Costa Rica Expertise: 2019

Monday, December 2, 2019

Transparency Law 9416 and IRS Form 5471

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

The panic continues for those with a company, association, trust, or other legal entity in Costa Rica that is required to file shareholders and beneficial owners report with the Central Bank, as mandated by Law 9416.

Unbeknownst to most American expats, they have another problem, IRS Form 5471. In a month's worth of interviews with many U.S. citizens who own companies in Costa Rica, only three people could be found who file the required form. The U.S. fine for not doing so is $10,000 per instance.

Monday, November 4, 2019

How to fill out transparency forms

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

Almost everyone with a company in Costa Rica is a bit frustrated and worried about filing their Registro de Transparencia y Beneficiarios Finales (register of transparency and final beneficiaries) report to comply with Law 9416.

For those late to the ballgame, all the ruckus is about the Costa Rican law approved Dec. 14, 2016, but effective this year. Those readers can refer to the articles “Time to fess up or pay up!,” published in Aug. 5, and “How to register for Law 9416,” published Sept. 2 for more information to get up to speed.

To sum up the news, Law 9416 was enacted to quash privacy for legal entities formed to protect secret investors. The Costa Rican government asserts it will only use the information it harvests to find tax cheats, drug dealers and terrorists.

The report is due Jan. 3. Hacienda (the tax department) will start dishing out fines next February for non-filers. That’s right, people have until the final due date to file. Many are confused about this fact because soft dates were published based on the last digit of a company’s identification number as its filing deadline. The soft dates were a guideline, so everyone would not file simultaneously by waiting until the last minute.

Filers are experiencing many problems, hampering their abilities to comply with the rules. Here are a few of them:

Monday, October 7, 2019

New rules for vacation rental landlords

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

For those renting villas, chalets, apartments, rooms, and the like through nontraditional means like Airbnb, Vrbo, HomeAway, Facebook, Instagram, and other similar media sites, business is about to get much more difficult. Legislation passed by the legislature in September regulating short-term rentals will soon be signed into law by the president of the country.

The country is promoting the new rules as a vehicle to protect tourists against scams, frauds, rip-offs, and discrimination. Really, it's just another new tax law with some icing on top to appease the large-scale hospitality industry.

Presently, it is known as bill 20.865. It defines a short-term rental as a temporary stay for money more than 24 hours and less than one year. This excludes the romance motels found throughout Latin America used by locals for steamy getaways and the rental of a place to live long term.

Here is what landlords will need to do to comply with the new law:

Monday, September 2, 2019

How to register for Law 9416

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

Yesterday started a new era in Costa Rica, a new time when all privacy using an anonymous corporation was no more.

In the good old days, a company, called a sociedad anonima, an anonymous society in English, S.A. for short, protected investors. Laws in the past allowed them to remain secret. The concept goes as far back as the 15th and 16th centuries to promote investment in transatlantic exploration. The term later became synonymous with a corporation, a limited liability company and the like.

Law 9416, enacted Dec. 14, 2016, was designed to quash privacy for legal entities formed to protect secret investors, the opposite of the original spirit of the practice. The Costa Rican government asserts it will only use the information harvested to find tax cheats, drug dealers and terrorist suspects. Everyone knows there is no system that cannot be hacked, leaving the information gathered at risk, especially in a country where important secrets quickly find their way to the front page of local newspapers.

Monday, August 5, 2019

Time to fess up or pay up!

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

The Costa Rican government will require full disclosure starting next month of everyone’s secrets hidden in companies.

Unless the powers-that-be change their minds again, full registration of all legal entities in the country, as mandated by Law 9416, will begin on Sept. 1 and continue through the end of January.

The first deadline was March 1, six months ago, to start the process, but many business leaders complained loudly, so the deadline was extended. There has been so much tax news this year, it is easy to get confused by all the information, so an update follows to refresh people's memories.

Monday, July 1, 2019

Capital gains now a fact!

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

As of today, selling assets like real estate will be pricier in Costa Rica.

For years, people have enjoyed a capital gains free country. Many, who bought property over the years, did so without too much question because they hoped to make a big profit someday on appreciation in value with no local capital gains tax to pay.

Those days are over. Law 9635, called the “Fortalecimiento de las Finanzas Públicas” or just the “Plan Fiscal,” the fiscal plan in English, became law Dec. 4. Many parts of the legislation were on hold until today, July 1. One of those parts was the imposition of a capital gains tax on the sale of assets.

Last Thursday, the tax department published its final revision to the regulations of the law. Here is an outline of the essential facts concerning capital gains:

Monday, June 3, 2019

Tax return filings now in question!

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

“Round and round it goes, where it stops, nobody knows.”

Does that quote refer to a roulette table or to Costa Rica's tax Law 9635? Apparently, to the latter. The country's decision-makers cannot make up their minds whether companies that are not active will have to file income tax returns on the due date Dec. 16.

The law passed the legislature Dec. 3 and was valid Dec. 4. However, it had no bylaws, the nitty-gritty regulations and rules that make a law work in practice.

Monday, May 6, 2019

How expats can prepare to file tax returns

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

Most expats now should know, everyone with a Costa Rican company of any type will be required to file an income tax return this year. What many do not know is that they will have to submit two within three months of each other.

According to attorney Marco Retana, there is a fine of around $375 (depending on the exchange rate) for not filing. More importantly, non-filers will not be able to get any legal documents at the national registry for their company if they are not in compliance with the law.

Monday, April 1, 2019

Tax complexities will challenge expats

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

One has to wonder if the powers that make the tax laws in Costa Rica think about the logistics of enforcing them. Another interesting question is whether the government cares anymore about all the people who came to the country over the past 40 years to retire and invest here.

In an interview with Kevin Chavarria C.P.A., a professional who gives lectures about the new tax laws, the question was put to him: “Does Costa Rica care about all the retirees, and other little investors making this country their home?”

Monday, March 4, 2019

Here is a summary of new tax law complexities

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

The tax news coming out of the government for the last several months is complicated and confusing. Most people do not understand what is going on. Ticos do not comprehend the technical verbiage of the laws. Most expats cannot make sense of the gibberish because many of them do not read or speak the Spanish language.

Here is a concise summary focusing on the two tax policies in the news, Law 9416 and Law 9635.

Monday, February 4, 2019

More Troubling Tax News

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

The new tax legislation requiring investors to pay capital gains in Costa Rica is a hard pill to swallow for many expats. Here is another pain from the legislators that will make many lives uncomfortable.

It is all about Ley 9416, approved two years ago on Dec. 14, 2016. The law mandates the registration of all shareholders and beneficial owners of all legal entities, except for ones under the control of these governmental institutions:

• Superintendencia General de Entidades Financieras (SUGEF – overseer of financial institutions);
• Superintendencias General de Valores (SUGEVAL – overseer of financial markets);
• Superintendencia General de Pensiones (SUPEN – overseer of pension funds);
• Fideicomisos publicos (public trusts). 

It includes, but is not limited to, these legal structures: 

Sociedad anonima (S.A);
Sociedad de responsabilidad limitada (S.R.L. also known as L.L.C.);
Sociedad civil (S.C. is also known as a civil society);
Surcusal  (branch of a foreign corporation);
Asociación (association of any type, include non-profit);
Fideicomiso (trust, except for public trusts).

Ley 9416 mandated the Banco Central (Costa Rica’s central bank) to have the system in place by last Jan. 1. The bank will hold all this information for investigative purposes to be used by the tax department and the drug enforcement agency.

Required registration begins March 1, based on the last digit of an entity’s cédula (identification) number per the following schedule: In March, entities ending with the cédula number 0 must register. In April, entities with cédulas ending in 1 must do so. May is the deadline for entities with cédulas ending in 2, and so on until December, when entities with cédulas ending in 9 must file.

Now for the hard part. Only certain people with specific representation or powers-of-attorney can do the registering. 

• S.A. – only the president;
• S.R.L.—any manager with legal representation;
• S.C. – only the administrator;
• Surcusal – only representative with full power-of attorney;
• Asociación – administrator with full power-of attorney;
• Fideicomiso – trustee

The registering party must also have a firma digital or digital signature registered with the Banco Central. Only Costa Ricans and people with a legal residency who have a DIMEX number can obtain a digital signature in Costa Rica.

So, how do retired expats or other people without legal residency who hold property in a company in Costa Rica register? They have to go to a public notary and assign a special power-of-attorney to someone else who does qualify to sign them up. This process is somewhat of an expensive endeavor, especially for retired folks watching their budgets.

How often is the registration required? Every year! Yes, annually, a correctly authorized individual will have to fill out the paperwork at the Banco Central for every legal entity in Costa Rica.

Of course, the fines for not filing the information are bank breaking. From three to one-hundred minimum salaries. The current legally established minimum salary is 446,200 colons, or about $750. In U.S. dollars, that translates into penalties of from $2,250 to $75,000 for non-compliance.

According to the original law and the specific regulations that apply to the law, the Banco Central should be ready for the registration to begin. It is not, according to the press. Moreover, according to the El Financiero newspaper owned by La Nacion, only five percent of people in Costa Rica have a digital signature as of last September.

What should expats and others do since it does not appear the country is prepared to implement Ley 9416? 

Everyone should check and see if their company is up-to-date. If it not, they should consult a notary as soon as possible and update it with correct information. Here is a checklist:

• Is the legal address right?
• Are the representatives accurate?
• Are the identification numbers for the representatives current?
• Is the registered agent information up-to-date?
• Does a legal representative have a digital signature?
• By-laws should be reviewed and updated, if necessary.

A person should be selected to file the paperwork with the Central Bank, and that person needs to acquire a digital signature. Most banks in Costa Rica provide the service. The process usually requires the payment of a fee and an appointment. They are valid for two years.

For those entities that do not have a person with sufficient rights to get a digital signature, another person must be selected as the representative. It could be an attorney, but does not need to be one. Anyone with a Costa Rican cédula or resident with a DIMEX number can obtain the digital document as long as they are in good standing with the government. 

Why this law? The Costa Rican government is trying its best to keep the international powers that be happy, so they will continue to lend the country money. It all comes down to Costa Rica adhering to the rules set forth by the members of the global financial system. The country has always been a heavy borrower, but recently, its expenses have far outgrown its income. The debt was an estimated 65 percent of gross domestic product in 2017 and estimated to go much higher without fiscal reforms.

Over recent years, the country has implemented some pretty tough new tax laws. The question is whether the state can actually achieve and, more importantly, maintain what it is legislating. Ley 9416 will be a great test because it is complicated to set up, establish compliance and enforce.

Article first published in A.M. Costa Rica on February 4, 2019. 


Monday, January 14, 2019

Tax law bites expat savings hard

By: Garland M. Baker B.
Exclusive to A.M. Costa Rica

Editor's Note: While this article was accurate at the time of publication, some information may now be outdated. We are currently preparing a comprehensive update. Sign up for our Alerts to be notified as soon as the revised content is live!

The new tax law passed the legislature at the end of last year and came out in the judicial newspaper La Gaceta Dec. 4. The full effect begins six months from that date, or around June 4. Expats should brace for some expensive surprises. Here is a quick study guide to what they can expect.

Costa Rica just experienced the longest strike on record for the country. It lasted 90 days. President Carlos Alvarado insisted the country needed a new tax initiative to get it out of financial trouble. Most unions and many individuals opposed the plan for a myriad of reasons, so the strike went on and on.

That discourse is not of import now. The law is now a reality, called the Fortalecimiento de las Finanzas Públicas (Strengthening of Public Finances) Ley 9635. That's a fancy name for what it is: a tax law packing a big bite and severe consequences for tax cheaters.

The legislation is in four parts: The first and second parts rewrite the sales and income tax laws. The third and fourth deal more with government employees and fiscal procedures to save money.

How will the changes affect expats?