Panama’s Ministry of Security announced a stunning 99% drop in irregular migration through the Darién Jungle as of March 2025.
This treacherous route, connecting Colombia to Panama, once saw 520,000 migrants cross in 2023, chasing dreams of reaching the United States. Now, daily crossings average just 14, a stark shift shaking up regional dynamics.
The Darién Gap, a 575,000-hectare swampy jungle, long served as a perilous path for Venezuelans, Colombians, and others fleeing hardship.
Criminal networks cashed in, earning $820 million in 2023, while Panama spent $60 million yearly on aid. By February 2025, arrivals cratered to 4,849 monthly, prompting camp closures.
A reverse migration strategy drives this change, with Panama, Costa Rica, and the U.S. teaming up to deport migrants southward. Of 299 deportees from the U.S., 189 chose voluntary return, 107 got humanitarian permits, and three await flights.
Darién Jungle Migration Plummets 99% Amid Regional Crackdown. (Photo Internet reproduction)
Since starting, 4,337 returned, mostly Venezuelans (4,108), alongside Colombians (140) and Peruvians (29). Panama ramps up deportations with U.S. funding—$6 million since July 2024—flying out 1,500 migrants last year.
Central American Migration Shift
Barbed wire and patrols now choke the jungle, while Costa Rica tightens its border. Analysts link the drop to fears of U.S. President Trump’s deportation plans, slashing the route’s appeal.
Numbers tell a grim backstory: 55 died crossing in 2024, and 180 children were abandoned. Crossings hit 80,000 monthly in 2023, but December 2024 saw just 4,849. Businesses watch closely as trafficking profits dry up and Panama’s aid costs shrink.
Vice Minister Luis Felipe Icaza met Costa Rica’s Mario Zamora Cordero on March 23 to review progress. Venezuela’s refusal to accept returnees complicates efforts, leaving many stranded.
Experts warn deterrence masks deeper issues—poverty and violence still push people to move. This plunge reshapes Central America’s migration landscape, easing Panama’s burden but raising questions about displaced migrants.
Companies eye reduced border strain, yet the root causes simmer unresolved. The Darién, once a bustling gauntlet, now stands quiet, its future uncertain.