Panama · Step by Step
Key Facts
A dollarised economy. Panama uses the US dollar alongside the balboa, so dollar holders face no currency risk and there are no exchange controls.
A regional banking hub. Panama City hosts one of Latin America’s largest international banking centres, with many local and foreign banks.
Fixed deposits are popular. Term deposits (plazo fijo) are a common, conservative way to earn interest on idle cash.
A small local market exists. The Bolsa de Valores de Panamá lists local equities and bonds, alongside government and corporate debt.
An investor visa route. The Qualified Investor visa offers residency for a qualifying investment in real estate, a bank deposit or securities — confirm the current threshold with an attorney.
For people already holding US dollars, investing in Panama removes one big variable: with a dollarised economy and no exchange controls, there is no currency conversion risk on the way in or out. What you gain in stability you must balance against the size and depth of the local market, which is why diversification matters.
RTAsk Rio TimesHave a question about Brazil or Latin America? Get a straight answer from our reporting.Start asking →
What Dollarisation Means for Investors
Panama has used the US dollar as its circulating currency for more than a century, alongside the balboa, which is pegged one-to-one and exists mainly as coins. For an investor coming from the United States or holding dollars elsewhere, this is a major advantage: there is no exchange-rate gap between what you put in and what you take out.
Just as important, Panama has no exchange controls, so moving money in and out is straightforward through the banking system. This combination of a hard currency and free capital movement is a big part of why the country attracts international savers.
The flip side is that Panama cannot print its own money, so the economy lives or dies on real activity — the Canal, logistics, services and finance — rather than monetary stimulus. That discipline has historically supported low inflation and a stable price level for residents and savers alike.
The Banking Centre and Fixed Deposits
Panama City is home to one of the largest international banking centres in Latin America, with a long list of domestic and foreign-owned banks. This depth gives residents and investors a wide choice of institutions for everyday banking and for parking savings.
The most popular conservative instrument is the fixed-term deposit, or plazo fijo, where you commit funds for a set period in exchange for a stated interest rate. Rates depend on the bank, the term and prevailing conditions, so it pays to shop around and to ask about the rate environment when you deposit.
Opening accounts as a foreigner involves compliance checks and documentation, which has become more rigorous in recent years. Patience and complete paperwork go a long way.
Banks will typically ask for references, proof of the source of your funds and evidence of your activity, and a local introduction often smooths the process. Building a relationship with a single well-regarded institution is usually easier than chasing the highest advertised rate across many banks.
The Stock Exchange and Bonds
Panama has its own stock exchange, the Bolsa de Valores de Panamá, but it is small and far less liquid than major international markets. It lists a limited number of local equities along with a meaningful range of fixed-income securities.
In practice, much of the activity centres on bonds — both Panamanian government debt and corporate issues from established local companies. For income-focused investors, these can be an option, though liquidity and the narrow universe of names are real constraints.
Many expats keep the bulk of their portfolio in their home-country or global brokerage accounts and treat Panamanian securities as a smaller, targeted allocation rather than a core holding.
Real Estate as the Default Choice
By a wide margin, real estate is the most popular investment for foreigners in Panama. Titled property can be owned outright by non-nationals, the market is dollar-denominated, and rental demand in Panama City and the established expat zones supports a buy-to-let strategy.
Property also doubles as a lifestyle asset and, in qualifying cases, as a route to residency. That dual purpose — somewhere to live or holiday plus a hard asset — is a large part of its appeal.
As with any property market, success depends on location, due diligence and a clear-eyed view of rental yields and resale prospects, so the same care applies here as anywhere else.
Investors should also weigh the practical costs of ownership — condo fees, property tax, maintenance and management if you rent it out — against the headline yield. A property that looks attractive on paper can deliver a thinner real return once those running costs are counted.
The Qualified Investor Visa
For those willing to commit capital, the Qualified Investor visa links an investment directly to permanent residency. The programme accepts qualifying investments in several forms, typically real estate, a fixed bank deposit or securities.
The qualifying amount is set at a substantial threshold and the rules around eligible assets are specific, and both can change, so you should confirm the current figure and the accepted investment types with a Panamanian immigration attorney before planning around it.
Used well, the programme lets a single investment serve two goals at once: putting money to work and securing the right to live in Panama. Used carelessly, it can lock capital into an asset that does not suit you, so the investment decision should stand on its own merits.
Risk, Compliance and Getting Advice
No market is risk-free, and Panama’s smaller size means concentration risk is a genuine concern. Sensible investors diversify across asset types and across geographies rather than betting everything on a single local property or deposit.
Panama has also undertaken significant transparency and compliance reforms in recent years in response to international pressure, tightening banking due diligence and reporting. This is positive for the country’s long-term standing, but it means account opening and transactions require thorough documentation.
Everything here is general information rather than financial advice. Before committing capital, consult a licensed financial adviser and a Panamanian attorney, and confirm current rates, thresholds and rules for your specific situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there currency risk when investing in Panama?
For dollar holders, essentially no. Panama uses the US dollar alongside the balboa with no exchange controls, so there is no conversion risk on dollars going in or coming out.
Investors based in other currencies still carry exchange risk against the dollar.
What is a plazo fijo?
A plazo fijo is a fixed-term bank deposit: you lock funds for a set period in return for a stated interest rate. Rates vary by bank and term and move with conditions, so compare offers and ask about the current rate environment.
Can I buy local stocks and bonds?
Yes, through the Bolsa de Valores de Panamá, though it is small and less liquid than major markets, with more activity in bonds than equities. Many expats keep core holdings in international accounts and treat local securities as a smaller allocation.
How does the Qualified Investor visa work?
It grants residency in exchange for a qualifying investment in real estate, a fixed deposit or securities above a set threshold. Because the amount and eligible assets can change, confirm the current rules with a Panamanian immigration attorney.
Is Panama a safe place for my money?
It has a stable, dollarised economy and a large banking centre, and it has strengthened transparency and compliance in recent years. Still, diversify, do due diligence, and treat this as general information rather than financial advice by consulting a licensed adviser.
View original source — Rio Times ↗



