A commercial appraisal in Costa Rica determines the market value of properties used for economic activity: retail spaces, offices, warehouses, industrial facilities, malls, and mixed-use buildings. The methodology differs from residential — it incorporates the income capitalization method and occupancy analysis. This guide explains how to value each type, what considerations apply in 2026, and reference price ranges.
What is a commercial appraisal?
A commercial appraisal is a technical valuation of properties whose main use is economic activity: retail, professional offices, storage, manufacturing, logistics, hospitality. Unlike residential, commercial value depends heavily on projected income flows and strategic location (visibility, traffic, access).
In Costa Rica, commercial appraisals follow the International Valuation Standards (IVS) and CFIA rules, with three methodologies applicable by case.
Most commonly appraised commercial property types
Retail spaces
- Mall locations (Multiplaza, Terramall, Escazú Village, City Mall)
- Street-front retail (Paseo Colón, Rohrmoser, Escazú, Heredia Centro)
- Plaza locations (San Pedro, Curridabat, Tres Ríos)
- Restaurants with specialized construction
Offices
- Class A corporate buildings (Escazú, Heredia)
- Offices in mixed towers
- Independent professional offices (clinics, law firms)
Warehouses and industrial facilities
- Industrial parks in Alajuela and Heredia (Eurofarmers, Ultra Park, Coyol)
- Free zones (Zona Franca Metropolitana, BES, Coyol Free Zone)
- Logistics warehouses near airport
- Manufacturing facilities in Cartago and San José
Malls and mixed-use
- Buildings with retail on ground floor + apartments above (mixed use)
- Small strip malls
The 3 commercial appraisal methodologies
Market comparison method
Analysis of recent transactions of similar commercial properties in the same area. Useful for standard retail with many available comparables. Less useful for unique properties (singular corporate buildings).
Cost method
Construction replacement value minus accumulated depreciation, plus land value. Primary for specialized constructions (custom industrial facilities, unique corporate buildings) where clear comparables don’t exist.
Income capitalization method (most important in commercial)
Present value of future rental flows discounted at market capitalization rate. Basic formula:
Value = Annual net rent / Capitalization rate
Real CR example: a 100 m² retail space in Escazú with $3,000/month rent ($36,000/year) and a typical 9% market cap rate → approximate value $400,000.
Capitalization rates in Costa Rica 2026 range between:
- GAM retail: 8-10%
- Class A offices Escazú/Heredia: 7-9%
- Industrial warehouses: 9-11%
- Malls: 7-9%
- Secondary / distant zone properties: 10-13%
Key factors affecting commercial value
- Location and visibility — corner vs inner street, foot/vehicle traffic, anchor proximity
- Current occupancy — vacant vs leased (with verified income)
- Tenant quality — multinational corporation vs local business
- Lease term — 5+ years with indexed adjustment is premium value
- Municipal zoning — what uses land-use permits
- Infrastructure — parking, loading/unloading, clear height, special openings
- Law 7600 compliance (disability accessibility) — required in new commercial
- Micromarket trend — upward gentrification vs massive vacancy
What the commercial report includes
- Market value (the 3 methods when applicable)
- Market analysis with comparables
- Occupancy and rent analysis
- Detailed photographs
- Technical description (areas, facilities, finishes)
- Complete registry study
- Municipal zoning and land use
- Conclusions with currency (CRC or USD — most commercial in USD)
- CFIA signature
Typical timelines
| Type | Standard | Rush |
|---|---|---|
| Standard retail space | 7-10 days | 48-72 h |
| Tower office | 7-10 days | 48-72 h |
| Industrial facility | 10-15 days | 72-96 h |
| Full mall | 15-25 days | Per complexity |
Reference costs
- Retail space or office: $500-$1,500 USD
- Warehouse or industrial facility: $800-$2,500 USD
- Full corporate building: $1,500-$5,000 USD
- Multi-tenant mall: quoted by complexity
FAQ
Is a commercial appraisal required for private buy-sell? Not mandatory but highly recommended. Protects from overpaying or underselling.
Do free zones have special rules? Yes. Free zone properties (PROCOMER regime) have transfer restrictions and specific valuation. A free-zone-experienced appraiser is essential.
Can the appraisal support rent renegotiation? Yes. A recent appraisal with market rent analysis is a key tool for renegotiating contracts.
Do banks accept commercial appraisals for credit? Yes, if the property meets bank requirements (clear zoning, no irregularities). Typical maximum 60-70% of appraised value for commercial.
Conclusion
Commercial appraisal in Costa Rica is more complex than residential due to dependence on the capitalization method and variety of property types. A CFIA-licensed appraiser experienced in commercial understands local market nuances — cap rates by zone, zoning risks, location value.
Díaz Peritajes offers commercial appraisals for retail, offices, warehouses, and industrial facilities with nationwide coverage from Pérez Zeledón and Curridabat. Free quote — WhatsApp +506 7272-7270.