If you have been browsing listings on Costa Rica’s Caribbean coast, you may have come across stunning properties near Playa Cocles with eye-catching price tags. Some of them look like incredible deals. A few might even come with documents that appear to show title or legal standing.
Here is what you need to know before you take another step: a significant portion of the land in and around Playa Cocles sits within the Kekoldi Indigenous Reserve. Under Costa Rican law — upheld repeatedly by the country’s highest court — non-indigenous individuals cannot legally own property within this reserve. Not foreigners. Not Costa Rican citizens without indigenous heritage. No one outside the Bribri and Kekoldi indigenous community.
This is not a gray area. It is not a technicality that clever legal structuring can resolve. It is a constitutional and statutory prohibition backed by the Supreme Court. Any transaction that attempts to transfer land within the reserve to a non-indigenous buyer is declared void — and the buyer receives no compensation.
⚠️ CRITICAL BUYER WARNING: Any purchase of land within the Kekoldi Indigenous Reserve by a non-indigenous buyer is legally null and void under Costa Rican law. There is no legal remedy and no government compensation. Always obtain a formal CONAI certification before purchasing any property in or near Cocles.
Understanding the Kekoldi — Who They Are and Why This Land Is Protected
The Kekoldi — also spelled Keköldi — are an indigenous Bribri community whose ancestral territory spans the southern Caribbean coast of Costa Rica, from the foothills of the Talamanca mountains down to the coast in the vicinity of Playa Cocles. The territory covers approximately 36,000 hectares and is home to around 210 registered indigenous community members.
In 1977, Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly formally recognized the Kekoldi’s rights to their territory through Indigenous Law 6172, one of the most robust pieces of indigenous land protection legislation in Latin America. The law is explicit: indigenous reserves are inalienable, imprescriptible, non-transferable, and exclusively for the indigenous communities that inhabit them.
The law’s Article 3 states unambiguously that non-indigenous persons may not rent, lease, purchase, or otherwise acquire land within these reserves, and that any such transfer is null and void. There are no exceptions for foreigners, for corporations, or for any other legal vehicle.
A History of Contested Boundaries — and Why It Matters Right Now
The reason this issue is particularly acute for buyers in 2025 and 2026 is that the reserve’s boundaries have been the subject of decades of legal dispute — and those disputes have now been resolved in the Kekoldi’s favor.
In 1996, an executive decree appeared to release approximately 3,074 acres of coastal land — including much of what is now Playa Cocles — from the reserve’s jurisdiction. This opened a two-decade window during which properties in the area were bought, sold, and developed as though they carried legitimate private title.
However, the Kekoldi Association of Development subsequently challenged this boundary change in court. After years of litigation through multiple levels of the Costa Rican judiciary, the courts reaffirmed the original 1977 boundaries. The 2022 Constitutional Chamber ruling removed any remaining ambiguity: the reserve boundaries are those established in 1977, and the property rights of non-indigenous persons who acquired land within those boundaries after 1977 are not legally protected.
In practical terms, this means that properties which changed hands during the 1996-2022 period based on the belief that they were outside the reserve may now fall within its boundaries — and any current non-indigenous owner is in a legally precarious position.
How to Know If a Property Is Inside the Reserve
The Kekoldi Reserve boundaries are not always obvious from a property listing, a visual inspection, or even a standard title search at the National Registry. This is precisely what makes this situation so dangerous for uninformed buyers.
The definitive method for determining whether a specific property falls within the Kekoldi Reserve is to obtain a formal certification from CONAI — the National Commission of Indigenous Affairs. This certification will confirm or deny whether a given parcel is within the reserve boundaries.
As legal experts on the ground have advised: if your property of interest is located between Calle Azania (near La Costa de Papito hotel) and the former Hotel Punta Cocles, you are in the zone of concern and must obtain CONAI certification before proceeding.
Do not rely on:
- The seller’s assurances that the property is clean
- A National Registry title search alone — titles in this zone can exist on paper but be legally unenforceable
- Prior purchase history — the fact that a property has changed hands before does not validate the transaction under current law
- The physical appearance of a property or the presence of existing structures
What About Properties Just Outside the Reserve?
There is excellent news for buyers who want to be near Playa Cocles: legally clean, titled properties do exist within reasonable proximity to the area. The key is knowing exactly where the reserve boundary falls and identifying the pockets of land that lie outside it.
In 2026, these safe investment zones near Cocles include select parcels with verified CONAI-clear status, as well as properties in adjacent areas such as Playa Negra, Hone Creek, and inland Talamanca. These markets are seeing strong appreciation precisely because the supply of legally unambiguous real estate in the greater area is limited.
This scarcity dynamic is actually creating a compelling investment case for buyers who do their homework. Properties with clear legal standing near Cocles are commanding premium prices and are unlikely to depreciate as regulatory enforcement increases.
Our Commitment: Legal Clarity Before the Sale
Coldwell Banker Caribe does not list or sell properties within the Kekoldi Indigenous Reserve to non-indigenous buyers. Full stop. Our commitment to our clients means we will never place you in a transaction that puts your investment at legal risk.
When you work with our team, every property we present on the southern Caribbean coast has been through our legal due diligence process, including verification of ZMT status, CONAI reserve certification, and National Registry title standing.
If you are currently holding a property in the Cocles area and are uncertain about its legal status, we can also connect you with qualified Costa Rican real estate attorneys who specialize in indigenous land law and can advise you on your options.
The Caribbean coast of Costa Rica is extraordinary. The opportunities here are real. The key is making sure the property you fall in love with is one you can actually own — legally, safely, and permanently.
📞 Contact Coldwell Banker Caribe | coldwellbankercaribe.com



