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Market Comparisons → Nicaragua

Nicaragua: Manufacturing, Free Zones & Investment Climate

An objective overview of Nicaragua as a manufacturing destination, drawing from U.S. Department of State Investment Climate Statements and USTR documentation.

Trade Framework: CAFTA

Nicaragua is a signatory to the Dominican Republic–Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR), in force with the United States since April 2006. CAFTA provides duty-free access to the U.S. market for qualifying Nicaraguan manufactured goods, subject to rules of origin requirements. However, the U.S. State Department notes that customs practices in Nicaragua regularly deviate from CAFTA-DR provisions in practice (State Dept. 2024 Investment Climate Statement).

Free Zone Framework

Nicaragua operates a free trade zone regime for export-oriented manufacturing, with established activity in textiles and apparel, auto wire harnesses, tobacco, medical equipment, and call centers. The Foreign Investment Law (Law 344, 2000) permits 100% foreign ownership in most industries. Free zone operations benefit from tax incentives across multiple categories.

Minimum wages in free trade zones are set on a multi-year schedule. In November 2022, authorities established an 8% annual increase for 2023–2024, 7% for 2025, and 6.7% for 2026–2027 (State Dept. 2024).

Significant Investment Risk: Political Environment

The U.S. State Department’s 2024 Investment Climate Statement identifies Nicaragua as a high-risk investment environment. Authorities regularly circumvent national regulations; corruption and lack of transparency affect customs and trade facilitation; and bureaucratic inefficiency is cited as a consistent operational challenge. The current political environment under the Ortega-Murillo administration has significantly increased investor risk since 2018. The U.S. maintains sanctions against Nicaraguan government officials and entities.

Strengths & Limitations

Strengths

  • CAFTA duty-free U.S. market access (in principle)
  • Among the lowest manufacturing labor costs in the hemisphere
  • Established apparel, textile, and wire harness manufacturing base
  • 100% foreign ownership permitted under Law 344
  • Significant tax incentive programs across multiple sectors

Limitations

  • High political risk — authoritarian governance, U.S. sanctions on government officials and entities
  • CAFTA provisions regularly violated in customs practice per State Dept. documentation
  • Corruption and lack of regulatory transparency create unpredictable operating environment
  • Weak rule of law and limited judicial independence
  • Significant reputational and compliance risk for U.S.-connected companies operating under sanctions exposure
  • Infrastructure and logistics gaps relative to Dominican Republic or Costa Rica

Sources: U.S. Department of State 2024 Investment Climate Statement — Nicaragua; USTR CAFTA-DR Documentation.

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