Hi,
I am thinking of retiring to Costa Rica eventually. I am leaning towards Guanacaste since it is the warmest and driest part of the country. My dream is to finally have a horse when I do if I can afford it and logistically it makes sense. I won’t have a ton of money. I am wondering if it is expensive to keep a horse there? Are vet bills high? Can one find 1-2 acres of reasonably priced land and like a two bedroom house near any of the places I mentioned? Like within a half hour from the cities or towns? Is it hard to find relatively cheap trustworthy labor to help care for a horse especially when I am away? and hay to buy? What kind of costs can I expect? Are there local people who are knowledgeable and offer services like blacksmiths and horse vets etc? Or if too hard to keep a horse myself is there horse boarding nearby those places and how expensive is that likely to be? I would buy the horse in Costa Rica? Any info on that? Any info would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks a lot!
Finding a house with 1-2 acres in Guanacaste near a town shouldn't be hard, nor would it be in any part of Costa Rica (other than San Jose where I doubt one could afford 1-2 acres, or even find them, LOL.)
"Reasonably priced" is relative. Best thing to do is figure out approximately where you would land, here, and look up prices on the internet.
Labor is cheap here, usually $3-5/hour depending on who you get and how much you want to pay. Many of us gringos pay more, by choice, when a worker is responsible, reliable, loyal, trustworthy, etc. But $3-5 for most workers is a fair estimate. Certainly you can find a local who will care for your horse when you're gone although if you live far from him (i.e. he's not a neighbor) he may ask for gas money. Gas is around $5/gallon here. (Can't remember exactly how much but just know it's way more than in the U.S. as are cars. Figure almost DOUBLE the price to buy a car or truck. Yes, you'd buy a horse in Costa Rica. Where/ how much, I have no idea. I'm sure in most areas you could fine one though.
"Horse boarding" might be just a neighbor with some land who has a horse or two? In that case, yes.
Anyway, the most important point to all this is:
Figure out 2-3 areas you are interested in, get to know prices in the area, and by all means RENT there for awhile before deciding to buy or move here permanently.
One other point is that it's not substantially cheaper to live here than it is to live in most areas of the USA. Food evens out to about the same for me, owning a car is a bit more expensive here (gas is way higher but mechanics are way cheaper), but the cost of the car is about double. Especially if you rent and don't buy your home, it's about the same cost here as in the USA, for cost of living, as rents are usually pretty high unless you just luck out or rent a room or something like that. You can also see examples of rent in most areas on the internet and some realty web sites also rent houses.