
Panama Taxation: Complete Guide for Residents and Non-Residents
Panama's territorial tax system explained: no tax on foreign income, 20-year exemptions, capital gains, VAT. Complete guide to optimize your investment.

Understand Panama's territorial taxation, taxes on rental income and capital gains, tax residency, and how to legally optimize your real estate investments.
Panama is one of the rare countries worldwide to operate under a territorial taxation system. This means:
Only income generated in Panama is taxable in Panama. Income generated abroad is not taxable.
Compared to other systems:
This difference is major for a European investor. It explains why Panama attracts thousands of international investors.

Income generated in Panama? → YES → Taxable in Panama
→ NO → NOT taxable in Panama
| Situation | Panama Tax Impact |
|---|---|
| Rental income from Panama property | ✓ Taxable |
| Capital gains: sale of Panama property | ✓ Taxable (certain cases) |
| Dividends from Panama company | ✓ Taxable |
| Salary earned in Panama | ✓ Taxable |
| Interest from Panama bank account | ✓ Taxable |
| Rental income from France property | ✗ NOT taxable in Panama |
| Dividends from ETF shares (France) | ✗ NOT taxable in Panama |
| Salary earned in France | ✗ NOT taxable in Panama |
| Crypto gains abroad | ✗ NOT taxable in Panama |
Many mistakenly think Panama = zero tax. This is false.
Panama has taxes, but they apply only to local income. Rates are moderate (20-30% depending on income), but not zero.

Tax Rate:
International Comparison:
| Country | Marginal Tax | Charges | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Panama | 25% | 0% | 25% |
| France | 45% | 17.2% | 62.2% |
| Belgium | 45% | 13.07% | 58.07% |
| Switzerland (Geneva) | 22% | 5.15% | 27.15% |
| Spain | 45% | 6.35% | 51.35% |
| Portugal (NHR) | 10% | 0% | 10% |
Observation: Panama is competitive, even compared to Switzerland or Portugal.
Building in Panama generating $20,000/month in gross rentals
Annual gross income: $240,000
Allowed deductions (reduce taxable base):
Net taxable income: $240,000 - $31,600 = $208,400
Income tax (25%): $52,100
Net final: $208,400 - $52,100 = $156,300/year
Net return: $156,300 / invested capital
(Note: this example ignores investor's home country taxation)
Two distinct cases:
Recommendation: Panama encourages long-term holding. If possible, keep the building minimum 5 years before sale to eliminate capital gains tax.
Tax residency is the country where you're considered resident for tax purposes. It determines whether you're taxable on worldwide income (residency = worldwide taxation) or just local income (residency elsewhere = local income only).
In Panama, you're considered a Panama tax resident if:
Important: simply investing in Panama does NOT make you a Panama tax resident. You must:
Your tax residency: France
Your tax situation:
Net Calculation:
Result: ~57% net after all taxes.
Your tax residency: Panama
Your tax situation:
BUT: you must establish your genuine residence in Panama, not just have a bank account.
Net Calculation:
Result: ~75% net after Panama tax.
Gain vs. Scenario A: 75% - 57% = +18% difference = ~$28,000 on $156,300. That's huge!
Your tax residency: Belgium
Your tax situation:
Net Calculation:
Result: ~57% net.
(Note: Belgium and Panama have a double taxation treaty facilitating the credit)
Panama offers a special visa called Friendly Nations Visa (or "visa of friendly nations") providing:
Eligible Countries: all EU countries + USA, Canada, UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, Singapore, etc. (42 countries total).
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Required Income | $1,000/month (retirement or passive income) |
| Bank Deposit | $5,000 (in Panama bank) |
| File Fees | ~$350 |
| Processing Timeline | 3-6 months |
| Validity | Permanent (then renewal every 5 years) |
| Residency Requirement | No minimum days/year required (but must be your residence) |
Having the Friendly Nations Visa isn't sufficient. To benefit from territorial taxation, you must:
Edge Case: if you spend 300 days/year in France and 65 days in Panama, you ARE a French tax resident, not Panama resident. French authorities will see your life center is in France.
| Point | Details |
|---|---|
| Treaty | Yes, signed 1982 |
| Real Estate Income | Taxable in country where located (Panama) |
| Capital Gains | Taxable in country of residence |
| 5-Year Exemption | Recognized by France (no French tax either) |
| Tax Credit | Yes, full credit for Panama tax paid |
| Residency: determined by criteria (life center, residence, time spent) |
Benefit: if you're Panama resident, treaty recognizes real estate income taxable in Panama ONLY (no double taxation). If you're France resident, income taxable in France (but tax credit for Panama tax).
Same logic as France-Panama. Bilateral treaty recognizes taxation in source country (Panama for real estate).
Switzerland has treaty with Panama. Swiss residents: taxable in Switzerland on worldwide income. Tax credit for Panama tax paid.
Situation:
Taxation:
Verdict: final return ~5%. Less attractive, but adds diversification to retirement portfolio.
Situation:
Taxation:
Verdict: final return ~6.75%. Very attractive. Compared to Profile 1: +€10.25k/year = 100% improvement.
Situation:
Taxation (Years 1-5 as France Resident):
Taxation (Years 6-7 as Panama Resident after Friendly Nations Visa):
Verdict: return years 1-5 as France resident = 4.4% (low), but return years 6+ as Panama resident = 6.75% (excellent). Long-term vision.
If tax paid in Panama (25%) < theoretical French tax (45%), you can only credit the 25%.
If you invest in SPV (club deal), distributions are treated as real estate income and taxable in Panama (~25%).
SPV pays Panama tax, you receive net. No "double taxation" at that level.
Property manager fees (10% of rentals) are deductible from Panama taxable base, reducing tax. This is included in the 8-11% net return calculations.
Beyond income tax, there is:
This is deductible from income tax base, so net effect is moderate.
Panama has unclear crypto framework. Key points:
Recommendation: crypto in Panama remains legally ambiguous. If you trade crypto, specialized accountant required.
Legal: Yes
Mechanics: obtain Friendly Nations Visa, establish residence, become Panama tax resident
Advantage: ~25% tax vs ~45% in France/Belgium
Condition: must genuinely live in Panama (not just virtual)
Legal: Yes
Mechanics: instead of buying building alone, invest in SPV with others
Advantage:
Legal: Yes
Mechanics: wait 5 years before selling building, capital gains exemption
Advantage: 0% tax on capital gains (vs 25% before 5 years)
Example: buy $1M, sell $1.4M after 7 years = gains $400k = TAX 0% = net $400k gains
Legal: Yes
Mechanics: short-term rental (Airbnb) to boost gross revenue, plus long-term for stability
Advantage: higher returns (10-12% vs 6-8% pure long-term)
Attention: more management work, higher vacancy risk
Legal: Yes
Mechanics: after 5 years, refinance building with local bank, recover capital, future distributions from net income
Advantage: withdraw capital after 5 years without selling (thus no capital gains tax 0% after 5 years), continue generating returns
Example: buy $1M, after 7 years value $1.4M, borrow $900k, distribute $900k to shareholders, continue rental for returns, eventual sale year 10
Reality: Panama = territorial system (25% on local income), not zero tax.
Risk: tax fraud. You remain taxable in your home country even if Panama resident.
Right: declare in France/Belgium (worldwide income), obtain Panama tax credit.
Reality: visa facilitates residency, but insufficient alone. You must genuinely live in Panama to be "tax resident".
Life Center Test: where do you spend most time? Where is your family? Where are your main activities?
Attention: certain income (dividends from Panama companies) may be subject to withholding tax (10-15%) before distribution. Check SPV contract.
Attention: taxation differs. Panama salaries: progressive 0-25%. Real estate income: flat 25%.
Attention: beyond income tax, ~1%/year in property taxes. This is in addition to 25%.
A: You're taxable at two levels:
But: you have tax credit. Panama tax (25%) reduces France tax. Net = 25% + (45% - 25%) = 45% total. It's as if you're directly taxed in France at 45%.
A: No, not simply. You must establish genuine residence in Panama (live there, have home, family).
If you stay in France and just get Panama visa, French authorities see you as France resident and tax normally.
A:
LATAM Finance prospectuses typically show "after Panama tax" returns (8-11%), not after France/Belgium tax.
You must then add your national tax (France/Belgium) to this base.
A: Yes, in Panama. Zero tax on gains if sale after 5 years.
But: if you remain France tax resident, France might tax these gains (French law). France-Panama treaty generally recognizes exemption, so no double taxation.
Consult lawyer to confirm your situation.
A: you must declare (SAT form, Panama tax administration). SPV also declares.
Responsibility of property manager and operator (LATAM Finance) to report gross income. You receive declaration.
Recommendation: don't hide income. Panama hardening FATCA/EOIR standards (international bank transparency).
A: Yes. Belgium has treaty with Panama (since 1984). Recognizes Panama tax paid and imputes it.
Process: declare in Belgium your income, calculate Belgium tax (45%), deduct Panama tax paid (25%), pay difference to Belgium.
Net: 45% - 25% = 20% additional to Belgium. Total 45% same as French income.
A: if you're American, FATCA taxes you worldwide everywhere. Panama taxes 25%, USA taxes too (with tax credit).
If you're not American, FATCA doesn't apply directly. But Panama has EOIR agreement (automatic information exchange) with 100+ countries, so Panama income reported to your home country.
Recommendation: declare in your home country, no surprises.
| Destination | Tax System | Real Estate Tax | Gains (5yrs) | Residence Visa |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panama | Territorial | 25% | 0% | Friendly Nations |
| Costa Rica | Worldwide | 15% | 0% | Pensioner (retiree) |
| Mexico | Worldwide | 25% | 25% | Temporal/Permanent |
| Colombia | Worldwide | 33% | 33% | V type (visitor) |
| Uruguay | Worldwide | 0% (special) | 0% | Permanent |
Overall Winner: Panama (25% + territorial system) or Costa Rica (15% + territorial + Pensioner visa).
Discover the real estate club deal opportunities currently available.
View opportunitiesPanama uses territorial system: only local income taxable in Panama (~25%).
For Europeans, it depends on your tax residency:
The difference is major: ~20 percentage points (45% vs 25%) = €28k/year on €150k income.
To optimize:
Don't neglect your home country:
Professional Advice Essential:
Panama remains fiscally attractive, but it's not a "zero tax" miracle. Understanding the territorial system and your personal situation is key.
Ready to explore investment opportunities? Start with latam.finance and consult an accountant to validate your situation.

Author
Fondateur — LATAM Finance & BR Group
Entrepreneur et investisseur immobilier, fondateur de BR Group et LATAM Finance. Plus de 20 ans d'expérience en immobilier international.
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