COVID-19 and expatriation in Ecuador
The COVID-19 crisis inevitably impacts Ecuador, between closed airports or periods of containment in some cities or even the entire country .
We would like to hear from you during this unusual period, to find out what the consequences of this pandemic are on your expatriation or expatriation project in Ecuador.
Does the current crisis call into question your long-term expatriation project?
If you are already settled in Ecuador, do you plan to return to your home country?
How are you living through such an uncertain period, especially if you are far from your loved ones?
Have any of you ended your expatriation in Ecuador unexpectedly?
Paradoxically, has this crisis brought you closer to some people?
What are your plans for the future?
Thank you very much for your feedback.
Hope you are doing well.
尝辞茂肠.
- Ecuadorian lifestyle: Ama la vida - Guide
- Shipping household goods to Ecuador - 19 Replies
- Ecuador bound - 9 Replies
- Post-Covid-19 situation in Ecuador - 2 Replies
- What to Bring to Ecuador - 20 Replies
- The driving force of your expatriation in Ecuador - 20 Replies
- Update on Covid 19 situation in Manta Ecuador - 22 Replies
Over time I鈥檒l re-evaluate the virus activity causing Covid 19, how it鈥檚 morphed, where it鈥檚 erupting. If things ever rerun to a semblance of normal and i wear a painter鈥檚 respirator - breathing protection beyond N95 P95, then and only then will I consider getting on a commercial flight again. Watch the NIGHTMARE in Wuhan聽 the CCP Chinese Communist Party hides:聽 YOU TUBE :聽 鈥淐orona Virus in China 10 times bigger?!鈥
If you sailed down to Ecuador, lovely thought just a few months ago, in which port would you moor your boat? Manta is where the cruise ships come in. I've heard Salinas is the place with the oldest yacht clubs (it's generational with Ecuadoreans and arriviste with expats!) also where facilities actually exist to moor and get services and supplies. I read an article in a sailing blog about Bahia de Caraquez's possibilities. San Vicente is just across the River Chone. All I've heard from blogs to state department about Esmeraldas is to avoid it. One person who owns property there praised it, but he was living in exile in Canoa at the time.
Last year I traveled around the country by bus for three months. The Pacific Coast seems like a gem of a place to set up a moorage. All-in-all Ecuador's a thrilling, diverse, and beautiful place. For nearly a year now, I've tried to get back to it. All the emigration/immigration red tape that blocks the way requires the skills of a bushwhacker with a machete it seems, but the real winner is to find a good visa facilitator. This damned COVID-19 though has big chilled the whole regatta, I'm afraid.
Stay cool in the mean time. Watch "12 Monkeys."
Cheers!
Buster
The spread of the COVID-19 pandemic has stopped my emigration in its tracks. I contracted with Gringo Visas in 2019 to help me return to Ecuador to live. That has involved nine months of corresponding with government agencies, jumping through legal hoops, and getting it all apostilled. A year ago, I didn't even know what that word meant.聽 Now that I've got all the legal ducks in a row, they've closed the borders and planes aren't flying.
American Airlines and LATAM Airlines seem flexible and willing to change fly dates until the end of 2021. The apartments, Quinta Maria Apartments, in Cuenca are also willing to change dates when the borders reopen.聽 And the visa facilitator has emailed me that all the apostilled legal stuff, FBI and police background checks, etc. are in suspended animation. All will still be good (no five month expiration date) when the planes start flying again, and the borders re-open.
Thanks for asking, Loic. I depend on expat websites for news of Ecuador. It's such a small country that most in the U.S. couldn't find it on the map. It's not a goal of mine to clue them in--personally, I'd like to keep the secret and keep this little gem of a country to myself.
My heart breaks for the suffering of its lovely people. I wish I were back there, but there is no way of return for now.
Siempre joven, mis amigos.
Buster
Not sure who you're addressing, but here goes. No, the visa facilitator said they're checking with immigration officials daily. They said when the borders re-open and planes start flying again they will let me know to "come on down." I'm getting a tourist visa stamped on my passport at the airport, and the visa facilitator is walking (driving actually) me through the two year temporary visa process.
Have you and your husband got your paperwork, security checks, birth certificates, etc. apostilled and聽 in order? Just asking because it took me six months to get everything done and back from Dee Cee. I'm sure you're aware of what will be needed: birth certificate from your state of birth, proof of income, six months of bank records, state and FBI background checks, proof of insurance. etc. All translated into Spanish.
I was most concerned that there's a 5 month limit on the security checks, but the v.f. said that since the process was already started it would pick up where it was at when things got shut down. Fortunately the airlines, and apartments where I have pre-paid rent will work with me to reschedule.
Just reading the news from several online sources (CDC, WHO, various officials) the earliest seems to be聽 about July. Or possibly next July (2021) if they can find a vaccine.
Cheers and good luck!
Emigrayo (Buster)
I spent two great weeks in Canoa back in 2019. Awesome place! Have you found an affordable place to rent? You mentioned, "No bus" was available--Horrors! It was less than 50 cents to ride into San Vicente or Bahia in spring last year. I guess the COVID-19 messes with everything聽
How long a time was it when you arrived in Ecuador until you had your visa and cedula? Did you have an agency help you with that, or did you just figure it out and do it on your own?
Best wishes. I hope you can dodge the po-leece long enough to get some surf time in聽
Emigrayo (Buster)
Given the chaotic response to the pandemic in the US, we feel safer here. We have no plans to leave.
I'm supposed to renew my residency visa by next month, changing it from the 2 year one to permanent status and all my documents are ready; but, as you know, the world is in a standstill.聽 The deadlines for this type of stuff, visas, driver's licenses, etc. have all been suspended until the lockdown is over.
The curfew from 2PM to 5AM, only one day a week to drive your car based on the license plate number, no-one on the street except to go to the grocery store or doctor, etc. is more restrictive than almost anywhere in the US, and it's getting a bit old, but will end eventually.聽 One big reason for staying here was that my healthcare coverage is far better here than what I had in the US and costs me half as much.
It's interesting to watch the news and hear that there are partially empty shelves back home, while the SuperMaxi store I go to here is completely stocked, as well as the small neighborhood shops near me.
I too am looking forward to easy, simple, international travel.聽 Ah, the good old days - didn't know how good they were....
We got our visa filed and approved in a week.聽 That was fast.聽 Then all the offices closed and everything is on hold. We stayeda at our home - and our only contacts were our neighbors on the mountain.聽 We helped each other out. They are Ecuadorian so we had both side of the story in Ecuador and out.
My husband I a I tried to leave once with out tickets out of Guayaquil, but we were turned back by the military. We did not know it was under marshall law.聽 We went back home in a taxi.
We have a friend, Ulises, that helped us get out of the country about a week and a half later. It was trick and required lots of paperwork.聽 We thank him, but Guayquil was so strange.聽 NO traffic or anything.聽 We had to wait outside the airport and home that they did not cancel our flight.聽 There were only seven passengers.
I think we would have stay in Ecuador but we had to get back to the USA to finish some important business and my husband needed back surger.聽 We are now on lockdown in Kansas (Lenexa).聽 We can get what we need but no surgeries for a while - who know when?
We will return when we can, hopefully this summer and the 90 day visa rule will be revisitied by the government.聽 Our home is there and we want to get back.
Friendships grew closer with several people via phones and technology.聽 When we got back we tried to help by sending what we could to people who could help because they were there.
The kindess of Ecuadorins to us was amazing.聽 We followed all the rules and most of all respected the fears everyone had during this time.
My husband and I look forward to returning.聽 This pandemic didn not change our opinion of Ecuador.聽 It is our home now.
I thank our friends, expat and especially Ecuadorian that help us learn what we needed to know.
Robin and Joel
I do want to add that we contacted the US Embassy for flights out.聽 But honestly, they were not much help.聽 We had to get to Quito. There was no time to get that far from the province of Loja and taxies were almost impossible to get due to restrictions.聽 And hoestly, some did not want to drive to Quito or Quayquil.聽 I don't blame them.
I hope the embasy could help others that wanted to leave.
Robin and Joel
Like you, I look forward to returning to Ecuador as soon as possible. I had really hoped to get out of the U.S. before the borders closed and planes stopped flying, but it didn't happen. So, I wait.
I stayed in Vilcabamba for a month in 2019. I found it to be a lovely place.
Best Wishes.
Emigrayo (Buster)
I think the worst part is the unknown, we just have no clue when they鈥檙e going to reopen the border and being in limbo especially when we both quit our jobs we are literally sitting around eating junk food and binge watching Netflix!!!
Here in Austin Texas they鈥檙e certainly not as strict as they are in Ecuador but I kind of think they should be聽 because most people are not taking it very seriously.聽 yes lots of restaurants and movie theaters etc. are closed but people are out walking and mingling and having parties every day it seems like and unfortunately it seems to be the younger generation that seem to think they鈥檙e bulletproof and don鈥檛 really have much for thought for everybody else.聽
So with that being said we are 100% in limbo and the day they open up that border if even for two days we鈥檙e on a plane and we鈥檙e heading to Ecuador we bought a hotel on the beach and I have easily 4 to 5 months worth of work to do so I can easily quarantine myself and be busy for the next five months with no problems.聽
I just need to get there LOL!!
My wife is very active on the Facebook groups from Salinas and Ecuador so we certainly are hearing all the nightmares that are happening over there and we hope that everyone is safe and this will all be behind us soon even though I don鈥檛 think they鈥檒l ever be a normal again.
Everybody stay safe and stay inside!!
Emigrayo (Buster)
Joel and a I are really wanting to get back to Vilcabamba. It is a friendly town.聽 I really like the Ecuadorian people and others we have met over time.
However, we do have to take care of things here in the USA. First, Joel's back surgery, healing time, and the leagal move.聽 I don't know how long all this will go on in Ecuador - our visas were approved in a week but who knows when things will open up again.聽 So, we wait for informaiton here and in Ecuador.
Joel and I really look forward to things getting back to some kind of normal!
Good luck to you, and all others, in the wait and see mode.
Robin
Best Wishes,
Emigrayo66
Thank you for checking in with me,
Karen Cecilia
kcvonholck wrote:It will still be another year or even 2 before I will be ready to move back to Ecuador, and my selected city is Cuenca, and was so happy to read that there not been any Covid-19 cases at this time....
Karen Cecilia
Karen Cecilia's information that there have not been any covid cases in Cuenca is not correct.
Cuenca's mayor, for instance, says 15 percent of 244 vendors from El Arenal market have tested positive for covid (per an article e-published yesterday, April 26, at ...)聽 This testing result prompted Mayor Palacios to suspend all activity at another market to which the Arenal vendors had been relocated.
In an article at the same website published today, Ecuador's health minister is predicting that at least 80 percent of the population will have been covid-infected by late this year.聽 He says probably one million -- and possibly millions -- in Ecuador have already been infected.聽 "This is a positive," he says, because it means "the level of immunity is increasing rapidly."
cccmedia
I hope you can realize your dreams in the near future.
Emigrayo66 (Buster)
Make your relocation easier with the Ecuador expat guide

Moving to Ecuador with your pet
Like most countries, Ecuador has certain rules and regulations regarding traveling with pets. It is better to be ...

Moving to Ecuador
Moving to Ecuador and bringing all your worldly goods requires appropriate planning. Here are some guidelines that ...

Work in Ecuador
Ecuador is famous as a retirement haven. But you might not want to wait until retirement age to move there and ...

Opening a bank account in Ecuador
A few years back, an expat would just breeze into an Ecuadorian bank, flash their passport and a bank account ...

Accommodation in Cuenca
The rose-colored lenses through which potential expats have been made to view Cuenca often blur how the real ...

Family and children in Ecuador
Family is everything to an Ecuadorian. The extended family unit is the most important aspect of life in Ecuador, ...

Retirement in Ecuador
For the past decade or so, Ecuador has moved between the number one and number two spots in polls that rank ...

Healthcare in Ecuador
Ecuador, as a fast-developing nation, has laws that are constantly evolving, but one thing is certain: the ongoing ...
Forum topics on moving to Ecuador
大咖福利影院 for your expat journey



