Rental Contracts Ecuador
| 📝 Rental Contracts Ecuador | |
|---|---|
| Governing law | Ley de Inquilinato (Tenant Law) and Civil Code |
| Contract language | Spanish (official); bilingual versions are acceptable |
| Notarization | Not required but recommended for formal protection |
| Minimum lease | No legal minimum; 1 year is standard practice |
ECUAWIKI › THE PENINSULA › LIVING & PRACTICAL · HOUSING
Ecuador has a legal framework for residential rentals governed by the Ley de Inquilinato (Tenant and Landlord Law) and the Civil Code. Understanding the basics of how rental contracts work protects both tenants and landlords.
Is a Written Contract Required?
A written contract is not legally required for a rental agreement in Ecuador, but it is strongly recommended. Without a written contract:
- Terms of rent, payment dates, and responsibilities are unenforceable
- Deposit recovery is nearly impossible in a dispute
- You have no legal proof of tenancy
Any reasonable landlord will provide a written contract. If you are renting without one, request it. Some landlords, especially for very informal arrangements, resist — in this case, consider whether the risk is acceptable.
What a Good Contract Should Include
- Full names and cédula numbers of both parties (landlord and tenant)
- Property address with complete description
- Monthly rent amount and the date it is due each month
- Duration (plazo) — typically 1 year
- Deposit amount and conditions for return
- Who pays which utilities
- Maintenance responsibilities (who handles minor vs. major repairs)
- Conditions for early termination by either party
- Notice period for non-renewal (typically 30–60 days)
Deposit
The deposit (depósito or garantía) is typically 1–2 months' rent. Key points:
- The contract should specify the conditions under which the deposit can be retained
- The landlord cannot retain the deposit for normal wear and tear — only for damage beyond normal use
- Return the property in the condition you received it; document this with photos at move-in
Termination
- Either party can terminate with proper notice as specified in the contract (typically 30 days for month-to-month; 60 days for annual leases)
- Breaking a fixed-term lease early typically requires paying a penalty — this should be specified in the contract
- Illegal eviction (forcing a tenant out without legal process) is against the Ley de Inquilinato
Rent Increases
Rent increases must be negotiated; a landlord cannot unilaterally increase rent during an active contract. At renewal, market rate negotiation is standard.
Disputes
Tenant-landlord disputes are handled by:
- Juzgados de Inquilinato (Tenancy Courts) — Ecuador has a specialized court system for rental disputes
- Mediation (centro de mediación) — often faster and less adversarial
For legal help with serious disputes, consult a local abogado or the legal aid services available through the municipality.