Administrative divisions of Panama

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The Republic of Panama is a unitary state according to its political constitution, which is territorially organized into provinces, districts, corregimientos, and special regimes. [1] [2]

Contents

As of December 4, 2020, the political-administrative division of the Republic of Panama comprises 10 provinces, [3] 81 districts (or municipalities), 6 indigenous comarcas, and 702 corregimientos. [4] [2]

Administrative divisions

Provinces

The province is the largest political division into which the territory of the Panamanian State is divided, composed of legally established districts. [1]

To create a province, the following requirements must be met: [1]

Each province has a governor freely appointed and removed by the Executive Branch, who acts as its representative within the province. Each governor also has a deputy appointed by the Executive Branch.

Each province has a provincial council, composed of all the corregimiento representatives of the respective province.

Districts

The district is the political-administrative division of the territory of the province under the jurisdiction of a municipality, composed of corregimientos over which the municipal government exercises authority. [1]

The Political Constitution of Panama recognizes the municipality as the autonomous political organization of the community established in a district. It is considered the fundamental entity of the political-administrative division of the State, with its own democratic and autonomous government. It is responsible for providing public services and constructing public works as determined by law, ordering the development of its territory, promoting citizen participation, as well as the social and cultural improvement of its inhabitants, and fulfilling other functions assigned to it by the Constitution and the law.

To create a district, the following requirements must be met: [1]

Regarding authorities, each district has a mayor, who is the head of the municipal administration, and a deputy mayor, both elected by direct popular vote for a five-year term.

Each district has a governing body called the municipal council, composed of all the corregimiento representatives elected within the district.

Corregimientos

Corregimientos constitute territorial jurisdictions that form part of a district to which they legally belong. [1]

To create a corregimiento, the following requirements must be met:

In the case of high-density urban corregimientos, the new proposal for the creation of a corregimiento must have a minimum population of 20,000 inhabitants and a territorial extension approximately equal to that from which it is segregated.

Corregimientos may also be created with a smaller population base for reasons of territorial extension, poverty levels, and difficult accessibility.

Each corregimiento is administered by a representative elected by direct popular vote for a five-year term. Corregimiento representatives may be re-elected indefinitely.

Special regimes

Indigenous comarcas

Law 65 of 2015 establishes that, for the creation of special regimes, the requirements set forth in the Constitution and the law must be observed.

The first special regime to be created was the comarca of San Blas (now Guna Yala) through Law 16 of December 19, 1953. This was followed by Emberá-Wounaan (Law 22 of November 8, 1983), Madugandí (Law 24 of January 12, 1996), Ngäbe-Buglé (Law 10 of March 7, 1997), Wargandí (Law 34 of July 25, 2000), [5] and Naso Tjër Di (Law 188 of December 4, 2020). [6]

Unofficial divisions

In addition to the political-administrative divisions recognized by the State, Panama has territorial denominations in common use that are not part of the official territorial organization and lack legal or administrative status.

Barrios (Neighborhoods)

In Panama, a barrio is an informal designation used to refer to a local area or neighborhood. It does not constitute an official administrative division and is not part of the country’s territorial hierarchy. [7]

Barrios are usually smaller than a corregimiento, which is the smallest legally recognized political-administrative unit. A single corregimiento may contain several neighborhoods, whose boundaries are not officially defined and may vary according to local usage.

Although they are not official, neighborhoods—especially in Panama City—are in many cases better known and more commonly used in daily life than the names of the corresponding corregimientos, and are commonly used in addresses, geographic references, and social contexts.

Some well-known neighborhoods of Panama City include El Cangrejo, Punta Paitilla, Punta Pacifica, and Costa del Este.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Ley N° 65 de 22 de octubre de 2015 que desarrolla normas para la creación y organización territorial del Estado Panameño" (PDF). Asamblea Nacional de Panamá . Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  2. 1 2 "Superficie, población y densidad de población en la República, según provincia, comarca indígena, distrito y corregimiento: Censos de 2000, 2010 y 2023" (PDF). Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censo (INEC) . Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  3. "Ley Nº119 del 30 de diciembre de 2013: Que crea la provincia de Panamá Oeste, segregada de la provincia de Panamá" (PDF). Gaceta Oficial de Panamá . Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  4. "Monitoreo legislativo: creación de 4 distritos y 26 nuevos corregimientos" (PDF). Asamblea Nacional de Panamá . Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  5. "La organización territorial de Panamá: Particularidades del régimen provincial y municipal" (PDF). Asamblea Legislativa de la República de Panamá . Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  6. Cedida, Ministerio de Seguridad |. "Naso Tjër Di: Panamá convierte el último reino indígena de América en comarca". www.laestrella.com.pa (in Spanish). Retrieved 2026-01-04.
  7. "¿Cómo Se Definen Los Barrios En Panamá? | Casasplus". casas.plus. Retrieved 2026-01-04.