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Notarías

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📋 Notarías (Notaries)
RoleNotarize documents for legal validity in Ecuador
Required forProperty transfers, powers of attorney, some contracts
LocationsLa Libertad (main), Salinas, Santa Elena city
CostVaries by service; typically $20–150 USD

ECUAWIKI › THE PENINSULA › LIVING & PRACTICAL · DOCUMENTS

A notaría (notary's office) in Ecuador is staffed by a notario público — a legally appointed official who authenticates documents, certifies signatures, and formalizes legal transactions. The Ecuadorian notarial system follows the civil law tradition: notaries play a much larger role than in common law countries and are required for many legal transactions.

When You Need a Notary

Required by law

  • Property purchase and transfer (compraventa de bienes raíces) — must be completed before a notary and registered in the Registro de la Propiedad
  • Power of attorney (poder notarial) — if you need someone to act on your behalf legally
  • Some business formation and company change documents
  • Recognition of signatures on some contract types
  • Donation of real property

Commonly useful

  • Notarized copy of a document (copia certificada) — a notary-certified copy of an original document, accepted by institutions that don't want to hold the original
  • Notarized translation — some official translations are notarized as an additional step beyond the translator's certification
  • Some contract types where parties want added legal security

On the Santa Elena Peninsula

Notarías are found in the main urban centres:

Location Notes
La Libertad Multiple notarías in the downtown and commercial areas; highest volume and capacity on the peninsula
Salinas Several notarías; concentrated near the municipal area
Santa Elena city Notarías near the government and Parque Central area

The Process

A typical notarization:

  1. Bring the document and your cédula to the notaría
  2. The notary reviews the document and confirms it is legally appropriate
  3. Both parties (if a bilateral document) sign in the presence of the notary
  4. The notary applies their seal and signature
  5. You receive the notarized original (and certified copies if needed)
  6. The act is registered in the notarial registry
    1. Apostilling a Notarized Document ##

If you need to use a notarized Ecuadorian document in another country, it may need to be apostilled through the Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores. See Apostilles & Document Legalization.

Costs

Notary fees are set by a national fee schedule and are relatively modest. A simple signature certification may cost $10–30. Complex transactions (property transfers) cost proportionally more. You will also pay for official copies.

See Also