Moving to Costa Rica: Residency, Cost, Health and Remote Work

Is Costa Rica a Realistic Place to Build a New Life? Residency, Cost of Living, Healthcare, and Remote Work Reality

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Moving to Costa Rica can look straightforward from the outside: keep earning from abroad, find a comfortable home and settle into a slower rhythm. In practice, one incorrect assumption about residency, work rights, healthcare, taxes or housing can turn an attractive relocation into an expensive temporary stay.

The real question is not simply whether Costa Rica offers an appealing lifestyle. It is whether the legal category, income source, healthcare plan and location support the life the household actually intends to build. A digital nomad, pension recipient, investor, locally employed professional and family member do not enter under the same rules or receive the same rights.

This guide examines the full decision: lawful stay, lawful work, CCSS and private healthcare, tax exposure, banking, regional costs, infrastructure and first-year financial pressure. The goal is to determine whether moving to Costa Rica can remain practical and financially stable after the initial appeal gives way to everyday reality.

Important: Costa Rican immigration, work, healthcare and tax rules depend on the category, income source, family and individual circumstances and can change. Official sources or qualified advice may be necessary before acting. This article provides general information and does not constitute personalised immigration, legal, tax, medical or financial advice.

Who Costa Rica May Suit—and Who May Find It Less Practical Than Expected

Costa Rica may work well for people with portable income who value nature, smaller communities and a slower rhythm, while accepting that services vary by location. It can be less practical for those expecting cheap coastal housing, easy local employment, immediate permanent residence or seamless infrastructure. Imported food, private school, air-conditioning, a vehicle and international travel can quickly reshape the budget.

Costa Rica may be a stronger fit if…

income remains stable when earned from abroad; the household can choose a location after testing infrastructure; slower routines and regional variation are acceptable; healthcare will be planned through CCSS, private care or both; the move is funded beyond the immigration minimum.

It may be a weaker fit if…

the plan depends on easy local salaried work; coastal rent must be inexpensive; public transport must solve every journey; bureaucracy must be fast and predictable; nearly all savings would be spent on arrival.

Costa Rica in One Practical Snapshot

AreaPractical reading
ResidencySeveral categories exist, each with a different legal basis
Work rightsDepend on the category and explicit authorisation
Remote workDigital-nomad status is limited to qualifying foreign remote services
HealthcareCCSS and private care solve different needs
HousingCosts vary sharply with region, access and tourism pressure
TaxIncome source, activity and tax residence must be separated
InfrastructureInternet, roads, power and transport must be checked by address
Long-term stabilityDepends on renewals, income continuity and lawful category progression

Moving to Costa Rica Starts With the Legal Reason for Staying

Tourist admission, digital-nomad stay, temporary residence and permanent residence are not interchangeable. Start with the real reason for remaining — not the easiest headline.

SituationCategory to researchMain evidenceCentral caution
Foreign pension incomeTemporary residence as pensionadoQualifying lifetime pensionResidence does not authorise every form of work
Stable non-employment incomeTemporary residence as rentistaQualifying income for the required periodEvidence and renewal conditions must remain valid
Qualifying investmentTemporary residence as investorCurrent minimum qualifying investmentInvestment status is not local work permission
Remote services for foreign clients or employerDigital-nomad stayForeign income and medical insuranceOrdinary Costa Rican employment is outside the category
Skilled or specialised local workEmployment-related temporary categoryEmployer, role and DGME authorisationA job offer alone may not complete the process
Spouse of a Costa Rican citizenTemporary residence based on marriageValid qualifying marriage and current DGME evidenceThis is distinct from direct permanent-residence routes for specified first-degree relatives
Parent, qualifying child or qualifying sibling of a Costa Rican citizenPermanent-residence route to researchRelationship within the categories listed in Article 78Not every extended-family relationship qualifies
Three years of qualifying temporary residencePermanent-residence applicationContinuous qualifying residenceEligibility to apply is not automatic approval

For more information, explore Costa Rica’s residency guidance:

Explore Costa Rica Residency Options

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Pensionado, Rentista and Investor Residence

Pensionado

Article 81 of Law 8764 requires a permanent foreign pension of at least USD 1,000 per month. Evidence must come from the responsible institution, while foreign civil documents must meet apostille or legalisation and translation rules.

A principal applicant may include a spouse and eligible dependants. This is renewable temporary residence, with continued qualification and CCSS evidence where required. It does not create unrestricted permission for local employment or labour in a Costa Rican business.

Rentista

Article 82 requires stable income of at least USD 2,500 per month, supported for at least two years through acceptable financial evidence. The amount may cover the principal applicant, spouse and eligible children, but each person needs the required identity and relationship documents.

Rentista is renewable temporary residence. Income evidence, DIMEX and CCSS must remain current, and the category does not automatically permit local employment or unrestricted self-employment.

Investor

The Regulation to Law 9996 sets a minimum qualifying investment of USD 150,000, or its CRC equivalent at the applicable Banco Central selling rate. Qualifying forms include specified property or registrable assets, securities, approved projects, regulated venture-capital funds and sustainable-tourism infrastructure. Evidence varies by asset and the investment must be maintained.

Investor status is renewable temporary residence. It does not prove adequate liquid income, and owning a company or property does not authorise day-to-day labour without the required permission.

Current Incentives Require Immediate Verification

Law 9996 conditionally offers relief for specified household goods, vehicles and property transactions. It took effect on 14 July 2021 and allows eligible applicants to opt into Article 5 benefits during its first five years; granted benefits may continue for ten years. At the 27 June 2026 review date, that window appeared due to end on 14 July 2026. The immigration threshold remains separate, so confirm current DGME and Hacienda treatment before relying on incentives.

Work Rights: Residence and Permission to Work Are Not the Same

Article 80 of Law 8764 limits temporary residents to activities authorised by DGME. Dependants may need prior authorisation. Employment routes can be tied to the employer, role, qualifications and immigration resolution; a job offer alone is not a work permit. Permanent residents generally have broader access, subject to labour, licensing and tax rules.

Tourist status should not be treated as a long-term work solution. Likewise, pensionado, rentista or investor residence should not be presented as blanket permission for local salaried work.

ActivityWhat must be checked
Local salaried employmentEmployer process, category and DGME authorisation
Costa Rican self-employmentCategory, work permission, tax registration and CCSS
Remote work for a foreign companyDigital-nomad status or another lawful basis consistent with the activity
Remote work for Costa Rican clientsLocal-source work, immigration authority and tax consequences
Spouse or dependant workSeparate permission where required
Business ownershipOwnership does not automatically equal permission to work

Digital Nomad Reality: A Temporary International-Work Category

What the Category Is

Law 10008 creates a non-resident subcategory of stay for remote services supplied to a person or entity abroad and paid from abroad. It is neither ordinary temporary residence nor unrestricted Costa Rican work permission.

Current Income and Family Rule

As of 27 June 2026, the legal minimum is USD 3,000 per month for the principal applicant, or USD 4,000 per month when applying with a qualifying family group. The family threshold may combine qualifying family income. Evidence must show stable or average monthly income over the preceding year that can continue abroad.

Duration and Renewal

The status lasts up to one year and may be renewed once for another year. Renewal requires at least 180 days in Costa Rica during the original period. A later category change may be possible, but this stay is not a direct path to permanent residence.

Medical Insurance

Every included family member needs full-period medical insurance with at least USD 50,000 in illness coverage for Costa Rica. A qualifying Costa Rican or international policy may be used; verify dates, exclusions and insurer status on the SUGESE authorised insurers register.

Tax and Banking Treatment

Law 10008 exempts the authorised beneficiary’s qualifying foreign remote income from Costa Rican profits tax, treats it as non-Costa Rican-source and excludes habitual tax residence for the authorised period. The benefit does not automatically extend to family members.

A beneficiary may request a national-system savings account, but approval remains subject to identity, tax-residency, source-of-funds and anti-money-laundering checks.

The Local-Work Boundary

The category does not permit paid services outside its international-remote scope. A Costa Rican employer or local clients can change the immigration and tax analysis; mischaracterisation can trigger cancellation and recovery of benefits.

From Temporary to Permanent Residence

After three consecutive years of qualifying temporary residence, Law 8764 permits an application for permanent residence. The person may apply; approval is not automatic.

A progression file should track the qualifying category, timely renewals, DIMEX validity, absences, CCSS compliance, current identity documents and the change-of-category rules in force at filing.

Digital-nomad time should not be assumed to count because it is a non-resident stay. Separate direct routes may exist for specified relatives of Costa Rican citizens. Permanent residence is not citizenship.

Healthcare: CCSS and Private Care Solve Different Problems

CCSS and Resident Obligations

CCSS is the public social-security and healthcare system. Where applicable, temporary residents must remain continuously affiliated and prove coverage at renewal. Employees generally enter through payroll; independent workers may need registration and income assessment; others may use an applicable voluntary or migrant mechanism. CCSS determines classification and contribution, so there is no responsible universal monthly figure.

What Public Coverage Can Provide

Properly registered users may access primary care, referrals, hospitals, maternity, prevention and medicines within system rules. It is not “free healthcare”: contributions, eligibility and procedures matter. The local health area or EBAIS commonly starts scheduled care; specialist access and waiting time vary by service and location.

Private Healthcare

Private care may offer faster access through direct payment, local insurance or international cover. It does not replace mandatory CCSS affiliation. Review inpatient, outpatient and emergency care; specialists and prescriptions; maternity, dental and mental health; pre-existing conditions; networks, deductibles and limits; evacuation; dependant coverage; and continuity after a job or status change.

The SUGESE public register can be used to verify whether a Costa Rican insurer is authorised.

Taxes: Territorial Does Not Mean “No Tax Questions”

Source-Based Taxation

Costa Rica taxes profits from Costa Rican-source activities under the Income Tax Law (Law 7092). The law considers where services are performed, assets sit, capital is invested and rights are used — not only the payer or bank location. Outside the digital-nomad regime, “the client is foreign” may be incomplete analysis.

Immigration Residence Versus Tax Residence

A DIMEX or immigration category does not settle tax residence. Law 9996 says investors, rentistas and pensionados are not automatically tax residents merely because of that status. Home-country rules, treaties, presence and economic facts may still matter.

The digital-nomad law is a specific exception for the authorised beneficiary and qualifying remote income. It should not be extended by analogy to local clients, unrelated income, an accompanying spouse or a period after the status ends.

Local Employment and Self-Employment

Local employment may involve withholding and CCSS. Local independent or business activity may require TRIBU-CR registration, invoicing, VAT analysis, income-tax filings and CCSS. Cross-border advice becomes more valuable with foreign companies, mixed clients, pensions, stock compensation, dual residence or permanent-establishment risk.

Banking and Daily Financial Infrastructure

Account opening depends on bank policy, passport or DIMEX, address, income, tax-residency data and source of funds. A right to request an account is not approval. Check CRC and USD access, IBAN and SINPE, payment compatibility, wire and card fees, authentication, maintenance charges, exchange spread and a backup international account.

Cost of Living: Costa Rica Is Not One Price Level

Central Valley

The Central Valley concentrates major hospitals, offices and services, but traffic and neighbourhood rents vary across San José, Escazú, Santa Ana, Heredia, Alajuela and Cartago.

Coastal and Tourism Markets

Guanacaste and the Central and Southern Pacific can add seasonal rent pressure, air-conditioning, vehicle dependence and address-specific water or road concerns.

Smaller Cities and Rural Areas

These areas may lower rent while reducing specialist care, transport and internet choice. Lower rent is not automatically lower total cost.

Local Budget Versus Expatriate Budget

INEC household expenditure data are national context, not an expatriate budget. Private health, school, vehicles and imported consumption can raise spending. May 2026 CPI was +0.27% monthly and -0.97% year on year, but that does not reveal a particular town’s rent.

Housing: The Monthly Rent Is Only the First Number

Budget for temporary lodging, a guarantee, rent, utilities, installation, furniture, parking and air-conditioning. The contract should identify currency, payment evidence, maintenance, utilities, termination and adjustment rules.

Costa Rica’s tenancy law (Law 7527) says residential tenants cannot be required to pay more than one month in advance or give a guarantee above one month’s rent. The contract should still define deductions, inspection evidence, return procedure and payment traceability.

Rental Due-Diligence Checklist

  • Verify the owner or authorised landlord
  • Use a written contract and traceable payment
  • Confirm rent currency and adjustment provisions
  • Identify utilities, maintenance and deposit terms
  • Test internet at the exact address
  • Check water reliability, parking and road access
  • Inspect flood, landslide and drainage exposure using CNE hazard maps
  • Record condition and inventory before occupation
  • Assess commute, security and early-exit terms

Remote Work Reality Beyond the Immigration Category

Internet

SUTEL’s 2025 internet quality report found stronger tested results in the Central Valley than in parts of Guanacaste, Puntarenas and Limón, but no regional result guarantees an address. Confirm the connection, uptime, mobile backup and coworking options before signing a lease.

Electricity and Weather

IMN climate regions and CNE hazard maps show that weather, flood and landslide exposure vary locally. Depending on the property, continuity may require surge protection, a UPS, mobile data, water storage or a generator.

Time Zones and Business Continuity

Test client hours against foreign daylight-saving changes and plan for banking, travel and document interruptions.

Local Work Temptation

Convenient local clients may invalidate digital-nomad assumptions by changing the immigration and tax character of the work.

The First-Year Budget Has Five Layers

LayerExamplesMain risk
Before departureDocuments, apostilles, application, insurance, flightsPaid before local stability
ArrivalTemporary stay, deposit, transport, setupConcentrated cash demand
MonthlyRent, food, health, internet, transportLocation changes the result
Annual or irregularRenewal, travel, vehicle, dental, schoolOmitted from simple budgets
EmergencyIncome loss, medical gap, relocation, return flightStatus and income can fail together

Pre-Departure Costs

Use dated official fees and quotes. Record currency, validity, household member and refundability.

ItemSolo planningCouple planningFamily planningEvidence to retain
Immigration and civil documentsPrice one full file: passport, certificates, criminal record, apostilles, translations and government chargesDuplicate person-specific documents and relationship evidenceAdd every dependant’s identity, relationship and school documentsDGME checklist, issuing authority receipts and translator quote
Insurance or healthObtain one dated policy or CCSS estimateQuote both adults separately where necessaryQuote every member and check family exclusionsPolicy schedule, coverage dates and SUGESE register where relevant
Flights and baggageOne dated itineraryTwo dated itinerariesFlexible fares, baggage and seating needsAirline fare and refund conditions
Temporary accommodationQuote a realistic search periodAllow for a larger unitAllow for location, school and bedroom constraintsWritten booking terms and cancellation policy
Pet or school preparationAdd only if applicableAdd only if applicableOften requires several separate deposits and recordsCarrier, veterinary, school and authority documents
Currency transferRecord fee and exchange spreadModel larger arrival transferModel staged transfers and backup accessProvider disclosure and BCCR reference rate

Arrival-Month Costs

Arrival itemOne-off?Refundable?Recurring consequence
Temporary accommodationYesNoA delayed search extends the cost
First month’s rentYes at move-inNoStarts the normal housing cycle
Rental guarantee or depositUsuallyConditionalCash remains unavailable until properly returned
Furniture and setupUsuallyNoReplacement and maintenance
Vehicle setupMaybeLimitedFuel, insurance, repairs and annual charges
Internet backupMaybeNoSecondary monthly service
Health coverageMaybeNoCCSS contribution or insurance premium
Bank and payment setupMaybeUsually noTransfer, card or account charges may continue
School or childcareMaybeDependsRecurring tuition and transport

Also allow for SIMs, utility activation, health registration, medicines, search transport and overlapping accommodation.

Recurring Monthly Costs

CategorySolo methodCouple methodFamily methodEvidence
HousingUse a signed or current long-term quotePrice the required number of roomsInclude school and transport location constraintsContract and included services
Utilities and internetAddress estimate plus backup connectionAdjust for occupancy and working hoursInclude cooling, laundry and device useProvider quote and prior bills where available
Food and household goodsRecord a trial-month basketTest the actual shared basketInclude school meals and imported itemsReceipts, not a national average
Transport and vehiclePrice the real routeAdd shared or separate commutingInclude school, childcare and medical tripsTransit fares, fuel, parking, insurance and repairs
Health and medicationCCSS or policy plus routine medicinesPrice both adultsPrice every member and recurring treatmentCCSS assessment, policy schedule and pharmacy record
School or childcareAdd only if applicableAdd only if applicableOften a major fixed costWritten tuition, registration and transport schedule
Documentation and renewalBuild a monthly reserveReserve for two filesReserve for every dependantDGME and civil-document cycle
International travel reserveFund essential return travelPrice two emergency ticketsPrice household emergency travelDated fare range and passport validity
Emergency reserveKeep separate from move-in cashIncrease for shared income riskIncrease for dependants and housing rigidityCash accessible without cancelling the move plan

Build Three First-Year Scenarios

Change assumptions rather than pretending one national figure is accurate.

Scenario 1 — Remote Worker in the Central Valley

Model a lawful remote-work basis, modest apartment, verified internet, mobile backup, private insurance and initially no car. Keep income comfortably above the threshold after foreign tax, insurance and travel.

Scenario 2 — Household Building Residence

Model temporary residence, CCSS, larger housing, a vehicle, school or childcare, renewals and longer setup. Quote every dependant separately.

Scenario 3 — Stress Case

Assume income interruption, application delay, extra lodging, medical cost, vehicle repair, exchange loss and an emergency flight. None should force unauthorised work.

Budget phaseRemote soloHouseholdStress case
Before departureVerified base costsBase plus dependant documentsBase plus contingency
Arrival monthRent setup, health, transportLarger setup, car, schoolLonger temporary stay
Months 2–3Stabilisation spendingHousehold stabilisationIncome or application delay
Months 4–12Normal recurring budgetRecurring family budgetMedical, vehicle or relocation shock
Emergency reserveKept separateLarger household bufferFunds several simultaneous failures
Total first-year cash needSum dated quotesSum household quotesBase plus quantified shocks

Costs People Commonly Forget

Common omissions include apostilles, translations, renewals, CCSS assessment issues or arrears, health exclusions, medicines, dental care, annual vehicle charges, repairs, air-conditioning, water storage, backup internet, duplicate lodging, school registration, imported goods, currency spread, pets, storm or flood damage, relocation between regions and emergency travel.

What Could Break the Plan?

The plan is fragile when tourist status substitutes for work permission, income barely meets a threshold, local clients are added without review, CCSS is ignored, insurance excludes the main risk or vacation rent becomes the benchmark. Other warnings: assuming instant banking, omitting the car, skipping address-level internet tests, assuming automatic permanent residence or spending emergency cash on deposits.

Red Flags in Costa Rica Relocation Offers

Reject claims of guaranteed residence, tourist work rights, unrestricted local clients, automatic status from any property purchase, guaranteed PR, “free” CCSS, guaranteed accounts, cash-only deposits, all-inclusive insurance, fake investment certificates, unverified landlord authority or false income evidence. A legitimate adviser should identify the legal basis, evidence, limits, fees and credentials without asking for misstatements.

When Professional Advice May Be Worth the Cost

Advice may be worthwhile for unclear work rights, local clients, family routes, overstays, investment structures or PR timing; cross-border companies, pensions or dual residence; chronic illness or CCSS classification; and large leases, rural access or uncertain landlord authority.

A Realistic Costa Rica Decision Matrix

Decision areaStronger foundationHigher risk
Legal statusCorrect category for the real activityTourist or wrong-category assumption
IncomeStable and comfortably above requirementsBarely reaches the minimum
WorkForeign remote or authorised local workUnauthorised local activity
HealthcareCCSS and private plan verified“Free healthcare” assumption
HousingWritten contract and tested locationVacation pricing or cash-only arrangement
InfrastructureAddress-level internet and backupGeneral regional claim
TaxSource and residence reviewedTerritoriality treated as total exemption
Long termRenewals and progression trackedAutomatic-PR assumption
FinancesDeposits and emergencies fundedAll savings spent on arrival

Five Questions Before Committing

  1. Which legal category matches the real reason for living and working in Costa Rica?
  2. Does that category authorise the intended local or remote activity?
  3. How will every household member access CCSS, private care or required insurance?
  4. Does the budget reflect the actual region, transport needs and infrastructure?
  5. Can the household survive an income interruption, application delay or forced move?

Costa Rica Can Be Realistic, but Not Because the Lifestyle Looks Simple

Costa Rica can support a stable new life when the category matches the activity, income is resilient, healthcare is arranged, tax source is understood and the budget reflects the actual location. The sustainable version is a documented plan with lawful work, verified infrastructure and cash for delays.

Before moving to Costa Rica, confirm DGME requirements, CCSS status, insurance wording, tax treatment and property conditions. Preparing documents, reviewing contracts and preserving an emergency exit separates a durable relocation from a fragile lifestyle experiment.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreigner live permanently in Costa Rica?

Yes, when the person qualifies for and receives permanent residence. Some close relatives of Costa Rican citizens may qualify through direct routes, while qualifying temporary residents may apply after three consecutive years. Approval is not automatic.

What are the main temporary-residence categories?

Common categories include pensionado, rentista, investor, specified employment or specialised-professional routes, and family-based categories. Eligibility, documents and work rights differ.

How much income is required for rentista or pensionado residence?

As reviewed on 27 June 2026, the pensionado minimum is a lifetime pension of USD 1,000 per month. Rentista requires at least USD 2,500 per month for no less than two years, with acceptable evidence. Verify current DGME requirements before filing.

How much investment is required for investor residence?

The current Regulation to Law 9996 sets USD 150,000 for qualifying investor-residence evidence. The separate five-year window for opting into Article 5 tax incentives was approaching its apparent end on 14 July 2026 at the review date, so DGME and Hacienda should be checked before filing or claiming incentives.

Can a temporary resident work in Costa Rica?

Only in remunerated or lucrative activities authorised by DGME for that category. Temporary residence alone is not a universal work permit.

Can a digital nomad work for a Costa Rican company?

Not under the ordinary scope of the digital-nomad category. Law 10008 authorises international remote services for a person or entity abroad, not unrestricted local employment.

What are the current digital-nomad income requirements?

The law requires USD 3,000 per month for the principal applicant or USD 4,000 per month when qualifying family members are included.

How long does the digital-nomad status last?

It may be granted for up to one year and renewed once for up to one additional year. Renewal requires at least 180 days in Costa Rica during the initial authorised period.

Does digital-nomad status lead directly to permanent residence?

No. It is a non-resident subcategory of stay. A later category change may be possible if the person independently qualifies.

Can a temporary resident apply for permanent residence after three years?

A person who has held qualifying temporary residence for three consecutive years may apply under current law. Continuity, renewals, CCSS and other requirements still matter, and approval is not automatic.

Is healthcare free in Costa Rica?

No. CCSS is contribution-based and requires eligibility and registration. Private care may involve premiums or direct payment.

Must temporary residents join the CCSS?

Generally, temporary residents must maintain continuous CCSS affiliation where applicable and prove it for renewal, subject to regulatory exceptions and their specific classification.

Do digital nomads need private health insurance?

They need a qualifying medical policy covering the full authorised stay, with at least USD 50,000 in medical-expense coverage for illness in Costa Rica. Every included dependant must be covered.

Is foreign income tax-free in Costa Rica?

Not as a universal rule. The digital-nomad law gives specific treatment to the authorised beneficiary’s qualifying foreign remote income. Other income requires source, activity, residence and cross-border analysis.

Can a foreigner open a Costa Rican bank account?

Potentially, but approval is bank-specific and subject to identity, source-of-funds, tax-residency and AML/KYC checks. Digital nomads have statutory access to request a savings account, not guaranteed approval. The SUGEF CICAC system provides identity and KYC context used in the process.

Is Costa Rica still affordable?

It can be manageable for some households and expensive for others. Region, housing standard, vehicle use, private healthcare, school, imported consumption and travel determine more than a national average.

Is the coast cheaper than San José?

Not necessarily. Tourism demand, air-conditioning, vehicle dependence, water or road constraints and limited long-term inventory can make some coastal locations more expensive.

How much money is needed for the first year?

There is no responsible universal figure. Add verified pre-departure costs, arrival cash, twelve months of region-specific expenses, annual obligations and a separate emergency reserve. Build solo, household and stress scenarios.

Published on: 27 de June de 2026

Sofia Lopez

Sofia Lopez

Sofia Lopez has spent years researching international mobility, work visa pathways, and life abroad across Europe, North America, and Oceania. With a background in business administration and a personal interest in making complex immigration and employment information more accessible, she founded SegueAsDicas.com as a practical resource for those planning to work, study, or relocate internationally. Her guides are built on official sources and real procedural research — not generic advice. When she is not writing, Sofia enjoys travelling, exploring new cultures, and a quiet moment with a good book.