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Retirement visas

Retiring to Ecuador: the visa routes

The Pensioner (retirement) visa broadly requires around US$1,400 a month of pension or lifetime income; it begins as a two-year temporary residence and can convert to permanent residency.

A few things to line up early:

Visa rules change often — treat this as a starting point and confirm the latest official requirements before you plan.

Remember: buying a home and gaining the right to live there are usually separate steps. See how ownership works in Ecuador, and what it costs to live there in our cost-of-retiring guide.

Tax as a resident of Ecuador

Ecuador is widely treated as taxing residents mainly on Ecuador-source income, so many retirees' foreign pensions are effectively untaxed, and over-65s also receive a large personal allowance. The letter of the law is debated and enforcement is tightening, so declare correctly and take local advice.

Healthcare and everyday life in Ecuador

Ecuador is very affordable: residents can join the public IESS social-security health scheme for a low monthly contribution, and private hospitals in Quito, Guayaquil and Cuenca are good and inexpensive. Private cover costs a fraction of Western prices. Ecuadorians are warm and the cost of living is low, but security has worsened in some coastal cities, so many expats prefer calmer highland towns like Cuenca; Spanish is essential, English limited, and they drive on the right.

Where retirees settle

Cuenca is the standout expat hub, colonial and spring-like; Quito for city life; Vilcabamba and Cotacachi for valleys and villages; and Salinas, Manta or Olon on the coast.

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Everything on Ecuador

Cost of retiring in EcuadorCan a foreigner buy property in Ecuador?

Retirement visas in other countries