CFIA-licensed appraiser Ing. Díaz inspecting property in Alajuela, Costa Rica
Alajuela

Inheritance & Probate Appraisals in Alajuela

Professional inheritance & probate appraisals services in Alajuela province

Probates in Alajuela frequently include agricultural farms (coffee, cattle, sugarcane) requiring productive-capacity + land valuation. Guatuso and Maleku indigenous territories require specific legal consideration. We coordinate with notaries in Alajuela downtown, Grecia, and Ciudad Quesada.

When do you need an inheritance appraisal?

An inheritance appraisal is needed in the four main scenarios of Costa Rica's probate process, governed by the Civil Code (arts. 520-605) and the Code of Civil Procedure. Testate succession: when the decedent left a will and each asset must be valued to execute the wishes. Intestate succession: when there is no will and the estate is divided according to the legal order of succession (spouse, descendants, ascendants). Voluntary partition among heirs: to agree on adjudication without going to court. Declaration of heirs before a notary: the notary requires an appraisal to formalize the transfer. In every case, the appraisal must be signed by an appraiser licensed by CFIA to have full validity before the National Registry, Hacienda, and Costa Rica's civil courts.

Types of assets valued in a probate

The probate estate can include assets of very different nature, each with its own valuation method. Real estate: family home, apartments, lots, agricultural farms, coastal properties, commercial spaces. Vehicles: cars, trucks, motorcycles, boats. Machinery and equipment: agricultural, industrial, construction equipment. Stocks and corporate interests: value of companies or shares in Costa Rican corporations. Valuable furniture: antique furniture, artwork, collections. Jewelry and precious metals. Financial products: certificates of deposit, bank accounts (valued at certified balances). We perform comprehensive valuation of all real estate and machinery; for jewelry or artwork we coordinate with trusted specialists when appropriate.

What the probate report includes

Each probate appraisal meets the formal requirements of notaries and courts. Detailed inventory: listing of all assets with individual technical description. Value per asset and total: market value of each property plus the consolidated total of the estate. Attached registry certification: cadastral plan and registry study per property. Photographs: graphic documentation of each asset's condition at the appraisal date. Calculation memorandum: method applied (market comparison, cost, income capitalization according to asset type). Express valuation date: whether retrospective (as of date of death) or current (for partition among living heirs). The report is signed by a CFIA appraiser and is ready to present to the notary or court without corrections.

Our probate methodology

Probate cases require a sensitive and technically rigorous approach. We apply International Valuation Standards (IVS) and CFIA standards adapted to the probate context. Retrospective valuation to date of death: for judicial probates, we research the market value on that specific date using transaction comparables from that period. Current-date valuation: for partitions among living heirs, value is current at report date. We apply three methods depending on asset type: market comparison (residential properties), cost minus depreciation (specialized structures), income capitalization (income-generating properties). When the estate includes agricultural farms or coastal properties, we adapt methodology to local particularities — maritime-terrestrial zone, concessions, agricultural use.

Validity before notaries, courts, and nationwide coverage

Our reports are accepted by all operators of Costa Rica's probate system. Public notaries: every notary in the country accepts the CFIA report for notarial probates and post-probate transfers. Civil courts: evidentiary validity in judicial probate proceedings in every jurisdiction (San José, Alajuela, Cartago, Heredia, Limón, Puntarenas, Guanacaste, southern zone). National Registry: accepted for registration of the inheritance transfer. Hacienda (Tax Authority): basis for transfer tax declaration when applicable. We operate nationwide from Pérez Zeledón and Curridabat. When the estate has assets spread across several provinces (very common), we consolidate the entire inventory into a single total report to simplify the process.

Alajuela specifics for inheritance & probate appraisals

Economic and territorial context

Alajuela is the second-largest province and hosts the Juan Santamaría International Airport and Coyol Free Zone, the country's most important industrial park. Combines consolidated GAM, agroindustry, and rural northern zone areas.

Price ranges per m² in Alajuela

$150-$1,000/m²: San Francisco and Guácima (near airport) $400-$900, Alajuela downtown $300-$600, Grecia and Atenas $200-$500, Naranjo, San Ramón, Palmares $150-$400, northern zone (Ciudad Quesada, Upala) $50-$250.

Market dynamics

Coyol free zone is most valued in country for industrial. Alajuela downtown with stable middle-class residential market. Northern zone (Ciudad Quesada) agricultural-livestock market with slow absorption.

Specific risks to consider

Active seismic zone (Alajuela fault). Northern zone with flood risk from Sarapiquí river. Poás and Upala near active Poás volcano.

Economic profile

Free zones, pharmaceutical and biomedical industry (Coyol), agroindustry (sugarcane, pineapple, high-altitude coffee), rural tourism (La Fortuna, Bajos del Toro).

What's included?

Coverage zones in Alajuela

Alajuela downtownSan RamónGreciaAtenasNaranjoPalmaresPoásSan Carlos

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