720 km over 7 days: about 103 km per day before detours.
Argentina to Uruguay Rio de la Plata route
Argentina to Uruguay Rio de la Plata route via Gualeguaychu, Fray Bentos, Colonia and Montevideo with border paperwork, foreign-vehicle toll setup, coastal weather and legal overnight planning.
Route line
Practical corridor decisions
6 corridor-specific notes checked against primary sources on Jun 16, 2026.
- DocumentsKeep driver, vehicle and toll records aligned
Rio de la Plata routing is paperwork-light only when the driver, tourist status, vehicle permission, insurance and toll account data all stay consistent.
Do this: Carry passports, accepted licence or IDP, vehicle registration, owner or rental permission, insurance, Argentina tourist-vehicle evidence and Uruguay customs entry paperwork.
- BorderMake Fray Bentos its own stage
The bridge crossing controls the first safe day in Uruguay because border queues, toll registration and Montevideo/Colonia approach timing can stack up.
Do this: Treat Gualeguaychu-Fray Bentos as a border-stage day: check Argentina's international pass listing, avoid late arrival, and leave slack for bridge queues, customs and first Uruguay toll setup.
- TollsSet the foreign toll pass early
Uruguay tolling is manageable, but foreign-plate vehicles need deliberate registration or pass handling rather than a last-second cash assumption.
Do this: Register or fund the Uruguay foreign-vehicle toll path before committing to Routes 1, 2, 3 or coastal legs, and keep card, cash and online-payment backups.
- OvernightName the night before the coast
Uruguay is compact, but legal overnight planning still matters around coast, wetlands, port zones and peak-season beach towns.
Do this: Use named campsites, tourist farms, guarded parking or hosted permission near Montevideo, Colonia, Punta del Este, Fray Bentos and coastal parks; do not rely on beaches, dunes or rambla parking.
- ServicesReset before city and beach legs
Distances are short, but urban access, holiday demand, toll setup and coastal parking can make service resets more important than kilometres.
Do this: Reset fuel, water, LPG, groceries, waste and secure parking before crossing the river, before Montevideo/Colonia urban days and before moving east toward beach towns.
- SeasonalCoast weather still needs slack
Shoulder season is comfortable, but Rio de la Plata weather and peak summer travel can still decide safe daily timing.
Do this: Keep slack for coastal wind, thunderstorms, heavy rain, bridge or ferry disruption, summer traffic, roadworks and crowded holiday weekends around the Rio de la Plata.
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 services every few days: water, dump, LPG, laundry, overnight stays and the first stop after a long drive.
Check wind for high vehicles, heat, passes, ferries and mountain seasonality before departure.
Route-specific planning signals
- Tolls / LEZTolls and city accessEstimate budget
The rules guide already covers 🇦🇷 Argentina and 🇺🇾 Uruguay; 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: heat (medium: 🇦🇷 Argentina); mountains (medium: 🇦🇷 Argentina); flooding (medium: 🇺🇾 Uruguay). 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 🇦🇷 Argentina. Plan water, dump, LPG, fuel and communications before long legs; for this preset, a sensible autonomy interval is 2-3 days.