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ATM & Banking

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Banking & ATMs
La Península de Santa Elena
Banks, ATMs, and practical money advice for residents, long-term visitors, and tourists — from the Salinas malecón to El Paseo Shopping in La Libertad.
USD $
Ecuador's currency
5+ banks
+ many cooperativas
La Libertad
Best banking coverage
Visa / MC
Widely accepted



Ecuador uses the US dollar, which eliminates any currency exchange headache for American visitors and simplifies things for everyone else. The peninsula's banking infrastructure is functional — there are full-service bank branches in Salinas, La Libertad, and Santa Elena, plus a reasonable spread of ATMs — but it is not as dense as Guayaquil, and some ATMs run out of cash during high season weekends. La Libertad, as the province's economic hub, has the most complete banking coverage.

💡 For visitors: Visa and Mastercard debit and credit cards are widely accepted at supermarkets, larger restaurants, and hotels. Smaller restaurants, markets, tiendas, taxis, and most local services are cash only. Carry some cash at all times.


Banks on the Peninsula

Salinas · La Libertad · Santa Elena · One branch per town
Banco del Pacífico
Ecuador's largest state-owned bank, present on the peninsula with one branch in each of the three main towns: one on the Salinas malecón, one in La Libertad, and one in Santa Elena. Each branch has an ATM. Generally a reliable option for foreign card withdrawals.

Branches: Salinas (malecón); La Libertad; Santa Elena (Av. Guayaquil y 9 de Octubre). One ATM per branch location.

Salinas · La Libertad · Santa Elena 🌐 bancopacífico.com

Salinas · La Libertad · Ecuador's largest private bank
Banco Pichincha
Ecuador's largest private-sector bank by capitalisation and depositors, founded 1906. Has branches and ATMs in Salinas and La Libertad. The Mi Vecino correspondent network (7,000+ points nationally) means Pichincha cash services are available at many small shops and pharmacies across the peninsula even where there is no branch. Use the Banco Pichincha app or website to find the nearest Mi Vecino point.

Salinas · La Libertad Mi Vecino agent network 🌐 pichincha.com

La Libertad · Salinas
Banco Guayaquil
One of Ecuador's major private banks, headquartered in Guayaquil. Present on the peninsula with branches and ATMs in La Libertad and Salinas. The Banco del Barrio correspondent network (similar to Mi Vecino) allows basic transactions at local shops. Accepts Visa, Mastercard, and American Express cards.

La Libertad · Salinas Banco del Barrio network 🌐 bancoguayaquil.com

La Libertad · Salinas malecón · 24-hour ATMs
Banco del Austro
Has a full-service agency in La Libertad (Calle 9 de Octubre S/N y Chimborazo, Mon–Fri 08:30–16:30, Sat 09:00–13:00) and a ventanilla de extensión at the Mercado La Libertad (Av. Séptima S/N entre Calle 20 y 21, Mon–Fri 08:00–16:00). Notably has 24-hour ATMs in Salinas on the Av. Malecón (corner of Rafael de la Cuadra, Manzana 26) — both an autobanco and a multifunción cajero. Also an ATM in La Libertad on 9 de Octubre y Calle 23.

La Libertad agency · Mon–Fri 08:30–16:30 · Sat 09:00–13:00 Salinas malecón ATM — 24h 🌐 bancodelaustro.com

La Libertad · ATMs
Produbanco
Part of the Grupo Financiero Producción, Produbanco is one of Ecuador's larger private banks. Present on the peninsula primarily through ATMs in La Libertad. Use the Produbanco website locator to find the nearest machine.

La Libertad 🌐 produbanco.com.ec

La Libertad · Salinas
Banco Bolivariano
Founded 1979, headquartered in Guayaquil. Focused on retail and corporate banking. Has ATM presence in La Libertad and Salinas. Use the bank locator on their website to find specific machine locations.

La Libertad · Salinas 🌐 bolivariano.com.ec


Cooperativas de Ahorro y Crédito

What is a cooperativa, and how is it different from a bank?

A cooperativa de ahorro y crédito (savings and credit cooperative) is a member-owned financial institution — not a bank. The key differences:

  • Ownership: Cooperativas are owned by their members (socios), not by shareholders. Profits are returned to members rather than distributed to outside investors.
  • Membership: To open an account or take a loan, you must become a socio — typically requiring a small membership share purchase ($20–$50). Ecuadorians join freely; foreigners may face more requirements depending on the cooperative.
  • Rates: Cooperativas often offer higher savings rates and lower loan rates than commercial banks, particularly for consumer and micro-business lending.
  • Regulation: Cooperativas are regulated by the Superintendencia de Economía Popular y Solidaria (SEPS), separate from the Superintendencia de Bancos that oversees banks. Deposits are protected by COSEDE (the deposit guarantee fund) up to $32,000, the same as banks.
  • ATMs: Many cooperativas have their own ATM networks, and several participate in the Red Conexus shared ATM network, allowing members of any participating cooperative to withdraw from each other's machines — greatly expanding ATM coverage across the peninsula.
  • Foreign visitors: Cooperativa ATMs generally accept international Visa and Mastercard cards at machines on the Red Conexus or other shared networks — you do not need to be a member to use the ATM, only to open an account.
Cooperativas have a very significant presence on the Santa Elena Peninsula — in many barrios they are more visible and more accessible than bank branches. The following are the most important:
La Libertad · Ecuador's largest cooperative · 1,000+ ATMs nationally
JEP — Cooperativa Juventud Ecuatoriana Progresista

★ Largest coop in Ecuador

The largest cooperative in Ecuador's history and the third largest in Latin America, with over 1.5 million socios and 64 branches nationally. On the peninsula, JEP has an agency in La Libertad (Av. 7ma S/N entre Calles 22 y 21 esq.). JEP issues its own Visa and Mastercard cards and operates 1,000+ ATMs nationally — members can use any JEP ATM for free, and the machines accept international cards. The scale of JEP makes it one of the most important financial institutions on the coast, offering the full range of savings accounts, fixed-term investments, consumer loans, and credit cards.

La Libertad — Av. 7ma entre Calles 22 y 21 Visa & Mastercard issued 🌐 jep.coop

La Libertad · Salinas · ATMs confirmed
Cooperativa de Ahorro y Crédito de la Policía Nacional (CPN)
Originally created for police officers but now open to the general public. Has ATMs confirmed on the peninsula: one in La Libertad at Calle 9 de Octubre y Rocafuerte (Comando Santa Elena), and one in Salinas at Av. Carlos Espinosa Larrea y Calle Brasil (near the UPC). The CPN participates in Red Conexus and other shared networks, making its ATMs accessible to non-members with international cards.

La Libertad — Calle 9 de Octubre y Rocafuerte Salinas — Av. Carlos Espinosa Larrea y Calle Brasil 🌐 cpn.fin.ec

Santa Elena · Public development bank · Agricultural & rural focus
BanEcuador B.P.
Technically a public bank (Banco Público), not a cooperative, but occupies a similar community-focused role. BanEcuador is the state's agricultural and rural development bank, providing credit to small farmers, fishermen, artisans, and rural entrepreneurs at subsidised rates. On the peninsula it has a branch in Santa Elena city (Manabí entre Guayaquil y 18 de Agosto, Planta Baja). Not primarily a retail institution for everyday banking — most useful for rural producers and small business owners seeking development credit.

Santa Elena — Manabí entre Guayaquil y 18 de Agosto 🌐 banecuador.fin.ec

La Libertad · Regional coop
Cooperativa 29 de Octubre
A well-established Ecuadorian cooperative with presence in La Libertad on the peninsula. Offers the standard cooperative product range: savings, fixed-term investments, and consumer and mortgage credit. Confirmed as active in Santa Elena province. Use the cooperative's website or local signage to confirm current branch and ATM locations.

La Libertad 🌐 29deoctubre.fin.ec

Salinas canton interior · Community cooperative · Grupo Salinas
CoopSalinas
Founded 16 November 1972 by the communities of the Salinas de Bolívar canton (in the sierra — note: a different Salinas from the beach town), CoopSalinas is part of the internationally recognised Grupo Salinas social economy model. Described as the first savings and credit cooperative in Ecuador to serve the rural sector with technological solutions, including a virtual platform and an ATM. Primarily serves its member communities in the sierra but has visibility in Santa Elena province through the Salinerito brand. Relevant mainly for residents of rural communities connected to the Grupo Salinas network.

Grupo Salinas network 🌐 salinerito.com

Other cooperativas with ATMs or offices on the peninsula include Cooperativa Salinerita and others. The cooperative landscape changes frequently — use Google Maps searching "cooperativa" in Salinas or La Libertad for current locations.


ATMs — Where to Find Cash

ATMs on the peninsula dispense US dollars. Most machines are on the Visa/Plus and Mastercard/Cirrus networks and will accept foreign debit and credit cards. Standard withdrawal limits vary by bank but are typically $200–$500 per transaction.
Town Bank Location / Notes
Salinas Banco del Austro Av. Malecón y Rafael de la Cuadra (Mz 26) — autobanco + multifunción cajero. 24 hours. Most convenient for malecón-area visitors.
Banco del Pacífico Malecón branch ATM — one machine at the branch.
Cooperativa Policía Nacional Av. Carlos Espinosa Larrea y Calle Brasil (near UPC Salinas).
Banco Pichincha / Others ATMs in and around central Salinas. Check bank apps for current locations.
La Libertad Banco del Austro 9 de Octubre y Calle 23. Also a ventanilla at Mercado La Libertad (Av. Séptima entre Calles 20–21).
JEP Av. 7ma S/N entre Calles 22 y 21 esq. (branch ATM).
Cooperativa Policía Nacional Calle 9 de Octubre y Rocafuerte (Comando Santa Elena).
El Paseo Shopping Multiple bank ATMs inside the mall — most convenient for La Libertad banking. Includes Banco Bolivariano, Produbanco and others.
Santa Elena Banco del Pacífico Av. Guayaquil y 9 de Octubre (full-service agency with ATM).
ATM locations change. Always use your bank's official locator app or website to confirm current machines. The above is community-verified but may be outdated.


For Foreign Visitors & Expats

💳
Foreign cards at ATMs
Visa and Mastercard (debit and credit) work at most ATMs on the peninsula. Banco del Pacífico machines are generally the most reliable for foreign cards. American Express cards are accepted at some ATMs but coverage is more limited. Expect a fee from both your home bank and the local ATM — usually $3–6 per withdrawal total. Take out larger amounts to reduce fees per transaction.
🏧
Withdrawal limits
Ecuadorian ATMs typically limit withdrawals to $200–$500 per transaction, and often $500–$1,000 per day. If you need more cash, use multiple machines or plan ahead. During high season (Jan–May), some ATMs run out of cash by Saturday afternoon — withdraw earlier in the day or earlier in the week.
🏪
Card payments at stores
All major supermarkets (Supermaxi, Mi Comisariato, Tía, Akí, Hipermarket) accept Visa and Mastercard with no added fee. TuTi is cash only — see Supermarkets. Most larger hotels and restaurants take cards; smaller restaurants, street food, taxis, tiendas, and local markets are cash only.
📱
Mobile payments
De Una (Banco del Pacífico's instant transfer app) is widely used locally for peer-to-peer payments and is common in small businesses. Residents and long-term visitors with an Ecuadorian bank account can use De Una, Banca Móvil Pichincha, and similar apps. Foreign visitors without a local account cannot use these platforms.
🏘
Mi Vecino / Banco del Barrio agents
Banco Pichincha's Mi Vecino and Banco Guayaquil's Banco del Barrio are correspondent banking networks — small local shops authorised to process deposits, withdrawals, and payments on behalf of the bank. Useful if the nearest branch is closed or out of reach. You need an account with the respective bank to use these. Identified by window stickers in shop fronts.


Opening a Local Bank Account

For residents and long-term visitors, a local bank account unlocks mobile payment apps, avoids foreign card ATM fees, and makes paying utilities and services much easier. Requirements vary by bank and by resident status.
Document Notes
Cédula / Passport Required for all accounts. Foreigners use passport. Long-term residents with a visa may be required to show their visa document.
RUC or employment proof Some account types (current accounts, business accounts) require proof of income or RUC (tax registration). Savings accounts are simpler.
Proof of address A utility bill or contract in your name for your Ecuadorian address.
Initial deposit Varies by bank and account type — typically $20–$200 to open a basic savings account.
Banco del Pacífico and Banco Pichincha are generally the most accessible for foreign residents. Requirements and processes change — visit the branch directly and bring all documents; requirements can vary by individual branch manager.


Practical Tips

  • Always carry some cash. Even in Salinas, many common daily transactions — taxis, tiendas, street food, local restaurants, farmers' markets, fishermen's docks — are cash only.
  • High season + weekends = ATM queues and empty machines. Withdraw cash before peak weekends (especially Semana Santa and Carnaval). Salinas malecón ATMs can run dry by Saturday afternoon.
  • The Banco del Austro ATM on the malecón is 24 hours. Most useful for late-night or early-morning cash needs.
  • El Paseo Shopping in La Libertad has the highest concentration of ATMs in one place. If you're making a big shop and need cash, go to the mall.
  • Notify your home bank before travelling. Foreign card blocks on Ecuador transactions are common. A quick call or online notification before departure prevents your card being blocked at the ATM.
  • Check your home bank's international ATM fee policy. Some accounts (Wise, Revolut, Charles Schwab in the US, etc.) refund ATM fees or charge nothing — worth setting up before you arrive.
  • ATM fees. Most Ecuadorian ATMs charge a small local fee per withdrawal on top of your home bank's international fee — confirm with each machine before proceeding. Total fees typically run $3–6 per transaction.
  • For large amounts of cash, go to a branch window (ventanilla) rather than an ATM. ATMs have daily limits; branches can process larger withdrawals with ID.
  • Security. Use ATMs in well-lit, busy locations — bank lobbies and mall ATMs are preferable to standalone street machines. Cover the keypad when entering your PIN. Skimming devices have been reported on street ATMs in Ecuador generally.


See Also

Supermarkets

Where cards are accepted

Taxis & Apps

Cash-only — always carry change

Living & Practical

Full practical guide index



Quick Reference

🏦 Main banks & coops
Banco del Pacífico, Pichincha, Guayaquil, Austro (1 branch each). JEP (largest cooperative, La Libertad). CPN ATMs in Salinas and La Libertad. Austro has a 24h ATM on the Salinas malecón.

🕐 24-hour ATM in Salinas
Banco del Austro, Av. Malecón y Rafael de la Cuadra.

🏬 Most ATMs in one place
El Paseo Shopping, La Libertad.

💵 Currency
US dollar (USD). No exchange needed for Americans.

💳 Cards accepted
Visa & Mastercard at supermarkets and most hotels. Cash everywhere else.

🏧 ATM withdrawal limit
Typically $200–500 per transaction; $500–1,000 per day.

High season warning
ATMs can run out of cash Sat afternoon during Jan–May peak. Withdraw early.


Banks at a Glance

Banco del Pacífico Salinas · La Libertad · Santa Elena

Banco Pichincha Salinas · La Libertad

Banco Guayaquil La Libertad · Salinas

Banco del Austro La Libertad · Salinas malecón ATM

Produbanco La Libertad (ATMs)

Banco Bolivariano La Libertad · Salinas (ATMs)


🕐 Typical Branch Hours
Mon–Fri: 08:30–16:30
Most bank branches follow this schedule.
Saturday: 09:00–13:00
Most branches open Saturday mornings. Confirm locally.
Sunday / holidays: Closed
ATMs remain accessible 24 hours.
Hours confirmed for Banco del Austro La Libertad. Other banks similar — verify locally.


📱 Useful Apps
De Una (Banco del Pacífico) — instant transfers, widely used locally for payments between individuals and small businesses. Requires a Banco del Pacífico account.
Banca Móvil Pichincha — full mobile banking, Mi Vecino locator, ATM locator.
App Banco Guayaquil — mobile banking, Banco del Barrio locator.
Wise / Revolut (foreign visitors) — low-fee international transfers and card payments. Not Ecuadorian bank apps but widely used by expats to reduce ATM and FX fees.


🏗 Help Build This Page

Know a bank or ATM location not listed? Updated hours?