4,300 km over 22 days: about 196 km per day before detours.
Ecuador to Paraguay via Peru and Bolivia route
Ecuador to Paraguay route via Peru and Bolivia, Quito, Cuenca, Huaquillas, Lima, Puno, Desaguadero, La Paz, Santa Cruz, Villamontes, Infante Rivarola, Mariscal Estigarribia and Asuncion with three border stages, SENAE/SUNAT/SIVETUR/DNIT paperwork, coastal desert, Altiplano and Chaco service planning.
Route line
- 1🇪🇨 EcuadorCountry
Start: check camper profile, documents, fuel and autonomy range.
- 2🇵🇪 PeruCountry
Transit: check vignettes, tunnels, ferries, mass limits and stopover rules.
- 3🇧🇴 BoliviaCountry
Transit: check vignettes, tunnels, ferries, mass limits and stopover rules.
- 4🇵🇾 ParaguayCountry
Finish: check local overnight, parking, LEZ and toll-road rules.
Practical corridor decisions
6 corridor-specific notes checked against primary sources on Jun 17, 2026.
- DocumentsKeep SENAE, SUNAT, SIVETUR and DNIT aligned
This is a four-country vehicle-status corridor; SENAE, SUNAT, SIVETUR and DNIT need the same driver, vehicle, permission, insurance and stay-length story.
Do this: Before Quito, Cuenca, Huaquillas, Lima, Puno, Desaguadero, La Paz, Santa Cruz, Villamontes, Infante Rivarola, Mariscal Estigarribia or Asuncion, keep passports, accepted licence or IDP, vehicle registration, owner or rental permission, insurance, Ecuador SENAE DJT records, Peru SUNAT CIT or carnet evidence, Bolivia SIVETUR evidence and Paraguay DNIT paperwork together.
- BorderThree border days set the route
The route stacks a humid coastal border, a high-altitude lake border and a remote Chaco border; none should be attached to a long driving day.
Do this: Treat Huaquillas-Aguas Verdes, Desaguadero and Infante Rivarola/Mariscal Estigarribia as three separate border days with daylight, customs steps, road status, market traffic, altitude or heat buffers and named fallback nights.
SENAE Ecuador: travellers by landEcuador MIT: infrastructure and transportSUNAT: requesting temporary vehicle entrySUNAT: temporary tourist vehicle entryBolivia Aduana: travellers and tourist vehiclesBolivia ABC: road transitability toolsParaguay DNIT: border neighbourhood trafficParaguay DNIT: customs regimesParaguay MOPC: roads and public works - TollsSplit payment planning four ways
Payment assumptions change at every country segment, from compact Ecuador costs to Peru insurance/protected-area exposure, Bolivia controls and Paraguay Chaco peajes.
Do this: Budget Ecuador and Peru toll or parking costs, Peru SOAT and protected-area exposure, Bolivia road controls and Paraguay peajes separately, then keep small cash and card backups for coast, Altiplano and Chaco towns.
- OvernightName nights before every geography change
The corridor alternates coast, desert, lake, altiplano and Chaco; each segment needs named overnight choices rather than informal roadside assumptions.
Do this: Use formal campgrounds, guarded hospedajes, hosterias, community tourism stops, named tourist properties, protected-area-compatible stays or explicit hosted permission near Cuenca, Huaquillas, Lima, Puno, La Paz, Santa Cruz, Villamontes, Mariscal Estigarribia and Asuncion.
- ServicesReset before coast, altitude and Chaco gaps
Service assumptions change sharply between Ecuador's mountains, Peru's coast and Altiplano, Bolivia's lowlands and the Trans-Chaco.
Do this: Reset fuel, potable water, waste capacity, food, cash, tyres, shade, altitude plan, mobile data, offline maps and recovery contacts before Cuenca-Huaquillas, Lima-Puno, La Paz-Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz-Villamontes and Trans-Chaco legs.
- SeasonalCoast, Altiplano and Chaco all need slack
Winter is the practical planning season, but the route still stacks mountain weather, desert heat, altitude, social disruption and Chaco recovery risk into one itinerary.
Do this: Keep slack for Ecuador mountain rain, Peru coastal heat, El Nino disruption, high-altitude cold, lake fog, protest blockades, Chaco heat, thunderstorms, muddy shoulders, smoke or fire restrictions, roadworks and slower recovery.
Ecuador MIT: infrastructure and transportEcuador Ambiente y EnergíaSERNANP: protected natural areasBolivia ABC: road transitability toolsVias Bolivia: toll and weighing servicesParaguay MOPC: roads and public worksParaguay SIAM: environmental information systemParaguay MADES: biodiversity and protected areas
Practical checks for this route
Country pages help check overnight stays, tolls, city zones, seasonal requirements and required equipment where the rules guide is already filled.
Plan water, dump, LPG and fuel with extra margin: service gaps matter on this scenario.
A winter scenario needs separate tyre, overnight temperature, wind and service-availability checks.
Route-specific planning signals
- Tolls / LEZTolls and city accessEstimate budget
The rules guide already covers 🇪🇨 Ecuador, 🇵🇪 Peru, 🇧🇴 Bolivia and 🇵🇾 Paraguay; use it to verify road charges, LEZ/city access and height/weight classes, then keep a budget reserve.
- Ferry / bridgesFerries, bridges and tunnelsCheck risks
The core scenario is not ferry-led, but private roads, tunnels and bridges can still price by motorhome length or height.
- Weather / roadsWeather and road seasonalityOpen risks
Main country signals: mountains (high: 🇪🇨 Ecuador, 🇵🇪 Peru and 🇧🇴 Bolivia); snow (medium: 🇧🇴 Bolivia); heat (medium: 🇪🇨 Ecuador, 🇵🇪 Peru, 🇧🇴 Bolivia and 🇵🇾 Paraguay). Open road risks to recalculate them by month, daily distance and road mode.
- Service stopsWater, dump, LPG and first nightOpen services
This corridor has a remote-road signal in 🇪🇨 Ecuador, 🇵🇪 Peru, 🇧🇴 Bolivia and 🇵🇾 Paraguay. Plan water, dump, LPG, fuel and communications before long legs; for this preset, a sensible autonomy interval is up to 5 days.
Where to verify details
Ecuador news, rules and sources help refine restrictions before departure.
Peru news, rules and sources help refine restrictions before departure.
Bolivia news, rules and sources help refine restrictions before departure.
Paraguay news, rules and sources help refine restrictions before departure.