Coastal Zone Restrictions
| ⚠️ Coastal Zone Restrictions | |
|---|---|
| Governing Law | Ley de Costas / COOTAD |
| Buffer Zone | 50 meters from high-tide line |
| Zone Status | Public / State domain |
| Construction | Generally prohibited without concession |
| Enforcement | Variable; often unenforced historically |
ECUAWIKI › HOW-TO GUIDES › COASTAL ZONE RESTRICTIONS
Ecuador's Ley de Costas and related legislation establish a protected coastal buffer zone along the entire Ecuadorian coastline, including the Santa Elena Peninsula. Understanding these rules is essential for anyone considering buying beachfront property, building near the ocean, or understanding their rights as a beach user.
The 50-Meter Rule
The most important rule is that the first 50 meters measured from the high-tide line are classified as public domain (zona de uso público), belonging to the state. This zone:
- Cannot be privately owned or sold
- Access cannot be blocked — all beaches are legally public in Ecuador
- Construction is generally prohibited without a concession from the relevant government entity
- Can be leased (concesión) for tourism facilities, restaurants, or infrastructure with government approval
Practical Reality
In practice, this rule has been widely ignored historically. Many beachfront properties on the Peninsula were built within or overlapping the 50-meter zone before stricter enforcement began. This creates a legal grey area for existing structures:
- Some predate the law and may have acquired informal tolerance
- Others technically lack legal standing
- The situation varies by municipality and parcel
If you are buying beachfront property, always have a lawyer verify the exact legal status of the property relative to the coastal buffer. See Buying Process Ecuador and Property Laws.
Beach Access Rights
Because beaches are legally public, it is illegal to block beach access. However, in practice, some private developments do restrict access. If you encounter a blocked beach, you have a legal right to access it — though enforcement requires dealing with local authorities.
Environmental Zones
Beyond the 50-meter rule, protected areas such as REMACOPSE have additional layers of restrictions — no construction, no fishing in some zones, no disturbing wildlife. These areas are regulated by the Ministry of Environment.
Mangrove Protections
Mangroves are specially protected under Ecuadorian law. The removal or alteration of mangroves is strictly prohibited. See Manglaralto Estuary and other mangrove areas for context.