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EcuaWiki › Portals › The Peninsula
The Santa Elena Peninsula
The westernmost point of mainland Ecuador — where the Pacific shapes eight thousand years of human history, three cities, and dozens of fishing communities unlike anywhere else in South America.
200K+Residents
3Cantons
8,000Years inhabited
1911First oil well
80KTourists / season
"A compact strip of Pacific coast with some of the most diverse beach conditions, archaeology, and marine life in South America."

The Santa Elena Peninsula is Ecuador's westernmost continental point — bounded by the Gulf of Guayaquil to the south and Santa Elena Bay to the north. Its three cantons — Salinas, La Libertad, and Santa Elena — form a continuous urban conurbation that fades outward into fishing hamlets, salt flats, and cliff-edged headlands.

This is not a homogeneous coast. Salinas is Ecuador's premier beach resort, loud with jet-skis and night markets in high season. Fifteen minutes east, La Libertad is workaday and commercial — its Terminal Pesquero one of the most active fishing ports in the country. And inland, the provincial capital Santa Elena guards the Amantes de Sumpa, the 8,000-year-old lovers who are among the oldest human remains in the Americas.

Beyond the conurbation, the peninsula turns quieter: Ancón preserves British company-town architecture and Ecuador's first oil well. Anconcito hauls in langosta by dawn light. Ballenita offers one of the coast's best whale-watching perches from June to September. And Punta Blanca stretches its white-cliff beach in near-total peace, six kilometers from the last resort hotel.

The Three Cantons
Politically separated but physically merged — each with its own character, economy, and reason to be here.
Tourism Capital
Ecuador's most famous beach resort. The malecón hums year-round; the Chocolatera viewpoint merges two ocean currents before your eyes. Best whale watching June–September. Deepest nightlife on the coast.
La ChocolateraMust see
Jun–SepWhale season
Commercial Heart
The peninsula's largest city and economic engine. An active fishing port, oil refinery, the peninsula's main bus terminal, and the freshest seafood market in the province — without a tourist scene to complicate things.
Terminal PesqueroDawn experience
HubBus connections
Provincial Capital
Home to UPSE university, the Amantes de Sumpa museum, and 8,000 years of documented human settlement. The region's civic and archaeological center — origin point of Las Vegas culture, the first in Ecuador.
Amantes de SumpaFree museum
Oct 7Provincialization Day
Coastal Parishes & Villages
Whale viewpoints · Farallón Dillon · Surf at Chulluype
First oil well · British architecture · Cliffs
Fishing capital · Langosta · Bitumen cliffs
White cliffs · 3.7 km beach · Family-friendly
Thermal springs · Mud volcano · Interior
Salt flats · Flamingos · Traditional fishing
From the Peninsula to Manabí
North of Salinas, the Ruta del Spondylus (E-15) runs through Ayangue, Manglaralto, Montañita, Olón, and beyond — a succession of surf towns, fishing coves, and cloud-forest headlands. The peninsula is the departure point, not the destination.
Geography & Climate
Physical Setting

The peninsula is the northernmost extension of the West Coast desert system. Bounded south by the Gulf of Guayaquil and north by Santa Elena Bay, it is an arid plateau with a dramatic Pacific cliff-face on its outer edge and a calmer, warmer bay side facing east.

Ocean Currents

Two currents converge at La Chocolatera: the cold Humboldt Current from the south keeps water clear and nutrient-rich; the warmer equatorial current keeps beach water comfortable for swimming on the northern shore year-round.

High Season (Dec–May)

Beach season. Salinas at capacity. Warm water, calm surf on the bay side, and Guayaquileños flooding in on weekends. Book accommodation early; prices roughly double from January to February.

Low Season (Jun–Nov)

Cooler, windier, occasionally misty. Fewer tourists, lower prices. Prime whale-watching season — humpbacks arrive offshore in June and are reliably visible through September from Salinas, Ballenita, and Anconcito.

History in Brief
6800 BC
Las Vegas culture — the first documented human settlement in Ecuador — flourishes on the peninsula. The Sumpa site contains 200 burials, including the famous Amantes de Sumpa: a man and woman buried facing each other in an 8,000-year embrace.
Pre-contact
Valdivia, Machalilla, and Chorrera cultures succeed Las Vegas. The Spondylus shell becomes a sacred trade item along the coast, giving name to the modern Ruta del Spondylus that follows these ancient exchange routes.
1911
Ancón 1 — Ecuador's first commercial oil well — is drilled by the Anglo-Ecuadorian Oil Company. British engineers build a company town whose colonial-era architecture still stands today, a designated heritage geosite.
1977
Karen Stothert's excavations at Sumpa uncover the pre-ceramic cemetery, triggering international media attention and establishing the site as the most meticulously documented archaeological excavation in Ecuador.
2007
Santa Elena Province is created, separating from Guayas. The three cantons — Salinas, La Libertad, and Santa Elena — gain their own provincial administration for the first time.
Natural Environment
🐋
Humpback Whales
June–September offshore migration. Best seen from Ballenita's Mirador Caracol or boat tours departing from Salinas.
🦭
Sea Lions at La Lobería
Year-round colony below the boardwalk at Salinas. The Humboldt Current keeps fish stocks rich enough to sustain a permanent group.
🦩
Flamingo Salt Flats
Near Chanduy, seasonal flamingo colonies appear on the salt lagoons. Birdwatching is best in the early morning in low season.
🌿
Tropical Dry Forest
Ancón's interior preserves one of the coast's rare dry forest remnants, with endemic and migratory bird species accessible on foot.
🐠
Marine Reserves
Underwater reefs near Anconcito support artisanal dive sites. Punta Blanca's offshore waters see seasonal manta ray aggregations.
🫧
Bitumen Seeps
Natural oil seeps on the Anconcito cliffs — a geological curiosity that predates Ecuador's oil industry by millennia. Accessible at low tide.
Living & Getting Around
EcuaWiki's practical guides cover what the guidebooks don't. Jump directly to what you need:


At a Glance
Province Santa Elena
Cantons Salinas, La Libertad, Santa Elena
Population ~205,000 (conurbation)
Coastline ~75 km peninsula perimeter
Nearest city Guayaquil (~2 hr by bus)
Currency US Dollar (USD)
Time zone ECT (UTC−5)
Languages Spanish · some English in Salinas
Seasonal Guide
Dec – MayHigh beach season. Best swimming. Carnival in February.
Jun – SepHumpback whale season. Cooler, fewer crowds, better prices.
Oct 7Santa Elena Provincialization Day — the province's biggest civic holiday.
Dec 22Cantonización de Salinas — week of festivities & aquatic races.
Not to Miss
🏛️
8,000-year-old couple buried in an embrace. Free entry. Santa Elena city.
🌊
Two ocean currents meet at Ecuador's westernmost tip. Inside Naval Base, free entry.
🛢️
Ecuador's first oil well (1911) and rare British company-town architecture.
🐋
Humpbacks offshore June–September. Best viewpoints and tour operators listed.
🏗️ Help Build This Page

This portal is a living document. If you live here and know something the wiki doesn't — add it.



Welcome to the Peninsula Wiki

The community-run guide to the Santa Elena Peninsula: Salinas, La Libertad, Santa Elena, Ballenita, Punta Blanca and Ancon

Welcome! This is a collaborative project to document everything about our region. Whether you are looking for the next bus to Montañita, the best cevichería in La Libertad, or the history of the Sumpa Lovers, you'll find it here.

🌊 The Three Cities

Explore the core hubs of the peninsula:

  • Salinas: The tourism capital. Famous for its beaches, high-rises, and nightlife.
  • La Libertad: The commercial heart. Where the locals shop, eat, and connect.
  • Santa Elena: The historic capital. Home to ancestral heritage and regional government.

🌊 Also on this Area

🚍 Getting Around

🍴 Eat & Drink

Life in La Peninsula


🛠️ Community Toolkit

📅 Events in 2026

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