Panama

State Media Monitor · Country Profile
Panama
A small state footprint in a pluralistic media market
1 state outlet mapped · State-Controlled (SC)
Mapped outlets
One state outlet: SERTV, the state public broadcaster (SC). No ISFM or ISF outlets. The rest of the market is privately owned
The state outlet
SERTV: state TV + SERTV Deportes; radios Nacional FM, Crisol FM, Radio Nacional AM; est. by Law No. 58 of 2005
Why SC
Board chaired by the Minister of Culture; director appointed by the Executive & ratified by the legislature; no binding editorial firewall
Private market
Elite-owned, Panama City-concentrated: papers La Prensa, Panamá América, Crítica; TV networks TVN and Medcom
Main pressures
Not ownership capture but the legal system (frequent defamation suits) and government advertising leverage over online media
Press freedom
RSF 2026: 65th / 180, score 62.14 (mid-table); down 12 places from 53rd in 2025; journalists physically safe
Press freedom · RSF 2026 World Press Freedom Index
Panama: mid-table, under legal pressure
World rank out of 180. Lower rank = less press freedom. Panama sits in the upper-middle of the regional field; nearby countries shown for comparison.
Rank / 180 · longer bar = lower rank (worse)
Costa Rica
38 · satisfactory
Panama
65 · problematic
Mexico
122 · difficult
Honduras
132 · difficult
El Salvador
143 · very serious
Nicaragua
168 · very serious
Panama ranks 65th of 180 with a score of 62.14, in RSF’s “problematic” band and close to the United States (64th). It fell 12 places from 53rd in 2025; numerically the drop was most visible in the economic and social indicators, while safety stayed strong (87.71) and the legal score was little changed. The qualitative pressures are frequent defamation suits against journalists and government advertising leverage over online media; physical attacks are rare. Costa Rica (38th) leads the region.

Panama is one of the clearest counterpoints in the Central American mapping. Its media system is dominated by privately owned commercial outlets rather than by the state, and State Media Monitor maps a single state outlet in the country: the Sistema Estatal de Radio y Televisión (SERTV), the state public broadcaster, classified State-Controlled (SC). The state’s footprint in the media is therefore narrow, and the principal pressures on Panamanian journalism come not from ownership capture but from the legal system and from the economics of the advertising market.

This makes Panama the near-inverse of the region’s captured systems. Where a country such as Nicaragua has eliminated independent media and folded every outlet into a state-party apparatus, Panama has a competitive private press and a comparatively open landscape, within which a single government-run broadcaster operates without an enforceable guarantee of independence. The mapping question in Panama is not how a captured system is organised, but why the one state outlet falls short of being an independent public-service broadcaster.

Panama’s main media are privately owned, historically by families from the country’s economic elite, and concentrated in Panama City. The leading newspapers include La Prensa, Panamá América and Crítica, and the principal private television networks are TVN and the Medcom group’s channels. Given the country’s position as a hub between North and South America and its role as an international financial centre, it functions as a significant regional information market. This private, commercially driven structure is the dominant feature of the Panamanian media system, and it is the context in which the single state broadcaster operates.

SERTV is Panama’s state public broadcaster, operating the SERTV television service, the SERTV Deportes sports channel launched in 2025, and public radio services including Nacional FM, Crisol FM and Radio Nacional AM. It was established by Law No. 58 of 2005 as a public-law entity with a mandate framed around independence, impartiality and pluralism.

It is classified State-Controlled rather than as an independently managed public-service broadcaster because its governance and leadership are structurally tied to the state while its public-service principles are not backed by an enforceable editorial firewall. Law No. 58 of 2005 gives SERTV legal personality, its own assets and internal autonomy, and states that it should operate according to principles of independence, impartiality, pluralism, transparency and inclusion. In practice, however, the Director General and deputy directors are appointed by the Executive and ratified by the National Assembly, and the current Consejo Directivo is chaired by the Minister of Culture and composed largely of state officials and political appointees. This is a different kind of state control from the propaganda outlets seen elsewhere in the region: it is control through governance and appointment within an otherwise pluralistic system, rather than through the wholesale capture of the media space.

The real constraints on Panamanian journalism lie outside the question of state ownership. According to press-freedom monitors, the main threat is the legal system: journalists who criticise government policy or report on corruption, particularly on international financial scandals, are frequently targeted with defamation suits that often result in financial penalties, and legal actions have sought to have courts order the seizure of journalists’ assets and salaries to satisfy damages awarded to politicians. This litigation risk is a significant driver of self-censorship.

The second pressure is economic. Panama’s media market is open and competitive, but traditional outlets have cut staff amid financial strain, and the survival of many newer online outlets depends on government advertising revenue. The government’s discretionary allocation of advertising contracts is understood to influence coverage, giving the state an indirect lever over ostensibly independent media without any change in ownership. Physical safety, by contrast, is not the primary concern: attacks on journalists are rare, and Panama is considered a relatively safe environment for the profession.

In the 2026 Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index, Panama ranked 65th of 180 with a score of 62.14, down from 53rd in 2025. The fall should be read alongside RSF’s qualitative assessment: Panama remains relatively safe for journalists, with physical attacks described as rare, but the media environment is constrained by frequent defamation suits, financial penalties, pressure through government advertising and the dependence of many online outlets on public advertising revenue. Numerically, the 2025-2026 decline was most visible in the economic and social indicators, while the safety indicator remained comparatively strong.

This places Panama in the upper-middle of the regional field, far above the captured systems: within Central America it sits below Costa Rica, the regional leader, but well above El Salvador and Nicaragua, and its overall score is close to that of the United States. Its position reflects a functioning democratic media market under real but non-authoritarian pressure, rather than a state-dominated one.

State Media Monitor maps one state outlet in Panama, SERTV, classified State-Controlled (SC), unchanged for 2026. There are no outlets classified Independent State-Funded and State-Managed (ISFM) or Independent State-Funded (ISF): the single state broadcaster falls on the controlled side of the line because it lacks an enforceable guarantee of editorial independence, while the rest of the media system is privately owned and outside the scope of state-media mapping.

Media landscape · Panama 2026
One state outlet, a private market around it
Unlike the region’s captured systems, Panama’s media are mostly privately owned. SMM maps a single state outlet; the rest lies outside the state-media field.
State-mapped
STATE-CONTROLLED (SC)
SERTV
State public broadcaster: TV, SERTV Deportes, and radios Nacional FM, Crisol FM & Radio Nacional AM. Government-appointed board & leadership; no binding editorial firewall.
Privately owned · not state-media mapped
Newspapers
La Prensa · Panamá América · Crítica
Television
TVN · Medcom group networks
Ownership
Historically held by families from Panama’s economic elite; concentrated in Panama City
Main pressures here are legal (defamation suits) and economic (government advertising), not ownership capture.
No ISFM or ISF outlets. Panama’s single state broadcaster falls on the State-Controlled side of the line because it lacks an enforceable editorial-independence guarantee; the wider private market sits outside the scope of state-media mapping. This is the near-inverse of a captured system.

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