Temporary Residency
| đ Temporary Residency | |
|---|---|
| Spanish name | Residencia Temporal |
| Granting authority | Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores / CancillerĂa |
| Typical duration | 2 years (renewable) |
| Pathway to permanent | After 21 months of temporary residency |
ECUAWIKI âș THE PENINSULA âș LIVING & PRACTICAL âș VISAS & RESIDENCY
Temporary residency in Ecuador (residencia temporal) is a legal immigration status that allows a foreign national to live in Ecuador for an extended period â typically two years, renewable â with the right to work and access services. It is the normal intermediate step between tourist status and Permanent Residency.
Important: Immigration law in Ecuador changes. Always verify current requirements with the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores or a qualified immigration lawyer.
Categories of Temporary Residency
Ecuador offers several categories of temporary residency. The most relevant for people relocating to the Santa Elena Peninsula are:
Rentista (Retirement/Passive Income)
For people with a regular passive income â pension, annuity, rental income, investment income â above a minimum threshold (amounts change; confirm current figure with CancillerĂa). This is the most popular category for retiring expats. No employment in Ecuador is required.
Inversionista (Investor)
For people who have made a qualifying investment in Ecuador (property purchase, business, government bonds). Minimum investment amounts vary by category.
Amparo Familiar (Family Reunification)
For immediate family members of Ecuadorian citizens or legal Ecuadorian residents â spouses, children, parents.
Trabajo (Employment)
For people who have a job offer or employment contract from an Ecuadorian employer. The employer typically manages the application process.
Digital Nomad Visa
Introduced in recent years, allows remote workers employed by foreign companies to reside in Ecuador. Income threshold and documentation requirements apply.
General Requirements
Requirements vary by category but generally include:
- Valid passport (with at least 6 months remaining)
- Criminal background check from your country of origin (apostilled)
- Proof of economic solvency (bank statements, pension letters, etc.)
- Medical certificate and vaccination record (confirm current requirements)
- Proof of address in Ecuador (rental contract)
- Application forms from CancillerĂa
- Application fee (confirm current amount)
- For family reunification: certified and apostilled documents proving the relationship
All foreign documents must be apostilled in the country of origin and, if not in Spanish, officially translated by a certified translator in Ecuador. See Apostilles & Document Legalization.
The Application Process
- Gather all documents while still in your home country if possible (apostilles take time)
- Enter Ecuador on a tourist visa (Tourist Visa (T-3))
- Book an appointment at the CancillerĂa office in Guayaquil (the nearest major office to the peninsula)
- Submit application with all documents and pay the fee
- Wait for resolution â can take weeks to months
- Once approved: stamp your passport and proceed to the Registro Civil to obtain your cĂ©dula de extranjerĂa
After Temporary Residency is Approved
- You receive a visa stamp in your passport
- You must register at the Registro Civil to get your cĂ©dula de extranjerĂa â required for banking, utilities, healthcare
- You may live and work legally in Ecuador
- You may affiliate voluntarily with IESS for healthcare
- After approximately 21 months of legal residence, you may apply for Permanent Residency
Maintaining Your Status
- Renew before expiry â do not let your residency lapse
- Extended absences from Ecuador can affect your residency status (typically over 90 consecutive days may trigger a review)
- Update your address with CancillerĂa and Registro Civil if you move
- Keep your cédula current
Costs
Total costs vary but typically include: CancillerĂa application fee (~$200â450 USD), apostille fees (varies by country), certified translation fees, lawyer fees if used ($300â700 USD typical). Budget $500â1,500 USD for the full process depending on your category and whether you use a lawyer.
See Also
- Permanent Residency
- Tourist Visa (T-3)
- Visa Extension
- Cédulas
- Getting a Cédula
- Registro Civil
- Hiring an Immigration Lawyer
- Residency â overview of all options