Costa Rica
Heredia
Central Valley living without San Jose's sprawl — cooler air and a strong commuter link to the capital
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$3,800–$6,000 / month
3-bed family home
~$1,400 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$36
Nanny
~$7 / hr
Heredia is a major Central Valley city north-east of San Jose — spring-like temperatures, real urban services, and lower rents than prime Escazú in many neighbourhoods. Many families live here while using bilingual schools in Heredia, Belén, or the western San Jose suburbs (sometimes with school runs). Trade-offs are traffic on the General Cañas corridor, Spanish-first bureaucracy, and the same DIMEX-driven onboarding as everywhere else in Costa Rica.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1Check your entry rules — citizens of the US, EU, UK, Canada, and Australia enter Costa Rica visa-free for up to 90 days; most Western passport holders do not need a visa in advance
- 2Remote workers earning $3,000/month or more: apply for Costa Rica's Digital Nomad Visa (Visa de Trabajo para Nomadas Digitales) at the Costa Rican Consulate before or shortly after arriving
- 3Start housing 4–6 weeks before arrival — compare Heredia centro versus Belén / San Francisco de Heredia for commute time to your chosen school
- 4Apply to bilingual schools early — options exist in Heredia and the western suburbs; confirm morning traffic before you sign a lease
- 5Arrange IPMI before arrival — routine care exists locally; complex cases still funnel to CIMA or Clínica Bíblica in San Jose
- 6Apply for your DIMEX (Documento de Identidad Migratoria para Extranjeros — Costa Rica's official foreign resident ID card) after your visa is approved — required for banking and CAJA enrolment
- 7Open a Costa Rican bank account after receiving your DIMEX — BAC Credomatic and Banco Nacional both serve Heredia with branch networks
- 8Book daycare or nanny interviews before peak school intake — Central Valley caregivers are shared across Heredia and Alajuela expat circles
- 9Plan for earthquake and heavy-rain protocols — the Central Valley shakes occasionally and flash flooding can affect low crossings after storms
Family fit
Great for
- Families who want Central Valley climate and services without paying Escazú premiums for every square metre
- Parents working in northern San Jose or Alajuela who can tolerate structured commutes when traffic is managed
- Those who prefer a more Costa Rican urban feel than gated beach resorts — walkable barrios and local markets still thrive here
- Families already considering bilingual schools in the broader metro — Heredia slots into the same ecosystem
Watch out for
- Rush-hour congestion on routes toward San Jose — school start times and office hours stack on the same roads
- Spanish-first paperwork — fewer English-speaking notaries and municipal windows than Escazú; hire bilingual help for property and immigration steps
- Noise in denser barrios — buses, motorcycles, and street life can be louder than suburban Escazú
- Air quality on still days — valley smog is not unique to Heredia but affects children with respiratory sensitivity
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestApr · 33.2°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · 17.3°Cmean daily low
- WettestOct · 301 mmmonth total
- DriestFeb · 22.1 mmmonth total
- Low
- 17.3°C
- Rain
- 37.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 17.5°C
- Rain
- 22.1 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 18.5°C
- Rain
- 29.1 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 19°C
- Rain
- 76.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
- Low
- 19.4°C
- Rain
- 220.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~18
- Low
- 19.6°C
- Rain
- 209.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~17
- Low
- 19.1°C
- Rain
- 184.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~15
- Low
- 19.1°C
- Rain
- 198.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~17
- Low
- 18.9°C
- Rain
- 255.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~21
- Low
- 19°C
- Rain
- 301 mm
- Wet days
- ~25
- Low
- 17.8°C
- Rain
- 187.5 mm
- Wet days
- ~16
- Low
- 17.4°C
- Rain
- 70.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~6
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 29.1°C | 17.3°C | 37.8 mm | 3 |
| Feb | 31°C | 17.5°C | 22.1 mm | 2 |
| Mar | 32.9°C | 18.5°C | 29.1 mm | 2 |
| Apr | 33.2°C | 19°C | 76.5 mm | 6 |
| May | 32.2°C | 19.4°C | 220.4 mm | 18 |
| Jun | 29.4°C | 19.6°C | 209.4 mm | 17 |
| Jul | 29.1°C | 19.1°C | 184.5 mm | 15 |
| Aug | 29.2°C | 19.1°C | 198.4 mm | 17 |
| Sep | 28.7°C | 18.9°C | 255.9 mm | 21 |
| Oct | 28.2°C | 19°C | 301 mm | 25 |
| Nov | 27.9°C | 17.8°C | 187.5 mm | 16 |
| Dec | 28.1°C | 17.4°C | 70.4 mm | 6 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Apr (mean daily high ~33°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~17°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Oct (~301 mm total); driest: Feb (~22 mm).
- Mean daily highs reach about 32°C or more in Mar, Apr, May — plan air-conditioning, shade, and limited midday outdoor time for babies and young children.
- Very wet months mean waterproofs, covered waiting at school pickup, and extra room to dry uniforms and shoes.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 10.002°, -84.117° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
Citizens of the US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia, and most other Western countries enter Costa Rica visa-free for 90 days. Costa Rica launched a Digital Nomad Visa in 2022 for remote workers earning $3,000/month or more. The Rentista and Pensionado programmes offer long-term residency for those with passive income.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
Tourist entry (visa-free, 90 days)
Citizens of the US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia, and most Western countries enter Costa Rica visa-free for 90 days. Good for a scouting trip or initial stay while applying for the Digital Nomad Visa.
Digital Nomad Visa (Visa de Trabajo para Nomadas Digitales)
Launched in 2022. For remote workers and freelancers earning $3,000/month or more from outside Costa Rica. Grants legal residence and allows the holder to open bank accounts and access services.
Tourist entry — what it covers
- No advance visa required for citizens of the US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and most other Western countries — enter on your passport for 90 days.
- You must show a return ticket or onward travel ticket on arrival at Costa Rican immigration.
- No right to formal employment with a Costa Rican employer on tourist entry — remote work for a non-Costa Rican employer is the accepted practice.
- Good use: scout Heredia centro, San Francisco de Heredia, and Belén for housing, test school-run times on the General Cañas, and line up your Digital Nomad Visa before tourist entry expires.
- Do not overstay the 90-day limit without a visa approved — Costa Rica enforces entry rules and overstays result in fines and future entry complications.
Costa Rica Digital Nomad Visa — who qualifies and how to apply
- Income requirement: minimum $3,000/month (or $4,000/month if bringing dependents) from remote employment or freelancing for non-Costa Rican clients — verified by 3 months of bank statements and an employer letter.
- Required documents: valid passport, proof of remote income (minimum $3,000/month), private health insurance valid in Costa Rica, criminal background check with Apostille, and proof of accommodation.
- Apply at a Costa Rican Consulate or directly at the DGME (Direccion General de Migracion y Extranjeria — Costa Rica's immigration authority) in San Jose — processing typically takes 1–3 months.
- Once approved, apply for your DIMEX (Documento de Identidad Migratoria para Extranjeros — Costa Rica's official foreign resident ID card) — required for banking, healthcare, and school enrolment.
- The visa is valid 1 year and can be renewed once; after 2 years, many families transition to the Residencia Temporal or Rentista programmes for longer-term residency.
The Costa Rica Digital Nomad Visa application is processed by the Direccion General de Migracion y Extranjeria (DGME — Costa Rica's immigration authority) — apply with a complete documentation package to avoid delays.
Residency & DIMEX
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- Apply for your DIMEX (Documento de Identidad Migratoria para Extranjeros — Costa Rica's official foreign resident ID card) at the DGME office in San Jose after your visa is approved. Bring your passport, visa approval, and supporting documents.
- The DIMEX is required for opening a bank account, enrolling children in school, accessing CAJA (Costa Rica's public healthcare system), and most formal transactions in Costa Rica.
- CAJA (Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social — Costa Rica's public healthcare and social security system) enrolment is possible once you have your DIMEX — families with DIMEX can access public healthcare for a monthly contribution.
- Costa Rica does not have a mandatory address registration equivalent — but keeping your DIMEX address current with the DGME is important for permit renewals.
- After several years of legal residency, Costa Rica offers permanent residency (Residencia Permanente) pathways — consult a Costa Rican immigration lawyer (abogado) for your specific situation.
Search 'DIMEX appointment Costa Rica DGME' on Google to book your appointment at the DGME office — bring your approved visa, passport, and all supporting documents.
Banking
- BAC Credomatic is the bank most widely used by expat families in Costa Rica — English-language service, widespread ATM network, and online banking. Banco Nacional de Costa Rica is the largest public bank and also serves expats.
- You need your DIMEX (foreign resident ID card) to open a local bank account — this is the primary barrier for new arrivals who have not yet received their DIMEX.
- Heredia has full-service bank branches — English support is patchier than Escazú; bring a Spanish speaker for account opening day if possible
- While waiting for your DIMEX, use Wise or Revolut for international transfers and day-to-day spending — both are widely used by Costa Rica expats.
- Scotiabank Costa Rica also serves expats and has some English-language support in the Escazu and Santa Ana branches.
- Most San Jose landlords in Escazu and Santa Ana accept rent in US dollars — Costa Rica is a largely dollarized economy in expat areas, so USD accounts are practical.
Banking in Costa Rica requires your DIMEX — set up a Wise account before arriving to handle international transfers while your DIMEX application is in progress.
Housing
Heredia offers a mix of older centro apartments and newer condominiums toward Belén and Ulloa. Many listings are on the same national platforms as San Jose — search by neighbourhood, not just the city name, because commutes vary block by block.
Where to search
These are Costa Rica's main long-term rental platforms — this is where residents rent long-term housing (cheaper than Airbnb).
Search 'Heredia' plus your target barrio (e.g. 'Belén Heredia') inside each platform.
Tip: visit at rush hour once before you sign — the same apartment feels different at 7:30am on school days.
- Craigslist Costa Rica — long-term rentals and shares (costarica.craigslist.org)
Tip: on the homepage, open the Housing category, then choose 'apartments / housing for rent' (or 'real estate for rent'). Pick an area such as san jose centro, Escazu / Santa Ana / Rohrmoser, or use the map — long-term unfurnished listings are mixed with short-term, so read each post carefully.
Typical monthly rents
- 2-bed apartment, Heredia / Belén: $800–$1,300/month
- 3-bed house or townhouse, outer Heredia: $1,100–$1,800/month
- Newer condo with amenities: $1,300–$2,000/month
- Short-stay furnished while searching: $1,200–$2,000/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport and DIMEX (foreign resident ID) — required by most landlords before signing
- Proof of income or bank statements (3 months)
- Costa Rican bank account or US bank account for transfer payments
- 1–2 months deposit (deposito de garantia) — standard in Costa Rica
- Rental contracts are in Spanish — use a bilingual lawyer (abogado bilingue) to review before signing
Schools
Heredia sits inside the same bilingual private ecosystem as the wider San Jose metro — some campuses are in Heredia or Belén; others require crossing toward Escazú. Apply early and map traffic, not just distance.
Public system
Costa Rican public schools are free and widely available. All instruction is in Spanish. Not viable for non-Spanish-speaking children without significant language support. Young children (ages 4–7) typically acquire Spanish quickly if enrolled with tutoring support.
International options
US-style, IB, and bilingual programmes are available within driving distance — some families prioritise a Heredia-side campus to shorten commutes; others still choose Escazú schools and accept the drive.
Language notes
Spanish is the language of instruction in all public schools. International and bilingual private schools teach in both English and Spanish. Bilingual education is a major advantage for children — many families choose Costa Rica specifically for this. Private Spanish tutoring costs roughly $25–$40/hr.
Do a dry-run school commute on a Tuesday morning before you commit to a lease — GPS times understate peak congestion.
Education options
Bilingual private schools (English/Spanish)
Several well-regarded options sit in Heredia province — verify bus routes and after-school activities match your work hours.
International / IB programmes in the metro
The same Central Valley inventory San Jose families use — feasible from Heredia if you plan transport carefully.
Costa Rican public schools
Spanish-medium state schools are accessible locally; younger children adapt faster with tutoring support.
Childcare
Daycares and preschools exist across Heredia — bilingual coverage is better than beach towns but still verify staff languages in person.
Daycare & nurseries
- Private guarderías cluster near Belén and San Francisco — monthly fees often $350–$650 depending on hours and bilingual staff
- CEN-CINAI (Centro de Educación y Nutrición — Costa Rica's state early childhood centres) remain difficult for fresh arrivals without full DIMEX paperwork
- Tour facilities for earthquake retrofit basics — older buildings vary widely
- Align pickup times with rush hour — late fees sting when traffic stalls your route home
Nanny & au pair
- Full-time niñera (nanny): typically $500–$850/month — similar to wider San Jose metro rates
- Part-time nanny: roughly $4–$7/hr
- Many caregivers commute from Alajuela and Heredia suburbs — confirm punctuality expectations during rainy season
- References from school parent networks remain the gold standard
Where to find childcare
- Search 'Expats in Costa Rica' on Google — Heredia families often post caregiver leads in the main national thread
- ConMuchoGusto.net — filter for Heredia; interview in person before hiring
- Local parent WhatsApp groups through your school — fastest vetted referrals
Healthcare
Reviewed Apr 2026
Reviewed Apr 2026
- CAJA (Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social — Costa Rica's public healthcare system) facilities serve Heredia once you are enrolled through your DIMEX — queues vary by clinic
- Private hospitals in San Jose (CIMA Hospital and Clinica Biblica) remain the default for complex admissions — Heredia clinics handle much routine work
- Typical private GP visits: roughly $60–$100; specialists in San Jose $100–$200 before insurance reimbursement
- IPMI is still the practical bridge before CAJA kicks in cleanly — budget $200–$600/month for a family depending on coverage
- Pharmacies are widespread — carry paediatric formulations in Spanish packaging photos so pharmacists can match brands
Identify whether your preferred paediatrician practises in Heredia, San Jose, or both — split care gets confusing during fevers and vaccinations.
Safety
- Violent crime is uncommon in typical family neighbourhoods — most issues are opportunistic theft from vehicles and unsecured yards
- Traffic collisions are a major risk — motorbikes filter unpredictably; install proper child seats and avoid phone use while driving
- Earthquakes occur — teach children drop-cover-hold and keep emergency water at home
- Flash flooding after storms can block low roads between Heredia and San Jose — check Waze and local alerts before school pickup
- Street lighting varies — plan walking routes with older children before dark
FAQ
Is Heredia good for families?
Yes — especially for families who want Central Valley schools and healthcare access with somewhat lower housing pressure than prime Escazú. Trade-offs are commutes and Spanish-first admin outside expat bubbles.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget roughly $3,800–$6,000/month all-in for a family of four depending on school tier and housing — generally a bit below premium western-San Jose rents.
Is housing hard to find here?
Reasonable inventory on national platforms — the hard part is judging commute time, not finding any listing at all.
Do children need international school here, or can local schools work?
Public schools are Spanish-medium; bilingual private remains the common expat path — map school location before you sign a lease.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Routine private care is available in Heredia; specialists still cluster in San Jose — same CAJA and IPMI logic as the capital.
Do you need a car in Heredia?
Usually yes — even if some errands are walkable, school runs and weekend trips favour a car; public buses work but rarely replace family logistics.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Same national stack — DGME in San Jose for immigration milestones, Spanish contracts for housing, and patience with bank queues.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
How much rush hour reshapes your day — a '15 km' school run can eat an hour if timed wrong.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Heredia Costa Rica expats' on Google — neighbourhood-specific housing and school threads
Search: “Heredia Costa Rica expats Facebook”Search on GoogleSearch 'Expats in Costa Rica' on Google — national community with Heredia members
Search: “Expats in Costa Rica Facebook group”Search on Google