Chili Tabasco wrote:
You need to have a physical address in Miami with a company that forwards mail to Costa Rica.
Shop around and you will find that you can do that without having to pay a membership or monthly fee. Cards, letters and other documents tend to take about 7-10 days to arrive by regular mail.
Try to look for up front pricing so that you don't get stuck with extra charges after you mail has arrived.
Do you know of any mail-forwarding companies that send mail to CA/SA free-of-charge off? If you do, please share the info.
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You can not get a USA bank to send a credit or debit card to a Costa Rican address.
I have no experience with this kind of stuff in CR, but Chase Bank did send me a replacement MasterCard (by DHL) to Colombia. I was not billed for this, and the card arrived in 4 days.
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Getting cards and letters is an expensive pain in the ass if you use a mail forwarding service. I have used a P.O. Box with Correos de Costa Rica for about 20 years now, and it is great for local mail as well as international correspondence.
Yes, if I lived in CR, I would probably use a C de CR post office box. I've seen the dedicated US Mail trucks make the run from Puerto Limon to San Jose. I could live with 7 - 10 days delivery. It seems like US mail delivery in CR works well. In Colombia, it is a different story. To the best of my knowlesge, PO Boxes are available at the central post offices in each of the big cities. But the problem is, there are no dedicated US mail trucks like in CR. US mail delivery takes anywhere from 2 - 4 weeks to arrive in a mailbox in Colombia, and there is only a 50% chance that it will arrive at all.
With my mail forwarding company, I have the capability to hold the mail for me (for when I visit the States), send it to a friend or relative who will be visiting Colombia, send it someone in the States who will "handle it" for me... or if I need it in a hurry, I can have it sent to me via express mail (an expensive proposition).
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It's difficult to imagine that someone has gone through life and does not have one 'friend' who will let him use their address as a permanent residence.
Yeah, I hear you. But, handling someone else's mail can old pretty fast. That's why I chose to have "pros" managing my mail... even if it costs me $240/year. Every envelope that arrives in my Florida mail box is scanned and posted on-line the day it arrives. If I need to see what is inside it, I select "scan", and the next day the constents are posted as a .pdf. Sure, I give up some privacy, but it is a lot easier than going back and forth with a friend or relative, who is 2800 miles away, over every piece of mail. Mail that I know is sensitive and important remains sealed and is forwarded immediately. Some trade-offs have to be made when you are living in a foreign country, yet still have ties back in the "Motherland."
