new owner. Your attorney should walk you through this — flag it explicitly in your initial meeting so it doesn’t get missed. The exemption applies to the first $120,000 of registered value, which for most expat-priced properties means a very low annual tax bill.

For Brian and Kent: Our Specific Ownership Situation

Our situation has a wrinkle that makes title structure particularly important. Kent is applying for the Qualified Investor visa, which requires purchasing a property worth at least $300,000 — and Kent must be the sole named owner on that property to satisfy the visa requirement. If the purchase price is higher than $300,000, Brian can be added to the title for the amount above that threshold. This means we cannot simply split ownership the way many couples do. The property structure has to satisfy the visa requirement first, and the tax treatment and inheritance planning get built around that constraint — not the other way around. This is exactly the kind of situation where getting in front of Carolina Tejada Vaprio at Morgan & Morgan before we make any offer is non-negotiable.

Closing costs — what you actually pay.

Buyer Closing Costs in Panama — Confirmed 2025–2026

Attorney legal fees ~1%–1.5% of purchase price
Notary fees ~0.1%–0.25% of purchase price
Public Registry recording fees ~0.2%–0.3% of purchase price
Title search, certificates, due diligence Included in legal fees or itemized separately
Physical home inspection ~$100–$500 (buyer’s cost — do it)
Total buyer closing costs (cash purchase) ~2%–4.5% of purchase price
Transfer tax — who pays? 2% — standard practice is seller pays, negotiable
Initial deposit (promesa) ~10% of purchase price, typically non-refundable

The Registered Value Question

In Panama, the property’s registered value (valor catastral) is the declared price in the deed — and it’s the basis for future property tax calculations. Panama has no independent assessors. This creates a temptation to declare a lower price than you actually paid, which lowers the tax bill. We are not recommending this. We are flagging that you will encounter it, that it creates complications at resale (capital gains are calculated on the difference between registered purchase and registered sale price), and that you should discuss the implications with your attorney before structuring your closing. Panama’s DGI tracks these numbers.

The renovation budget: a framework.

We’re not going to give you a renovation cost per square foot, because we don’t have one from verified Panama City sources in 2025–2026. What we have is a framework for how to build a realistic number before you go into negotiation.

Renovation Category What Makes It More Expensive in Panama Status
Interior wall removal Structural engineer assessment + masonry demolition + concrete debris removal + repello repair on all adjacent surfaces Significantly more than U.S. equivalent
New electrical circuit Wall chasing + licensed electrician + repellador (separate trade) — three contractors for one circuit More than U.S. equivalent on scope basis
Bathroom relocation Slab break + drain rerouting + slab repour + tile removal and reinstallation — 4–5 trades Substantially more than U.S. equivalent
Bathroom upgrade (same location) Fixture swaps, tile work — manageable; no slab work if drains stay put Roughly comparable to U.S. equivalent
Kitchen renovation Cabinetry, countertops, tile — similar to U.S.; electrical upgrades may require wall chasing Material costs lower; electrical labor potentially higher
Full repaint Painting over repello requires the right primer; any cracks need filling first Broadly comparable
Tile floor replacement Porcelain at ~$10.99/m² at Hopsa — materials significantly cheaper than U.S.; tile labor comparable Material cost advantage is real
Zinc roof replacement Zinc material costs fell ~21.6% YoY (2024); labor and carriola replacement comparable Material cost advantage; get current Hopsa quote

“Budget for the scope you want. Then add 30% for the trades you didn’t know you’d need.”

The 30% contingency is not a cliché in this context — it reflects the structural reality of multi-trade work in concrete construction. Every renovation project we’ve read from expats who’ve been through it in Panama describes a moment where a wall got opened and something unexpected was found: wiring that wasn’t where the plan said, a pipe that crossed the electrical run, a block that was hollow where it should have been filled. Budget the contingency as a line item, not as a mental safety net you hope not to use.

The Question That Cuts Through Everything

There’s one question we’ve started asking ourselves about every property we look at that synthesizes everything in this series. It’s not on any checklist. It’s not a legal item or a technical inspection point. It’s this:

If everything we discovered during inspection is exactly what we found — and nothing better — would we still buy this property at this price, knowing what the renovation will actually require?

That question kills a lot of excitement. It’s supposed to. The excitement comes from imagining the finished space. The question forces you to price the path from here to there. In Panama, that path goes through concrete, through a wall chaser, through a team of tradespeople whose work you’ll need to coordinate in a language you may not speak fluently, and through a permitting system whose enforcement is inconsistent enough to be genuinely unpredictable.

None of that means don’t buy. It means buy with your eyes open and your budget honest.

What We’re Doing With This Research

We’re taking this checklist into our property search later in 2026. We’ll report back with the actual questions we asked, the actual answers we got, and what surprised us — because something always does. If you’re going through the same process, the GayExpatsPanama.com email address is he***@*************ma.com and we read everything.

The Master Pre-Purchase Checklist

Everything above, consolidated into a single reference you can print or screenshot before a property viewing.

Legal — Confirm With Your Attorney

Titled property confirmed — not ROP
Public Registry title search — seller confirmed as legal owner
Encumbrance search — no liens, mortgages, or claims
Tax paz y salvo — property taxes current at DGI
Utility accounts — electricity and water current
ANATI cadastral check — boundaries verified
Permit history — prior renovation work permitted or documented
Title structure decided — personal name, corporation, or foundation

Physical — Do This Yourself Before Offering

Knock every interior wall — identify block vs. Plycem vs. M2
Test every outlet — grounded, correct polarity (bring tester)
Open the electrical panel — amperage, condition, obvious issues
Inspect the roof — fasteners, ridge cap, under-surface if accessible
Look inside the drop ceiling cavity — organized or chaos?
Run hot water at every fixture — identify system type, check pressure
Flush every toilet, run every drain — slow clearing, gurgling sounds
Check walls for efflorescence and stains — moisture indicators
Assess cracks — hairline cosmetic vs. diagonal structural
Professional inspector engaged — expat-referred, not agent-referred

Renovation — Answer Before You Negotiate Price

Wall type confirmed for every wall in your renovation plan
Structural walls identified by a local engineer, not by eye
Drain penetration locations mapped relative to your floor plan
Drop ceiling cavity access confirmed and inspected
Three contractor quotes received from expat-referred tradespeople
30% contingency added to total renovation budget as a line item
Renovation budget vs. purchase price logic checked — does the math work?

Numbers — Confirmed Before Closing

Primary residence declaration filed at DGI post-closing — property tax exemption on first $120K
Annual property tax calculated at 0.5% on value above $120K (primary residence)
Closing cost budget set at 2%–4.5% of purchase price
Registered value discussed with attorney — implications for future capital gains
Title structure finalized with attorney — personal, corporate, or foundation

That’s the series. Four articles, one framework, everything we know as of April 2026 while we’re still in the research phase ourselves. We’ll update this as we get further along — and when we buy something, we’ll write about that too. The mistakes and all.

BK
Brian and Kent are a gay couple based in St. Petersburg, Florida, currently researching a move to Panama in real time. Brian is applying for the Pensionado visa. Kent is pursuing the Qualified Investor visa, which requires a minimum $300,000 property purchase in his name. GayExpatsPanama.com is the honest record of what they find — including what didn’t work, what surprised them, and what they’d do differently. Contact: he***@*************ma.com
Comment Policy We welcome questions, experiences, and honest observations from readers researching Panama. Comments are moderated — we review and respond within 24–48 hours. Off-topic comments and anything disrespectful to our community will not be approved.

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