Where to Live in Panama: Panama City, Boquete, Coronado and Pedasi

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-12 08:27:08 | Updated at 2026-06-12 20:43:03 12 hours ago

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Panama · Living in Panama

Key Facts

Panama City. Skyscrapers, restaurants and the biggest expat community, best for city lovers.

Boquete. Cool mountain town, spring-like weather, popular with retirees and nature lovers.

Coronado. An easy beach town near the capital with a ready-made expat scene.

Pedasí. A quiet Azuero beach town for those who want calm over crowds.

Deciding where to live in Panama is the happiest kind of homework, because the country packs a skyline, a cloud forest and two coastlines into a space smaller than many single US states. Whether you dream of rooftop pools or a cabin in the hills, this friendly tour of the main expat bases will help you find your fit.

 the historic Casco Viejo district in Panama CityCasco Viejo blends colonial charm with some of the capital’s best dining. (Photo: David Broad, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

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Panama City: the cosmopolitan heart

For many newcomers, the capital is the natural first stop. It offers a real skyline, world-class restaurants, modern hospitals and the country’s largest, most welcoming expat community.

Within the city, the neighbourhoods have distinct personalities. El Cangrejo is walkable and full of cafés, Bella Vista is central and lively, Costa del Este is sleek and family-friendly, and historic Casco Viejo trades high-rises for cobblestones and charm.

Boquete: the highland favourite

Up in the western mountains, Boquete enjoys spring-like weather all year, which is its great selling point. The cooler air means you can skip air conditioning, and the green valleys draw hikers, coffee farmers and a long-settled community of foreign retirees.

Life here is slower and more outdoorsy than in the capital. You trade nightlife for birdsong, gain space and gardens, and still find good cafés, a farmers’ market and fellow expats to share the trails with.

Coronado and the City Beaches

If you want sand without leaving the conveniences behind, Coronado is the classic choice. Roughly an hour and a half from the capital, it has supermarkets, clinics and golf, plus an established expat crowd to make settling in easy.

The wider stretch known as the City Beaches offers similar appeal at a range of prices. It suits people who want the ocean on weekdays and the city within reach for a night out.

Pedasí and the quieter coast

Further out on the Azuero Peninsula, Pedasí is for those who prefer calm to crowds. It is a small, friendly fishing town with clean beaches, surf nearby and a gentle pace that newcomers either adore or find too quiet.

The trade-off is distance. You are further from major hospitals and the airport, so Pedasí tends to reward people who value tranquillity and have a flexible lifestyle.

How to choose where to live in Panama

The smartest approach is to rent before you buy, and to sample more than one region across different seasons. A month in the city and a month in the hills will teach you more than any list ever could.

Weigh up climate, healthcare access and how often you will fly home, since those three factors shape daily life most. To plan the numbers, pair this with our guide to the cost of living in Panama.

Frequently asked questions

Where do most expats live in Panama?

The largest communities are in Panama City, Boquete and the Coronado beach area. Each offers a ready-made network of fellow expats and the services newcomers need.

Is it better to live in Panama City or the mountains?

It depends on your pace of life. The city offers jobs, dining and top hospitals, while towns like Boquete offer cooler weather, nature and a calmer, cheaper routine.

Should I rent or buy when I first move to Panama?

Most advisers suggest renting first, ideally in more than one area. It lets you test the climate, the commute and the community before committing to a purchase.

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