De acordo com um tópico no tripadvisor :
To enter my country you need to show the registration which prooves the vehicle is yours. After that the Customs will give you a "perniso de internacion" for 3 months.
You can leave your vehicle at your hotel, and then you can return and continue with more journeys down to Peru or Colombia in it. You have to pay a revenue every 3 months after that to the government.
I had clients that had done that before and I had take care of their paper work.
O endereço de e-mail de contato na postagem pode valer a pena para suas viagens.
A pesquisa por "perniso de internacion" leva a este site que traduz (via google (mal)) em:
Requirements for obtaining a permit for temporary use of a vehicle in Ecuador
He must submit to Customs officials of Ecuador, the qualifying documents for this purpose:
- Identity document (passport) duly stamped by migration
- Get a Mandatory Traffic Accident Insurance (SOAT)
- Driver's license and vehicle registration, whereby the vehicle is special and preferential entered for the Customs of Ecuador garment[sic].
- The permanence of the vehicle for private use tourist equal to the maximum time allowed tourists (90 days).
- The time allowed for the temporary custody of the vehicle is up to 90 days extendable once for 90 days.
- If the vehicle is not owned by the driver, you must present authorization granted by the owner of the vehicle before a notary for use during the trip, where the time the vehicle will remain in Ecuadorian territory stated.
Este site afirma ser capaz de fornecer a permissão em 30 minutos.
A chave para procurar por licenças parece ser "Importação Temporária" junto com "veículo" ou "carro". Uma anedota adicional para Nicuragua aqui diz:
We drove our Pathfinder 2000 from Canada in December 2011 and were in Nicaragua for 18 months with it (until May 2013)... Every 30 days (not 90 days) we had to either exit the country in to Costa Rica for 3 days and then come back in Nicaragua to get another 30 day "Temporary Importation Visa" for the car or drive to Managua to the DGA office and ask for a 30 day extension for a fee (I don't remember the how much, I think it was $1/day...) so in 18 months we probably drove in and out of both Costa Rica and Nicaragua with our Canadian car at least 8-9 times.
Dependendo dos países em que você pretende permanecer, parece que você normalmente precisa solicitar uma permissão de importação temporária, e isso geralmente tem duração restrita. Você pode renovar uma ou mais vezes no país ou sair do país e entrar novamente para renovar.