Let's get the uncomfortable part out of the way: Nosara is expensive by Costa Rica standards. It's not Tamarindo-party-hostel expensive and it's not Manuel Antonio tour-bus expensive — it's a different kind of expensive. The yoga-retreat, organic-smoothie, boutique-hotel kind. The kind where a decent dinner for two runs you $60 and a surf lesson costs more than a night in a hostel in San Jose.
But here's the thing — once you know what things actually cost, you can plan for it. And Nosara is absolutely worth the trip at every budget level. We've hosted families who stayed for a week on a tight budget and had an incredible time, and we've hosted groups who spared no expense and still felt like they got great value. The key is knowing what you're working with before you book your flights.
So here's the honest breakdown — every major cost category, with real prices that we've personally verified by, you know, living here.
Accommodation: Where You Stay Determines Everything
Accommodation is the single biggest variable in your Nosara budget. The range is enormous, and where you land on that spectrum shapes the entire cost of your trip.
Budget: Hostels and guesthouses ($20-80/night)
Nosara has a handful of hostels and budget guesthouses, though fewer than you'd find in more backpacker-oriented towns like Tamarindo or Santa Teresa. Dorm beds run $20-45 per night depending on the season. Private rooms at budget spots go for $50-80. They're basic but clean, and most are within walking or biking distance of Playa Guiones.
Mid-range: Hotels and Airbnbs ($100-250/night)
This is the sweet spot for most travelers. A comfortable hotel room or a well-reviewed Airbnb with air conditioning, a pool, and a kitchen will run you $100-250 per night. Having a kitchen is a genuine money-saver — more on that later. There are some truly lovely mid-range options in Nosara, and this tier gives you comfort without the sticker shock.
Luxury: Boutique hotels ($250-500+/night)
Nosara has no shortage of beautiful boutique hotels. Places like Bodhi Tree Yoga Resort, The Harmony Hotel, and The Silvestre offer stunning properties with world-class yoga programs, spa services, farm-to-table restaurants, and the kind of thoughtful design that makes your Instagram followers jealous. Expect to pay $250-500+ per night, and in peak season the top rooms can climb well beyond that.
Villa rentals: The smart play for groups ($300-800+/night)
Here's where the math gets interesting. A private villa that costs $400-600 per night sounds expensive until you realize it sleeps 6-12 people. Split between three couples or two families, suddenly you're paying $65-100 per person per night for a private pool, full kitchen, multiple bedrooms, and more space than any hotel could offer. If you're traveling with a group, a villa is almost always the best value — and the best experience. We wrote a whole post about why villas beat hotels in Costa Rica.
The biggest accommodation hack in Nosara is simple: travel with friends and rent a villa. You get more space, more privacy, a pool, a kitchen, and a lower per-person cost than most mid-range hotels. It's not even close.
Food and Dining: From $6 Casados to $70 Fine Dining
Nosara's food scene is surprisingly good — and surprisingly varied in price. You can eat well for cheap if you know where to look, or you can drop serious money at some genuinely excellent restaurants. Most visitors end up doing a mix of both.
Sodas (local restaurants): $5-10 per meal
Sodas are the backbone of affordable eating in Costa Rica. These small, locally-owned restaurants serve traditional dishes — the star of the menu is always the casado, a plate of rice, beans, salad, plantains, and your choice of protein (chicken, fish, beef, or pork). A casado at a soda runs $6-10. Breakfast plates — gallo pinto with eggs, toast, and coffee — go for $5-8. The food is hearty, authentic, and genuinely delicious. Eating at sodas for lunch is one of the best ways to keep your daily food costs down without sacrificing quality.
Mid-range restaurants: $14-28 per entree
The middle tier of Nosara's restaurant scene is excellent. Places like Burrito Amor, Al Chile, and Il Pepperoni serve food that's well above average in quality, with entrees ranging from $14-28. Add a drink or two and a shared appetizer, and you're looking at roughly $25-45 per person for a full meal. For more on our favorite spots, check out our guide to the best dinner spots in Nosara.
Fine dining: $35-70+ per person
Nosara's high-end restaurants — Coyol, Sendero, Huacas — are genuinely world-class. A full dinner with drinks at these spots will run $35-70+ per person. They're worth it for a special night or two during your trip, but you don't need to eat at this level every evening to have an incredible food experience in Nosara.
Coffee: $3-5
Costa Rica grows some of the best coffee on earth, and Nosara's cafes take it seriously. A good pour-over or latte runs $3-5 at most spots. Expect to spend $4-6 if you add a pastry or breakfast item.
Groceries: Plan for a markup
Grocery shopping in Nosara is doable — there are several small supermarkets and a weekly farmers market — but prices are 20-40% higher than you'd pay in San Jose or the Central Valley. The remote location and limited supply chain means everything costs more. Basics like rice, beans, eggs, and produce are reasonable. Imported items, specialty foods, and anything organic get expensive fast.
Bring sunscreen, bug spray, and your favorite snacks from home. These items are dramatically marked up in Nosara. A bottle of sunscreen that costs $8 at home can easily run $18-25 here. Same goes for insect repellent, kids' snacks, and specialty toiletries. Stuff a few extras in your checked bag — your wallet will thank you.
Activity Costs
Nosara is an activity-driven destination. Surfing, yoga, horseback riding, wildlife tours — there's a lot to do, and most of it isn't free. Here's what the most popular activities cost:
| Activity | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Surf lesson (group) | $55-85/session | Board and rash guard included |
| Multi-day surf package | $200-350 | 3-5 sessions, better per-session rate |
| Yoga drop-in class | $18-30 | Multi-class passes available |
| ATV/quad rental | $70-120/day | Multi-day rates available; see our quad rental guide |
| Horseback riding | $65-95/person | Sunset rides at the beach are unforgettable |
| Zipline (Miss Sky) | $60 adults, $40 kids | One of the longest ziplines in the world |
| Surfboard rental | $10-20/day | Weekly rates much cheaper |
| Golf cart rental | $60-100/day | Fun around-town alternative to a car |
| Kayak/SUP tour | $50-75 | Guided mangrove tours with wildlife |
Activities add up quickly, so it's worth thinking about which ones matter most to you. If surfing is your priority, a multi-day package saves real money compared to booking single sessions. Same goes for yoga — most studios offer weekly passes that bring the per-class cost down significantly.
Transportation
Getting around Nosara requires some form of transportation. The town is spread out across a few kilometers of dirt roads, and while you can walk or bike to some things, a vehicle makes life significantly easier — especially with kids or when heading to different beaches.
Rental car: $50-90/day
A rental SUV with mandatory insurance runs $50-90 per day, depending on the vehicle and season. We've written a full breakdown of renting a car in Costa Rica, including the insurance situation, which companies we trust, and how to save money. A car gives you the most freedom, especially if you want to explore beyond Nosara — day trips to San Juanillo, Playa Barrigona, or Samara are all within reach.
Tuk-tuks: $3-6 per ride
Nosara's tuk-tuks are the local taxi equivalent — small three-wheeled vehicles that zip around town. A ride from Playa Pelada to Playa Guiones costs $3-6 depending on the exact route and time of day. They're convenient, affordable, and everywhere. Just flag one down or ask your hotel to call one. For short around-town trips, tuk-tuks keep your transportation costs low.
Golf cart rental: $60-100/day
Golf carts have become a popular way to get around Nosara, and honestly, they're a blast. They're slower than a car but perfectly adequate for moving between the beaches, restaurants, and town. Kids love them. They won't get you to Barrigona or San Juanillo, but for daily Nosara life, they're a fun and slightly cheaper alternative to a full rental car.
Sample 7-Day Budgets
Here's what a week in Nosara actually looks like at three different spending levels. These are per-person estimates for two people traveling together.
| Category | Budget ($150/day) | Mid-Range ($300/day) | Luxury ($600+/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | $50/night (hostel private room or budget guesthouse) | $175/night (hotel or Airbnb with pool) | $400/night (boutique hotel or private villa) |
| Food | $30/day (sodas + groceries, cook some meals) | $70/day (mix of sodas, mid-range restaurants, some groceries) | $130/day (fine dining, mid-range restaurants, cafes) |
| Activities | $15/day (surfboard rental, free beaches, one or two paid activities) | $40/day (surf lessons, yoga classes, one excursion) | $80/day (private lessons, spa, multiple excursions) |
| Transport | $10/day (tuk-tuks, walking, biking) | $35/day (rental car split between two) | $45/day (rental SUV) |
| Daily Total (for two) | ~$150 | ~$300 | ~$600+ |
| 7-Day Total (for two) | ~$1,050 | ~$2,100 | ~$4,200+ |
A few notes on these numbers. The budget tier is tight but absolutely doable — you're eating local food, staying in simple accommodations, and being selective about paid activities. The mid-range tier is the most common among our guests and offers a comfortable balance of experiences without overspending. The luxury tier is for travelers who want the best of everything and don't mind paying for it.
If you're traveling as a group of four to six and splitting a villa rental, your per-person accommodation costs drop dramatically, often pushing a luxury-level experience into mid-range pricing territory.
Money-Saving Tips
After spending extensive time in Nosara, here are the strategies that make the biggest difference in your overall trip cost:
- Visit during green season (May-November). Accommodation prices drop 30-50% across the board. The weather is still warm, the surfing is often better, the jungle is lush and vibrant, and there are far fewer crowds. Yes, it rains — usually in the afternoon for an hour or two. The mornings are almost always gorgeous. Green season is genuinely underrated.
- Eat at sodas for lunch. A casado at a soda costs $6-10 and is one of the most satisfying meals in Costa Rica. Save the nicer restaurants for dinner when the ambiance matters more. This alone can cut your daily food costs by $20-30 per person.
- Rent a villa and split with friends. A $500/night villa split four ways is $125 per couple — less than a mid-range hotel room, with a private pool, kitchen, and common areas. The math always wins.
- Buy groceries and cook some meals. If your accommodation has a kitchen, use it. The local supermarkets have everything you need for breakfasts, lunches, and the occasional dinner. Cooking half your meals can save $30-50 per person per day compared to eating out every meal.
- Book multi-day surf and yoga packages. Single drop-in sessions are always the most expensive option. If you know you want to surf three or four times, book a package upfront. Same with yoga — weekly passes offer significant savings over individual classes.
- Bring sunscreen, bug spray, and snacks from home. This sounds minor, but the markup on these items in Nosara is remarkable. Sunscreen is essential every day, and buying it locally can cost two to three times what you'd pay at home. Toss a couple of extra bottles in your checked luggage.
- US dollars are accepted everywhere. You don't need to exchange currency before arriving. Most restaurants, shops, and activity providers accept US dollars and credit cards. ATMs in town dispense colones if you need local currency for tuk-tuks or smaller purchases.
Is Nosara Worth the Cost?
We're obviously biased, but the honest answer is yes — with a caveat. Nosara is worth it if you value what it offers: world-class surfing, genuine wellness culture, incredible nature, excellent food, and a pace of life that forces you to slow down. It's not a budget destination and it never pretends to be. But compared to comparable experiences — a week at a boutique resort in Tulum, a surf-and-yoga retreat in Bali, a villa in the Greek Islands — Nosara holds its own on value, especially when you factor in the quality of the experience.
The key is going in with realistic expectations about costs. Don't budget for Guatemala prices and expect Costa Rica quality. Know what things cost, plan accordingly, and you'll have one of the best trips of your life.
Ready to start planning? Check availability at Kembar on our booking page, or reach out on WhatsApp — we're always happy to help you figure out the logistics and make the most of your Nosara budget.