- Written by Christopher Howard
About two hours from Liberia airport on excellent roads, the trip to Sámara is smooth and particularly beautiful as it winds through little farming villages and past stunning mountain and valley landscapes. Life is even sleepier in this part of Guanacaste. The area has yet to become a focus for developers. So far, it attracts
- Written by Christopher Howard
The next cove north from Playas del Coco is Hermosa. The hillside that slopes down to the little bay and its long beach offers plenty of opportunity for great views, and both condo and single family home construction. Like Coco, the beach isn’t the prettiest you’ll find, but the great views make real estate in
- Written by Christopher Howard
Coco is not the most attractive beach town with a rather scruffy appearance. Les Nunez, a real estate broker and co-owner of First Realty in Hermosa, sees it changing, recognizing it more as a “town in transition.” Either way, Coco has always been a popular vacation spot for Ticos and, more recently, U.S. retirees living
- Written by Christopher Howard
These small villages and towns are all located within a few kilometers of each other, about a 30-minute drive from Tamarindo, and an hour from Liberia. Each little town has a grocery store and a few other shops, but not much else. Flamingo is a hilly peninsula of beautiful million-dollar vacation homes nestled among trees
- Written by Christopher Howard
This long white beach to the south of Tamarindo has, until now, been a low-key backpacker and surfer destination with just a few small hotels, residences, and surf schools. Although located adjacent to bustling Tamarindo, the natural barrier of an estuary means it’s only accessible either by a 30-minute drive through Villa Real, Huacas and
- Written by Christopher Howard
Tamarindo, or Tamagringo as it is known among some expatriates, is the epicenter of northwest Guanacaste’s real estate boom. Most people seem to have a love-hate relationship with the town. A lack of planning and regulation and an easily corruptible former municipality have led to uncontrolled development that is now threatening the surrounding environment. The
- Written by Christopher Howard
The city of Heredia is Costa Rica’s third biggest city, capital of the eponymous province, and located between (and north of) San Josè and Alajuela. The towns around the city – including San Rafael, Santa Barbara, San Isidro and San Joaquín de Flores – have become popular places among both expatriates and upwardly-mobile Ticos looking