Both countries have well-defined retiree paths, but the income thresholds, time on visa before permanence, and onboarding bureaucracy differ in ways that shape your first six months on the ground.
| Panama City | Medellín | |
|---|---|---|
| Main retiree visa | Pensionado. Permanent residency from day one. Widely regarded as one of the most retiree-friendly visas in Latin America. | Migrante Pensionado (M-11). 3-year residence permit, renewable. After 5 years on M, eligible to convert to Resident (R, permanent). |
| Minimum monthly pension | $1,000 USD/mo lifetime. US Social Security qualifies. +$250/mo per dependent. | ~$1,200 USD/mo (3× Colombian minimum wage, 2026). Must be from a foreign government, social-security, or qualified private pension. |
| Investor alternative | Qualified Investor: $300,000 in real estate, OR $500,000 stock market deposit, OR $750,000 fixed-term deposit. Friendly Nations Visa requires $200K real estate investment (post-2021 reform). | Migrante Inversionista (M-6): real estate investment of 100× minimum wage (~$40,000 USD, 2026), or business investment with similar threshold. |
| Rentista option (passive income, not pension) | Self-Solvency Visa: $300,000 bank deposit on 3-year fixed term, with monthly interest above subsistence minimum. | Migrante Rentista (M-10): ~$4,000 USD/mo (10× minimum wage) from foreign passive sources (rentals, royalties, dividends). |
| Time to permanent residency | Permanent on day one with Pensionado. Other visas have re-validation requirements but no waiting period for permanence. | Convert M visa to R (Resident) after 5 continuous years. Then renewable every 5 years; absences over 180 days/yr can break continuity. |
| Path to citizenship | 5 years as permanent resident. Naturalization exam in Spanish (history/civics). Panama generally recognizes dual citizenship. | 5 years as resident (2 years if married to Colombian or with Colombian child). Citizenship exam in Spanish. Colombia recognizes dual citizenship. |
| Processing time | 4-9 months typical. Requires multiple in-person appointments in Panama City. Most applicants need to be in Panama for at least part of the process. | 4-8 weeks online application + biometrics appointment. Faster overall than Panama. |
| Mandatory ID card | Carné de Residente issued after visa approval. Gates similar onboarding (bank account, lease). Some banks accept it faster than Colombia accepts the cédula. | Cédula de Extranjería required within 15 days of visa approval. Gates bank accounts, leases, healthcare enrollment. Issued by Migración Colombia. |
| Typical lawyer cost | $1,500 to $5,000 USD per case depending on visa type. Pensionado is on the lower end, Qualified Investor higher. | $800 to $2,500 USD per case. Most retirees use a lawyer to handle the M-visa application + cédula onboarding as a bundled service. |
| Family inclusion | Spouse and dependents covered under same Pensionado application at +$250/mo income requirement per dependent. Adult unmarried children up to 25 if studying. | Spouse and dependent children can be included on the principal visa with proof of relationship and dependency. |
| Notable benefits | Pensionado discounts: 50% off entertainment, 25% off domestic airfare, 25% off restaurants Mon-Thu, 30% off public transport, 50% off hotel rates (low season). 20% off doctor visits and medications. | Strong public/private healthcare access via EPS enrollment after cédula. Free or subsidized university tuition for residents in many cases. |
| US-citizen tax/SS impact | Panama territorial system means foreign-source Social Security and pensions are not taxed by Panama. No US-Panama tax treaty. | US-source Social Security is not taxed by Colombia for tax non-residents; for tax residents (>183 days/yr), worldwide income reporting applies. No US-Colombia tax treaty. |