Financial education · Ecuador 2026
Invest in bricks,
without buying a building.
Ecadorado explains how real estate crowdlending lets Ecuadorians take part in property-backed loans from accessible amounts, with clear rules and full project visibility.
- Projects reviewed by local specialists in Quito, Guayaquil and Cuenca.
- Mortgage contracts enforceable before Ecuadorian public notaries.
- Quarterly reports and a transparent payment calendar.

Projects reviewed in 2025
184
Minimum ticket studied
USD 100
Projects reviewed in 2025
184
Minimum ticket studied
USD 100
Subscribed community
9,400+
Country of operation
Ecuador
Concept
What is real estate crowdlending?
Real estate crowdlending is a form of collective financing in which a group of people lend money, in small amounts, to a property developer or an owner needing liquidity. That loan is secured by a real estate asset located in Ecuador (a first or second lien mortgage) and repays principal plus interest over a defined term.
A loan, not ownership
Unlike equity crowdfunding, here you do not buy a share of the property: you lend money. The developer returns the principal and pays interest according to an agreed schedule, typically between 6 and 36 months.
Backed by real estate
Every operation is structured on a real asset, appraised by an expert registered with the Ecuadorian Superintendence of Companies. If the developer defaults, the mortgage guarantee allows enforcement of the asset to recover the capital lent.
Democratised access
Previously, only banks financed property projects. Today, from as little as USD 100, an Ecuadorian professional can take part in transactions once reserved for institutional investors.
Process
How a real estate crowdlending deal works
A typical 5-stage cycle, applicable to residential, commercial or refurbishment projects in Ecuador.

Project origination
The developer submits the property, blueprints, expert appraisal, municipal permits and track record. Only a small share of projects passes the initial screening.
Legal structuring
The mortgage deed is signed before a public notary and registered in the Property Registry, with defined rate, term and amortisation schedule.
Collective funding
The deal is opened to the community. Each person contributes the amount they choose until the target is reached. If it is not reached, funds are returned to participants.
Disbursement and monitoring
Funds are transferred to the developer. The platform monitors construction progress, payments and collateral value, publishing quarterly reports.
Repayment with interest
The developer pays monthly instalments or a bullet at maturity. Each participant receives their pro-rata share of principal and interest, net of operating costs.
Value proposition
Why Ecuadorians are looking at real estate crowdlending
Real diversification
Spreading USD 1,000 across 10 different projects reduces exposure compared with placing everything into a single property or a single bank deposit.
Predictable cash flow
Payment schedules are typically monthly or quarterly, which makes it easier to plan expenses, reinvest or complement other income.
Tangible collateral
A mortgage is a real right registered in the Property Registry. In case of default, Ecuador has a clear legal procedure to enforce the guarantee.
Transparent education
Ecadorado publishes analyses, glossaries, case studies and comparisons with other vehicles (term deposits, funds, equities) so you can decide with information.

Warning
Risks to know before investing
No investment is risk-free. Real estate crowdlending is no exception and that is why transparency is a pillar at Ecadorado.
01
Default risk
The developer may fail to pay. Foreclosure takes time and may not recover 100% of the capital.
02
Liquidity risk
Loans are usually held to maturity. Selling your position early is not guaranteed before the term ends.
03
Market risk
Property prices in Ecuador can fluctuate with the economic cycle, tax policy or local events.
04
Regulatory risk
Regulatory frameworks evolve. Ecadorado adapts to the Organic Law on Entrepreneurship and Innovation and to the pronouncements of the Superintendence of Companies, Securities and Insurance.
Frequently asked
Questions we receive every week
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Real cases, glossaries, comparisons with term deposits, interviews with local developers and alerts when a project opens for public review.
