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Country Security Report

Costa Rica Security Report — 2026-05-18

LOW
Published May 18, 2026 — 19:58 UTC Period: May 11 — May 18, 2026 3 min read (591 words)

Executive Summary

Costa Rica maintains its position as Central America's most stable democracy, assessed at a LOW threat level as of May 2026. The country's institutional resilience, longstanding commitment to demilitarization, and robust rule of law continue to distinguish it within a turbulent subregion. President Rodrigo Chaves's administration has navigated fiscal consolidation under an IMF Extended Fund Facility, achieving primary surplus targets while managing political friction over austerity measures.

However, Costa Rica faces mounting transnational security pressures. The country's geographic position between South American cocaine production zones and North American consumption markets has led to a measurable increase in drug transit activity. Seizure data from the Servicio de Vigilancia Aerea indicates a 22% year-over-year increase in detected maritime trafficking attempts along the Pacific coast. Organized crime groups, including Mexican cartel affiliates, have expanded logistical networks within Costa Rica's port infrastructure.

The influx of Nicaraguan migrants and asylum seekers—exceeding 250,000 since 2018—continues to strain public services and generate political tension. Concurrently, the technology sector has emerged as a growth driver, with major investments from Intel, Amazon, and regional fintech firms positioning San Jose as a nearshoring hub. The government's fiscal discipline and trade diversification efforts provide a constructive medium-term economic outlook.

Key Developments

Political

  • The Chaves administration secured legislative approval for Phase II of the IMF fiscal reform package in March 2026, including public sector wage restraints and targeted subsidy reductions.
  • Municipal elections in February 2026 reflected continued political fragmentation, with no single party winning more than 18% of mayoral seats nationally.
  • Judicial independence remains robust, with the Constitutional Chamber (Sala IV) actively checking executive overreach on immigration enforcement measures.

Security

  • Drug seizure volumes increased 22% year-over-year, with Pacific maritime interdiction operations accounting for the majority of confiscations.
  • Homicide rates remain low by regional standards at approximately 12.5 per 100,000, though targeted killings linked to drug trafficking have risen in Limon province.
  • Costa Rica expanded cooperation with SOUTHCOM and the U.S. Coast Guard through Joint Interagency Task Force South, enhancing maritime domain awareness.

Economic

  • GDP growth is projected at 3.6% for 2026, driven by services exports, medical device manufacturing, and technology sector expansion.
  • The IMF program remains on track, with public debt projected to decline to 62% of GDP by year-end, down from 68% in 2023.
  • Nearshoring momentum continues as multinational corporations relocate supply chain operations from Asia, with the free trade zone at Coyol attracting $1.2 billion in committed investment.

Regional

  • Costa Rica hosts the largest Nicaraguan diaspora population, creating diplomatic friction with Managua and straining the national asylum processing system.
  • The government strengthened bilateral security cooperation with Panama to address cross-border trafficking along the shared Sixaola-Changuinola corridor.
  • San Jose continues to serve as the de facto hub for regional human rights organizations displaced from Nicaragua, Honduras, and Venezuela.

Outlook

Costa Rica's institutional stability and economic diversification strategy position the country favorably among Latin American peers. The principal risks center on transnational organized crime exploitation of the country's transit geography and the fiscal sustainability of absorbing large-scale Nicaraguan migration. The intelligence community assesses that democratic governance will remain resilient through 2026, though the Chaves administration faces a narrow legislative window for completing structural reforms before mid-term political dynamics shift.

Sources

  • IMF Country Report: Costa Rica, April 2026
  • U.S. Department of State, International Narcotics Control Strategy Report 2026
  • UNHCR Costa Rica Country Factsheet, Q1 2026
  • World Bank Development Indicators, Costa Rica 2026
  • JIATF-South Annual Threat Assessment, 2026
Grounding Sources (1)