Rental Housing Guide
| 🏠 Rental Housing Guide | |
|---|---|
| Region | Santa Elena Peninsula |
| Currency | USD |
| Contract language | Spanish (official); bilingual versions available on request |
| Typical lease | 1 year (standard); month-to-month possible but less common |
ECUAWIKI › THE PENINSULA › LIVING & PRACTICAL
Renting long-term on the Santa Elena Peninsula is achievable and relatively affordable compared to many places expats come from. This guide covers how to find a rental, what to expect, costs, and how the rental system works in Ecuador.
Rental Prices (Approximate)
Prices vary enormously by location, condition, and whether the property is marketed toward tourists or locals. The tourist premium is real — properties visible on Airbnb or listed in English are priced significantly higher than equivalent local-market rentals found through personal networks.
| Location | Studio/1BR | 2BR apartment | 3BR house |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salinas (tourist zone — Chipipe/Malecón) | $400–700/month | $600–1,200/month | $800–1,500/month |
| Salinas (residential areas) | $200–400/month | $350–600/month | $500–900/month |
| La Libertad | $150–300/month | $250–450/month | $400–700/month |
| Santa Elena city | $130–250/month | $200–400/month | $350–600/month |
| Montañita | $300–600/month | $500–900/month | — (less common) |
| Ayangue, Manglaralto, rural | $200–500/month | $350–600/month | Variable |
These are 2024–2025 estimates. Tourist-season furnished properties can be significantly higher.
How to Find a Rental
Local Networks
The most effective way to find affordable rentals is through local personal networks — word of mouth, talking to neighbours, asking shopkeepers, using local Facebook groups. Properties found this way are typically priced for the local market.
Facebook Groups
There are active Facebook groups for expats in Santa Elena and Salinas where rentals are regularly posted. Search for groups like "Expats in Santa Elena Ecuador," "Salinas Ecuador Expats," and similar.
Walking Around
In residential neighbourhoods, signs (Se Arrienda / Se Alquila — for rent) are common on gates and walls. This is still a common way properties are advertised locally.
Real Estate Agents
Available but typically list higher-priced properties and charge a commission. See Real Estate Agents on the Peninsula for more. Useful for furnished properties marketed to expats.
Online Platforms
Marketplace (Facebook), OLX Ecuador, Plusvalia.com, and Properati.com list Ecuadorian properties. Properties listed here are priced above local market but below tourist-rental prices.
What to Expect in Rentals
Furnished vs Unfurnished
Local rentals are typically unfurnished (sin muebles). Furnished properties are found in tourist areas and command a significant premium. Semiamoblado means partially furnished (kitchen appliances and some furniture but not a complete set).
Utilities
Utilities (electricity, water, gas, internet) are usually not included in rent unless specifically stated. Electricity is the most significant variable — air conditioning in the hot season can make electricity bills high. Ask for recent electricity bills before signing.
Deposit
Typically 1–2 months' rent as a security deposit (depósito / garantía). Make sure the conditions for return are specified in the contract.
Internet
Broadband is available in urban areas. Confirm coverage at the specific address before signing a contract. See Internet Service Providers and Getting Internet Installed.
Rental Contracts in Ecuador
Written rental contracts are standard and recommended. Ecuador's tenant protection laws provide some rights — see Rental Contracts Ecuador and Tenant Rights Ecuador for detail. Key points:
- Contracts should specify rent amount, payment date, duration, deposit, and responsibilities for utilities and maintenance
- Contracts signed in Spanish are the legal standard
- Notarization is not required for standard residential rentals but is sometimes requested
- Breaking a lease early typically requires 30–60 days' notice; check your specific contract
Seasonal Considerations
Salinas and the beach towns experience a high-season price increase of 50–100% from approximately December to Carnaval. Long-term rentals negotiated in the low season (May–November) are significantly cheaper and more likely to be available. Avoid looking for long-term rentals in December–January if you want competitive pricing.