Visa Runs: Difference between revisions
Creating visa runs guide |
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Latest revision as of 05:07, 3 June 2026
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90 days resets
What it does
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180 days/year cap
Annual maximum
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Peru or Colombia
Common destinations
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$80–200+
Approximate total cost
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What is a Visa Run?
A visa run is when you leave Ecuador, cross into another country, and re-enter Ecuador to get a new 90-day tourist stamp. It is an informal but widely practiced way for long-term tourists — digital nomads, retirees, and slow travelers — to extend their time in Ecuador without applying for formal residency.
The important thing to understand: Ecuador tracks cumulative days. Leaving and returning resets your 90-day countdown, but all days you spend in Ecuador count toward the annual 180-day cap. Once you have accumulated 180 tourist days in a calendar year, you cannot re-enter as a tourist until the new calendar year begins (or you must apply for residency).
Common Visa Run Options from the Peninsula
Peru: Huaquillas / Aguas Verdes Border
The closest land border to the Santa Elena Peninsula is Huaquillas (Ecuador) / Aguas Verdes (Peru), on the Pacific coastal route south. From La Libertad:
- Bus to Machala (~3–3.5 hours, $4–5), then bus or taxi to Huaquillas
- Cross the border on foot into Aguas Verdes, Peru
- Spend the required time (technically you must enter Peru, but in practice a brief crossing and return the same day is common)
- Re-enter Ecuador and get a new stamp
Total round trip: a long day or overnight. Cost: approximately $15–30 for transport.
Note: Peru immigration requires that you actually enter Peru, not just touch the border line. Have your passport stamped going out and coming in.
Colombia: Flight from Guayaquil
For a more comfortable visa run or a trip that combines the requirement with a visit to a destination you want to see, flying to Colombia is a popular option. Guayaquil has direct flights to Bogotá, Medellín, and Cali, often for $100–200 return. Spend a few days (or a week), return to Ecuador with a new 90-day stamp.
Peru: Tumbes / Zarumilla Border
An alternative land crossing south of Huaquillas; similar process, similar distance.
Domestic Transit (does NOT count)
Simply traveling within Ecuador does not reset anything. You must physically exit Ecuador and re-enter.
Tips
- Carry your passport at all times near border crossings; it will be checked multiple times
- Don't cut it close on your visa expiry — border crossings can take longer than expected
- Keep your exit and entry stamps — if there is ever a question about your days in Ecuador, your passport stamps are your evidence
- The 180-day limit is the hard cap — immigration officers can refuse entry if they believe you are living in Ecuador on a tourist visa and have reached or are near the annual limit. Having evidence of ties elsewhere (return ticket, employment, bank statements) helps.
- Residency is the clean solution — if you plan to be in Ecuador for more than 180 days per year, a residency visa is more appropriate than chaining visa runs
See Also
- Tourist Visa (T-3) — the initial visa
- Visa Extension — extending without leaving
- Residency — the long-term solution
- Getting to Guayaquil — for flights
- Portal:How-to Guides — all guides