Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home

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Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home
Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home

Are you looking for a furnished apartment in Costa Rica? Find out how to live comfortably and affordably here by renting a container home.

Moving to Costa Rica and Living in a Container Home

We moved to Costa Rica in August of 2021Unfortunately, when we chose our destination, we weren’t aware of the large American and Canadian communities that work remotely from Uvita.

This is a more typical ex-pat destination for people who choose this lifestyle than other parts of the country. Uvitians will also describe their community as a tourist town.

Before moving abroad, we signed a month-to-month lease on a container home sight unseen. So what is a container home? Well, it’s exactly as it sounds.

Why We Chose Container Homes in Costa Rica

Container homes in Costa Rica are made from retired shipping containers constructed together like building a house with giant Lego blocks. Besides being trendy, these types of dwellings contribute to recycling and are very economical at the same time. They can also be a cost effect away to living in a tiny home setup.

Today, I will walk you through the container home we moved into in Costa Rica

Container Home Compound

From the street side, you’ll see this little container home compound. There are three colorful units there. Two teams are butting up end on end. It shares a courtyard with the other units, with a garden running down the center.

Container Homes in Uvita Costa Rica
Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home

The unit closest to the street is a sunset orange color. Behind that unit is a lime green home, and then across the courtyard, there’s a sky blue one.


Our 20-foot shipping container is the green one. Each home also has sunscreens or awnings over each roof to shed water and keep it cool.

The Laundry Facility 

All three units share a joint laundry facility, and each tenant is assigned two days when they can do laundry. You’ll find a washing machine and washtub inside but no mechanical dryer.


Instead, they have four clotheslines strung across the inside length of the 10-meter-long open-air laundry facility. Right now, we’re in the rainy season. It rains almost every day, so it’s nice to have the space and clothesline inside this unit to dry our clothes.

The Kitchen Setup

Walking just 4 meters through the courtyard and up a couple of steps onto a small wooded deck, we enter our Kitchen/Living area through a sliding glass door. The apartment came fully furnished with everything we needed to live comfortably.

The kitchen was ready for cooking with a microwave, under-the-counter mini-fridge, two-eye induction cooktop, dishes, and cookware. It even had a wine bottle opener, something many furnished apartments forget to include.

kitchen in a container home in costa rica
Container Home Kitchen

The induction cooktop is pretty sweet. It heats up fast and can boil water in under 60 seconds. Induction cooking uses an electric current to heat iron or steel pots and pans through magnetic induction.


On the wall parallel to the kitchen counter, a large window looks out to the courtyard’s flowerbed. Next to that window is the sliding glass door.


I have noticed here in Costa Rica that most exterior doors have Double Cylinder Deadbolts, a lock with keyed cylinders on both the inside and the outside. This is not something you would typically have in the States and can be a fire hazard if that lock is on the primary exit.

Guest Bedroom

The guest bedroom came furnished with a full-sized bed, soft linens, and a mini-split air-conditioning unit. It is mounted on the wall above the head of the bed.


Right now, I’ve been using this bedroom as my office working primarily on my laptop spread outcrossed the bed with my back propped up against the wall.


We also decided to store all our luggage here. Jas and I moved down to Costa Rica with 13 suitcases, and they all fit in this small room.

Master’s Bedroom 

The master bedroom is located on the far end of the house and is slightly larger than the other bedroom. In addition to a full-sized bed, linens, and air-conditioning unit, it has a small credenza where we can store some of our personal items. Additionally, there is a walk-in closet off the original perimeter of the shipping container.

Master Bedroom bedroom in the Uvita Costa Rica Container Home
Master Bedroom

I think having two mini-splits of air-conditioning in such a small apartment is a bit overkill. We can more than stay comfortable using just one, but if we ever want to drop the temperature in the house fast, we can do it.

Bathroom

Like the master closet, the bathroom was added onto the shipping container’s perimeter as a bump-out. The bathroom has a nice-sized corner shower, toilet, trash can, and small vanity.


The shower is equipped with a device known to ex-pacts as a “suicide shower.” It’s a tea-kettle-shaped showerhead with a built-in 50 amp instant water heater.


Why do they call it a suicide shower? I can only imagine the live electrical wires running from the showerhead into the wall right over your head.

suicide shower head in Costa Rica
“Suicide Shower” Electric Heated Showe Head

Standing naked, wet, and barefoot in the shower with electrical wires within arm’s reach doesn’t sit right with me as a home builder. So, for now, we wilt remain conscious of the electrical current so close to us while we shower and be sure not to come in contact with it.


The mirror placement over the vanity mirror cracks me up. Standing directly in front of it, I can not see my face, just the reflection of my sunburned neck with my Adam’s apple staring straight back at me.


Another thing most people probably aren’t savvy bout is why there is always a trash can next to every toilet in Costa Rica. Well, they don’t want you to flush toilet paper here.


Why? Well, I was told by another ex-pat that it’s for environmental reasons. That may be partly true, but I have noticed the plumbing here does not meet U.S. standards.


For example, the sanitary lines that connect the toilets to the drains in the States are 3-1/2″ to 4″ pipes. However, I’ve noticed here a 2″ pipe is sometimes used for the main drain line. A 2″ drain is not large enough to flush toilet paper and will eventually clog if you do.


Another thing I noticed about the plumbing, at least in this place, is that they don’t use P-traps or drain vents. P-traps catch debris drained from the sink and prevent clogs from forming further down the line. This device also holds water in place to create a vapor loft hatch that stops septic gases from entering the home through the drains.

p traps container home

Because the drains in the house don’t have P-traps, we just put a cover over the gutters, which seems to block the odor.


Because the drains do not have an air vent attachment, the sinks drain slowly and will gurgle as air escapes from the drain lines.

Overall Experience

The plumbing annoyances are the only issue we’re having in our home. The overall size is perfect for those who travel light. We have a 20-foot container full of all our personal items arriving from the States sometime next month. Because of this, we will be looking for something more significant to fit us and all of our stuff.


We’re paying $ 35 monthly for rent here, which is excellent. That includes the internet and water supply. We spend an additional $100/month for unlimited electricity, which is expensive compared to the states, but electricity costs more here.


The location is excellent! We can walk to many good restaurants, grocery stores, a bank, a pharmacy, and farmers’ markets within 5 minutes. There is an incredible waterfall on the Uvita rive and a bamboo forest just a 20-minute walk away. And a beautiful sandy beach is a quick 5 min drive.


I recommend this place to anyone visiting Uvita and looking for an affordable Airbnb.

Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home
Affordable Living in Costa Rica | Furnished Container Home

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