Dollarized economy · 3–5 weeks · RUC · Local director required
3-5 weeks
RUC
Required
Ecuador's company formation process involves notarization, registration with the Superintendencia de Compañías (Superintendency of Companies), and RUC registration with the SRI (Servicio de Rentas Internas). A local Representante Legal who is Ecuadorian or holds legal residency is required. Ecuador's dollarized economy simplifies financial planning for international investors.
Notarization of articles of incorporation (escritura de constitución) before an Ecuadorian notary
Registration with the Superintendencia de Compañías (Superintendency of Companies)
RUC (tax ID) registration with the SRI (Servicio de Rentas Internas)
Municipal registration and business permit (Permiso de Funcionamiento)
Appointment of a qualifying Representante Legal domiciled in Ecuador
Ecuador permits 100% foreign ownership in most sectors. The required Representante Legal must be an Ecuadorian national or hold legal residency, but all economic ownership can be held by foreign nationals. Restrictions apply in strategic sectors designated by the constitution, including petroleum, mining, and public utilities, which require state participation. Ecuador's dollarized economy eliminates USD exchange rate risk for international investors.
Local Director: Required
Limited liability company, commonly used for small to mid-sized foreign businesses
Stock corporation, suitable for larger operations or companies requiring more complex capital structures
All entities operating in Ecuador must register with the SRI and obtain a RUC before commencing business. Ecuador operates a structured annual tax settlement system with mandatory electronic invoicing for all commercial transactions.
The RUC (Registro Único de Contribuyentes) is Ecuador's unique taxpayer identification number, issued by the SRI (Servicio de Rentas Internas). It is required for all tax filings and business activities.
Ecuador's IVA (VAT) is levied at a standard rate of 12% on most goods and services. A 0% rate applies to food staples, medicine, and exports. Monthly IVA declarations are filed electronically through the SRI portal. Electronic invoicing (factura electrónica) is mandatory for all transactions.
Ecuador's corporate income tax (Impuesto a la Renta) is levied at 25% on net taxable income (22% for entities that reinvest profits in productive assets under qualifying conditions). Monthly advance payments (cuotas de anticipo) are required based on the prior year's tax liability.
Annual corporate income tax return filed with SRI — deadline varies by RUC digit (typically March–April)
Annual report filed with the Superintendencia de Compañías (financial statements, shareholder information)
Annual renewal of municipal business permit (Permiso de Funcionamiento)
Monthly IVA (VAT) declaration filed electronically with SRI
Monthly income tax advance (anticipo del impuesto a la renta) payment
Electronic invoicing (factura electrónica) for all commercial transactions via SRI-authorized systems
Monthly IESS (social security) contributions if employing staff
Ecuador's labor framework is governed by the Código de Trabajo. Employers must provide a comprehensive package of mandatory benefits in addition to base salary.
Mandatory benefits include 13th month salary (Bono Navideño — December) and 14th month salary (Bono Escolar — April in Sierra, September in Costa), plus 15 days minimum paid vacation per year
IESS (Instituto Ecuatoriano de Seguridad Social) contributions: employer 12.15% of gross salary, employee 9.45% — mandatory for all employees
Annual profit sharing (participación de utilidades): employees entitled to 15% of pre-tax profits if the company is profitable — split 10% equally among employees and 5% by family load
NavviPal coordinates payroll processing and Código de Trabajo compliance through vetted Ecuadorian in-country partners. Contact our team before your first hire.
Talk To An ExpertEcuador is a dollarized, Pacific-coast economy with a growing services sector, a strategic position between Colombia and Peru, and significant natural resource wealth. Its USD economy and improving investment climate make it an increasingly viable option for foreign companies seeking Andean market access.
18M
Population
~B USD
GDP (2024 est.)
USD (dollarized)
Currency
3–5 weeks
Formation Time
NavviPal's platform tracks your Ecuadorian entity's RUC status, SRI filing calendar, Superintendencia de Compañías annual report deadlines, and IESS contribution obligations.

Internal revenue service responsible for RUC issuance, tax administration, and compliance oversight
Ecuador requires companies to have a legal representative who is an Ecuadorian national or holds legal residency. NavviPal provides a qualified local legal representative who acts solely on your company's instructions with full indemnity protections.
Company formation in Ecuador typically takes 3-5 weeks. The process includes drafting and notarizing articles of incorporation, registration with the Superintendencia de Compañías (Superintendency of Companies), and RUC registration with the SRI (Servicio de Rentas Internas).
Yes. Ecuador requires companies to appoint a legal representative (Representante Legal) who is an Ecuadorian national or holds legal residency. The Representante Legal represents the company before the SRI and the Superintendency of Companies, and must be domiciled in Ecuador.
Yes, 100% foreign ownership is permitted in most sectors. The required Representante Legal must be Ecuadorian or a resident, but all economic ownership can be held by foreign nationals. Restrictions apply in strategic sectors including petroleum, mining, and utilities. Ecuador's dollarized economy eliminates USD currency risk.
Company formation in Ecuador typically ranges from ,000 to ,000 USD for the core process, including notarization, Superintendency registration, and RUC setup. Ongoing costs include monthly VAT reporting, accounting, and the Representante Legal. NavviPal provides transparent, itemized quotes—contact us for your specific scenario.
The RUC (Registro Único de Contribuyentes) is Ecuador's taxpayer identification number, issued by the SRI. It is required for all tax filings, electronic invoicing, banking, and commercial transactions in Ecuador. The RUC must be activated before the company can begin operations or issue invoices.
Ecuadorian entities must file monthly VAT (IVA) reports with SRI, submit annual corporate income tax returns, comply with electronic invoicing requirements, file annual reports with the Superintendency of Companies, and hold mandatory shareholder meetings with proper corporate record-keeping.
Core requirements include: notarized articles of incorporation (escritura de constitución) executed before an Ecuadorian notary, registration with the Superintendency of Companies, RUC registration with SRI, apostilled copies of foreign shareholder identification documents, and appointment of a qualifying Representante Legal domiciled in Ecuador.
NavviPal handles company formation, compliance, accounting, and tax obligations so you can focus on building your business.