Panama City on a Budget: A First-Timer's Guide for 2026
Slug: panama-city-budget-travel-guide-2026Pillar: Travel > DestinationsKeyword: Panama City budget travelExcerpt: Panama City costs around $64 a day on a budget in 2026. Here's a real cost breakdown covering hostels, transport, food and when to go.
Panama City runs about $64 a day if you travel on a budget, according to 2026 cost-tracking data — cheaper than most people expect from a capital with a skyline that looks like Miami's. You get a modern city, a rainforest an hour away, and some of the best-value seafood in Central America, all using the US dollar, which makes budgeting straightforward if you're American.
What It Actually Costs Per Day
Budget travelers land around $64 a day covering accommodation, food, local transport, and activities. Mid-range travel runs closer to $191 a day, and luxury tips over $600. For most first-timers who want some comfort without going all-out, the budget-to-mid-range zone — $80-120 a day — covers a private hostel room or a basic hotel, real meals rather than only street food, and a couple of paid activities like the canal tour or a day trip to the rainforest.
Accommodation is where the range is widest. Hostel dorm beds run $8-18 a night, easy to find across Panama City and other popular stops like Boquete and Bocas del Toro. Boutique hotels and nicer suites run $290-400 a night if you want to go the other direction, but that's a luxury-tier spend, not what most budget travelers are paying.
Getting Around Without Overspending
Panama City's Metro is the cheapest way to move around and genuinely easy to use — Line 1 rides cost $0.35, Line 2 rides run $0.49. For trips the Metro doesn't cover, ride-hailing apps like Uber are the better call over yellow street taxis, both for price transparency and safety; a short trip within the city averages around $4.41. Between the Metro and the occasional Uber, you can get through a week in the city without spending much more than $20-30 total on transport.
Eating Well Without Paying Tourist Prices
Where you eat matters more than what you eat, price-wise. In Casco Viejo, the picturesque old-town neighborhood most tourists stick to, a latte runs $5-6 — step just a few blocks outside the tourist zone and the same drink is $1.25-1.50. The fish market has genuinely excellent, genuinely cheap ceviche stands charging around $2, sitting right next to touristy sit-down restaurants charging $8 for a similar dish. Eating at local fondas (small family-run eateries) instead of restaurants aimed at visitors is the single biggest lever for keeping your food budget down — expect $15-25 a day for meals if you mix fondas with the occasional nicer meal.
One Currency Quirk Worth Knowing
Panama uses a dual-currency system: the official Panamanian Balboa and the US dollar function interchangeably, and US dollars are legal tender everywhere, from rural towns to downtown Panama City. If you're coming from the US, this means no currency exchange, no conversion math, and no exchange fees eating into your budget — your dollars work exactly as they do at home.
When to Go for the Best Prices
Traveling during the rainy season, roughly April through November, is noticeably cheaper across accommodation and tours, since most tourists concentrate their visits between December and April when hotel prices climb. Rainy season in Panama doesn't usually mean all-day downpours — it's more commonly a heavy shower for an hour or two, then clear again, so you're trading a modest weather gamble for real savings on lodging.
Our Actual Recommendation for a First Trip
If it's your first time, spend two or three nights in Panama City itself — Casco Viejo for the old-town charm, plus a canal visit — then head out to Boquete in the highlands or Bocas del Toro on the Caribbean coast for a few days each. Trying to see all three in under a week means you'll spend more time in transit than actually enjoying any of them; better to pick two of the three and go deeper.
For more Central and South American destinations on a budget, see our destination guides, and our travel hub for the rest of our trip-planning coverage.
FAQ
How much does a week in Panama City cost on a budget?
At roughly $64 a day for budget travel, a week runs about $450, not including international flights. Staying closer to $80-100 a day gets you more comfort without tipping into mid-range pricing.
What currency does Panama use?
The US dollar is legal tender throughout Panama alongside the Panamanian Balboa, and the two are used interchangeably. If you're American, this means no currency exchange is necessary.
Is Panama City safe for budget travelers?
Panama City is generally considered one of the safer capital cities in Central America for tourists, though standard precautions apply — use Uber over street taxis at night, and stick to well-traveled areas in Casco Viejo after dark.
When is the cheapest time to visit Panama City?
Rainy season, roughly April through November, offers noticeably lower accommodation and tour prices than the busier December-to-April dry season, in exchange for occasional afternoon showers.










