In Panamá, IBI stands for Impuesto de Bienes Inmuebles (Real Estate Property Tax).
Since 2019, Panama has a progressive IBI system where the rates depend entirely on how the property is registered. Understanding these two categories is the difference between paying a high tax and a very low one.
Panama divides properties into two tax "regimes":
Regime A: Primary Residence (Patrimonio Familiar)
This is for your main home where you live. You must apply for this status; it is not automatic. |
Property Value Annual Tax Rate
First $120,000.00 0% Exempt
$120,001 to $700,000 5%
Above $700,000 0.7%
Regime B: Secondary/Investment (Other Properties)
This applies to raw land, vacation homes, rentals, or properties owned by corporations that haven't declared a beneficiary.
Property Value Annual Tax Rate
First $30,000 0%, Exempt
$30,001 to $250,000 0.6%
$250,001 to $500,000 0.8%
Above $500,000 1.0%
There are other mechanisms that can help you with paying taxes, and this is where a well-informed owner will manage their expenses. This will help you enjoy the benefits of the know how and your property.
Monica has worked as a lawyer and has extensive experience, so she offers her services and has provided us with the information necessary to write this short article, which I am sure will be of great help to you in your next investment.
Payment Schedule & Discounts
The IBI is an annual tax, but the government collects it in three installments:
April 30
August 31
December 31
The DGI grants you a 10% discount on the total amount If you pay the entire year’s tax upfront before March 1st
Transaction Taxes (Paid at Closing)
When you buy a property, there are two other specific taxes involved. While these are usually paid by the Seller, they are often a point of negotiation:
Transfer Tax (ITBI): 2% of the higher value between the sale price and the registered (cadastral) value.
Capital Gains Tax: 3% of the sale price (paid as an advance withholding).
Important: As a buyer, you should ensure your lawyer obtains a "Paz y Salvo de Inmueble" (Tax Clearance Certificate). This proves the seller has paid all IBI up to the date of sale; otherwise, you inherit their debt.
If you are buying a resale property, it might already have a 20-year exemption attached to it.
The Rule: Houses that received their construction permits before 2012 were granted a flat 20-year exemption on the building value, regardless of the price.
The Benefit: This exemption stays with the house. If you buy a home built in 2010 today (in 2026), you still have 4 years remaining where you pay $0 tax on the house structure.
The Catch: You still pay tax on the land if the land is valued over $30,000.
This is the "Parent Law" that created the two-tier system (Regime A and Regime B).
What it did: It modified Articles 764, 766, and 766-A of the Tax Code.
Regime A (Article 766): Establishes the Patrimonio Familiar Tributario (Family Tributary Patrimony) and Vivienda Principal (Primary Residence) rates. This is where the $120,000 exemption and the 0.5%–0.7% rates come from.
Regime B (Article 766-A): Establishes the rates for secondary properties, commercial lots, and raw land. This is where the $30,000 exemption and the 0.6%–1.0% rates come from.
While Law 66 changed the tax rates, the duration of exemptions for new construction is governed by a combination of Law 28 (2012) and subsequent updates in the Tax Code.
The 5, 10, and 20-year tiers: These are administrative rules within the Tax Code (specifically derived from reforms to Article 81 of Law 6 of 2005) that scale the exemption period based on the building's value ($120k, $300k, etc.).
Exemption Limit: It is important to note that Law 66 effectively ended the old "20-year automatic exemption" for luxury properties, replacing it with the shorter 5-year window for properties over $300,000.
Law 122 (Tourism Incentives): * Investors in tourism-related projects (like the Vista Mar expansion) are eligible for a 100% Income Tax Credit.
Includes 15-year exoneration on property taxes and 20-year exoneration on import duties for construction materials.