Low entry ticket
Buying an apartment in Quito requires a down payment of several tens of thousands of dollars. In crowdlending, a person can start from USD 100 per operation.
Financial education · Ecuador 2026
Kyploskaer is an educational initiative based in Quito that teaches, in plain language, how collective financing of real estate projects works and why it is becoming a real alternative across Latin America.

Concept
Real estate crowdlending is a form of collective financing in which a number of individuals jointly lend money to a real estate developer to carry out a specific project: building a residential block, refurbishing a commercial unit or purchasing urban land in cities such as Quito, Guayaquil or Cuenca.
Unlike equity crowdfunding, where the investor becomes a shareholder in the project, in crowdlending the relationship is a loan: the developer receives the capital and contractually commits to repaying it within an agreed term, together with the agreed interest.
It is a way of democratising access to a sector that was historically reserved for traditional banks and institutional investors with six-figure tickets or more.
Dozens or hundreds of people contribute small tranches until the total project amount is reached.
The developer signs a contract with clear conditions: principal, term (usually 12 to 36 months) and interest.
There is usually a mortgage or a pledge over the property that backs the operation.
The investor acts as a creditor: they do not enter the project's ownership, they only lend and collect.
Mechanics
A real estate crowdlending operation in Ecuador broadly follows the same six stages as in mature markets such as Spain, Estonia or Mexico.

A real estate developer submits a specific deal — for example, finishing a 24-apartment building in Cumbayá — and requests financing for a specific amount.
The platform assesses the project: technical and zoning feasibility, real collateral, developer experience and the market price of the underlying asset.
If the deal passes the review, it is published with its full data sheet: rate, term, collateral, plans, municipal permits and repayment schedule.
Registered investors contribute tranches — in Ecuador it usually starts from USD 100 — until 100% of the requested amount is covered.
Once the target is met, the funds are transferred to the developer to execute the works. The platform acts as an intermediary and custodian.
According to the agreed calendar, the developer returns the principal plus interest. Investors receive payments prorated according to their contribution.
Why it matters
Buying an apartment in Quito requires a down payment of several tens of thousands of dollars. In crowdlending, a person can start from USD 100 per operation.
With the same capital that a single down payment costs, it is possible to spread the money across 20 or 30 projects in different cities.
It does not require locking up money for 10 or 20 years, as direct purchase does: typical terms are 12 to 36 months.
The interest and the schedule are defined from day one, without depending on tenants, vacancies or property maintenance.
Each project is published with plans, permits, title certificates and technical reports accessible to the investor.
In most operations, the loan is backed by a mortgage or a pledge over the financed asset itself.
Risks
Real estate crowdlending is not a risk-free product. An informed decision also requires understanding the trade-offs.
The developer may delay or fail to repay. Even where there is collateral, enforcing it takes time and legal costs.
The money is committed until the end of the term. There is no consolidated secondary market in Ecuador.
A drop in the price per square metre can affect the value of the collateral and the saleability of the asset.
The regulatory framework for collaborative financing in Ecuador is still being consolidated by the Board of Financial Policy and Regulation.
Local context
Ecuador is going through an interesting stage: the housing deficit exceeds 1.8 million units according to figures from the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing, while private banks demand increasingly strict guarantees from small developers.
Into that gap, real estate crowdlending appears as an alternative for financing medium-sized projects in Quito, Guayaquil, Cuenca, Manta and Loja, complementing — not replacing — traditional mortgage credit.
Since 2020, the Ecuadorian Board of Financial Policy and Regulation has been working on specific guidelines for collaborative financing platforms, aligned with experiences in Colombia, Peru and Mexico.

Free newsletter
No spam and no promises of returns. Only educational content: glossaries, mechanics, real cases and regulatory news.

We use strictly necessary cookies for the site to work and, with your consent, analytics and marketing cookies. You may accept them, reject them or configure them at any time. More information in the Cookie Policy.