Paraguay

🇵🇾

Phone Code

+595

Capital

Asuncion

Population

7 Million

Native Name

Paraguay

Region

Americas

South America

Timezone

Paraguay Summer Time

UTC-03:00

Paraguay is a landlocked South American country of 406,000 square kilometres, bordered by Argentina to the south and west, Brazil to the east and Bolivia to the north-west. With a population of around 7 million and Asunción as its capital and largest city (founded 1537, one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities of the Americas), Paraguay is unique on the continent as an officially bilingual nation: both Spanish and Guaraní hold official status, and Guaraní is spoken by roughly 90 percent of the population — Paraguay is the only country in the Americas where an indigenous language is the daily language of the majority. The Paraguay River divides the country into two very different worlds. The eastern region (Región Oriental) holds 97 percent of the population on subtropical farmland, rolling hills and Atlantic-influenced forest. The western region — the Gran Chaco (Región Occidental) — covers 60 percent of the territory but holds only 3 percent of the population: a vast, sparsely populated wilderness of dry thorn forest, palm savanna and seasonal wetlands, with one of the densest jaguar populations of South America and a remarkable cluster of German-speaking Mennonite colonies (Filadelfia, Loma Plata, Neuland) settled in the 1920s and 1930s and still cultural and linguistic islands of Plautdietsch, German and Spanish in the middle of the Chaco. Tourism is unusually low for the region — Paraguay receives well under a million international visitors a year, far behind Argentina or Brazil — which makes it one of the more genuine, unbranded travel experiences left in South America. The big draws are the UNESCO-listed Jesuit missions of La Santísima Trinidad de Paraná and Jesús de Tavarangue near Encarnación (the surviving stone shells of the 17th-18th-century Guaraní reductions), the Itaipú Dam on the Paraná river opposite Foz do Iguaçu (the second-largest hydroelectric project in the world after Three Gorges), the Chaco wilderness and Mennonite Central, the historic centre of Asunción with its Casa de la Independencia and Cabildo, the historical Franciscan and Jesuit towns of the Cordillera (Yaguarón, Atyrá, Tobatí, Caacupé), the artisanal villages of the Circuito de Oro (ñandutí lace at Itauguá, ao po'i embroidery at Yataity, harp making at Luque), and the famously social tereré culture (the cold mate-with-medicinal-herbs that Paraguayans share continuously through the day, recognised by UNESCO in 2020 as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity).

Visa Requirements for Paraguay

Paraguay offers visa-free entry to citizens of around 80 countries — including the entire European Union, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Israel and most South American nations — for tourism and business stays of up to 90 days within a 365-day period. The entry stamp is issued on arrival at Silvio Pettirossi International Airport (ASU) in Asunción or at any of the recognised land borders with Argentina, Brazil and Bolivia. Passport must be valid at least 6 months from the date of entry; a return or onward ticket and proof of accommodation may be requested but rarely scrutinised. The 90-day stay can be extended for a further 90 days at the Dirección General de Migraciones in Asunción for a fee of around USD 100. Citizens of Mercosur and Andean Community member states (Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Uruguay) enter on national identity card under the regional free-movement protocol — the busiest cross-border arrival category. Citizens of approximately 80 other nationalities (much of Africa, large parts of Asia, the Middle East, Russia and the post-Soviet space) require an advance consular tourist visa: application at a Paraguayan embassy or consulate with form, passport, photos, bank statements, hotel reservation or invitation letter, fee of around USD 65–160 and processing of 5–15 working days. Paraguay has long had one of the most accessible permanent residency programmes in Latin America — historically requiring only a clean criminal record, a bank deposit of around USD 5,000 (or proof of ongoing income) and a relatively simple consular or in-country application — which has made the country a popular destination for retirees, digital nomads and second-residency seekers (the residency rules tightened somewhat in 2022 but remain among the friendlier programmes in the region). Citizenship is eligible after 3 years of permanent residency, with basic Spanish or Guaraní language ability required.

Common Visa Types

Visa-Free Entry (90 Days)

90 days within any 365-day period; passport valid 6+ months from date of entry; entry stamp issued at arrival at Silvio Pettirossi (ASU) or at any of the land borders; return or onward ticket and proof of accommodation may be requested; extendable for a further 90 days at the Dirección General de Migraciones in Asunción (around USD 100).

Tourism, family visits and short-term business meetings for citizens of around 80 countries — the entire EU, UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Israel and most South American nations.

Mercosur & Andean Community ID Entry

90 days; entry on national identity card or passport at all international airports and approved overland crossings; conversion to Mercosur temporary residency possible inside the country.

Free movement for citizens of Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Uruguay — the busiest entry category for the country, especially through the Posadas-Encarnación and Foz do Iguaçu-Ciudad del Este crossings.

Consular Tourist & Business Visa

30–90 days; apply at a Paraguayan consulate before travel; passport, photos, application form, bank statements (3–6 months), hotel reservation or invitation letter, yellow fever certificate (if arriving from endemic countries), fee of USD 65–160 depending on nationality; processing 5–15 working days; single or multiple entry depending on issuance.

Tourism and short business visits for citizens of approximately 80 nationalities outside the visa-free list — much of Africa, large parts of Asia, the Middle East, Russia and the post-Soviet space.

Residency Visa (Retirement, Investment, Work)

Apply at a Paraguayan consulate or directly at the Dirección General de Migraciones in Asunción with proof of stable income or a bank deposit of around USD 5,000 (rules tightened slightly in 2022 but the programme remains friendlier than most regional alternatives), criminal background check from countries of residence in the past 5 years (apostilled and translated to Spanish), birth certificate and medical certificate; processing 6–12 months; permanent residency after 2–3 years; citizenship eligible after 3 years of permanent residency, with basic Spanish or Guaraní language ability required.

Long-stay residency for retirees, remote workers, investors, employees with a Paraguayan sponsor and family reunification — Paraguay's residency programme is one of the most accessible in Latin America.

Important Travel Information

Citizens of around 80 countries — the entire EU, UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Israel and most South American nations — enter visa-free for 90 days within any 365-day period; Mercosur and Andean Community citizens enter on national ID card; the 90-day stay is extendable for a further 90 days at the Dirección General de Migraciones in Asunción (around USD 100).

Passport must be valid at least 6 months from the date of entry; return or onward ticket and proof of accommodation may be requested but are rarely scrutinised; entry stamp issued at Silvio Pettirossi (ASU) or at any of the land borders with Argentina, Brazil and Bolivia.

Silvio Pettirossi International Airport (ASU) in Asunción is the main hub, 16 km from the centre; direct flights from Buenos Aires (1 hr, Aerolíneas Argentinas/LATAM), São Paulo (2 hr, LATAM/Gol), Santiago de Chile, Lima, Santa Cruz de la Sierra and Panama City (Copa, the principal international hub for North American and European connections); no direct intercontinental flights, so most travellers from Europe arrive via Madrid (Iberia/Air Europa), São Paulo or Panama City.

Travel Guide

Paraguay rewards travellers who like the unpolished, the genuinely uncrowded and the slightly off-grid: under a million international visitors a year (less than a sixth of neighbouring Argentina), almost no tour-bus circuit, low costs, an unfailingly hospitable population and a cultural make-up — Spanish and Guaraní side by side, with German Mennonite communities and Brazilian/Argentine border traffic — that exists nowhere else on the continent. Asunción is the natural starting point: founded in 1537 as one of the earliest Spanish settlements of the Río de la Plata, it sits on the east bank of the Paraguay River and combines a small historic core (Casa de la Independencia, the Cabildo, the Panteón Nacional de los Héroes, the Plaza de los Héroes), riverfront walks along the Costanera, lively local markets (Mercado 4), the modern Paseo La Galería and the surrounding Carmelitas neighbourhood. The Circuito de Oro — a loop of historic Franciscan and Jesuit towns within 100 km of Asunción — strings together Areguá (the colourful pottery town on Lake Ypacaraí), Itauguá (centre of ñandutí lace, the spiderweb embroidery that is Paraguay's national craft), Yaguarón (with the country's most extraordinary Franciscan baroque interior), Caacupé (the great pilgrimage basilica, with the 8 December festival), Atyrá and Tobatí. The Jesuit missions of Trinidad and Jesús near Encarnación, listed by UNESCO in 1993, are Paraguay's signature heritage stop: surviving carved sandstone naves, bell towers and friezes from the 17th-18th-century reducciones jesuíticas where Guaraní communities lived under Jesuit guidance — Trinidad has the most spectacular ruins, Jesús the most evocative atmosphere, both reachable on a half-day from Encarnación. Encarnación itself, on the Paraná river opposite Posadas (Argentina), has a cleaned-up Costanera and the country's biggest carnival each January-February. Ciudad del Este, on the triple frontier with Brazil and Argentina, is famous for its border-shopping economy and as the gateway to the Itaipú Dam — the world's second-largest hydroelectric project, with free guided tours from the Paraguayan side, and a 15-km hop to the Brazilian and Argentine sides of the Iguazú Falls. The Chaco is the country's other great signature: a vast, low-density wilderness in the west crossed by the long Trans-Chaco Highway (Ruta 9), with the German Mennonite colonies of Filadelfia, Loma Plata and Neuland (founded by Plautdietsch-speaking Mennonite settlers from Russia and Canada in the 1920s and 1930s, still operating their own dairy cooperative and museum), and the Defensores del Chaco National Park as one of South America's last big jaguar reserves. Cuisine — sopa paraguaya (the country's national dish, a baked cornbread-style cheese cake despite the name), chipa (the cheese-and-cassava-flour rings sold by ambulant vendors), mbeju, milanesa, asado, tropical river fish and the omnipresent tereré (cold mate with medicinal herbs, recognised by UNESCO in 2020 as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity) — runs alongside Paraguay's distinctive harp music (arpa paraguaya, with the bell-like Pájaro Campana as standard repertoire) and the polka and guarania song traditions. Costs are unusually low for the continent — backpacker $25–40/day, mid-range $50–80/day — and the country pairs well with neighbouring Argentina (Buenos Aires-Asunción overnight bus or a 1-hour flight) or Brazil (Foz do Iguaçu-Ciudad del Este on foot across the Friendship Bridge).

Ways to Experience This Destination

Trinidad & Jesús — UNESCO Jesuit Missions

The UNESCO-listed mission ruins of La Santísima Trinidad de Paraná (founded 1706) and Jesús de Tavarangue (founded 1685) near Encarnación are Paraguay's signature heritage stop. The 17th-18th-century reducciones jesuíticas were self-sufficient Guaraní communities under Jesuit guidance — by the time of the Jesuit expulsion from the Spanish empire in 1767 the system was producing baroque architecture, music and art that combined European training with Guaraní craftsmanship. Trinidad holds the most spectacular surviving ruins, with carved sandstone friezes of musician angels, bell towers and a vast roofless church; Jesús has the more evocative atmosphere of an unfinished ruin. Both sit 28 km apart and can be combined in a half-day trip from Encarnación. Sound-and-light shows operate at Trinidad some evenings.

Itaipú Dam & Ciudad del Este

The Itaipú Dam, on the Paraná River between Paraguay and Brazil opposite Foz do Iguaçu, is the world's second-largest hydroelectric project after China's Three Gorges. Completed in 1984 and binationally operated, the 196-metre-high dam stretches almost 8 km across the Paraná with 20 generating units and a reservoir that extends 170 km upstream. Free guided tours from the Paraguayan-side visitor centre take in the spillway viewpoint, the powerhouse and the evening illumination of the dam structure. Ciudad del Este, the host city, doubles as a famous border-shopping town and the Paraguayan side of the Triple Frontier — most travellers combine the Itaipú visit with a 15-km hop across the Friendship Bridge to the Brazilian and Argentine sides of the Iguazú Falls.

Asunción, Casa de la Independencia & the Costanera

Asunción, founded in 1537 on the east bank of the Paraguay River, is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities of the Americas. The small historic core — the Casa de la Independencia (the 1772 house where the 14-15 May 1811 independence movement was hatched), the 19th-century Cabildo (now a cultural museum), the Panteón Nacional de los Héroes (a small Italian-marble Pantheon honouring López and the Triple Alliance War heroes), the Plaza de los Héroes — sits inside a low-rise capital that opens onto the Costanera river walk, the lively Mercado 4 for tereré supplies and snack-cart food, and the surrounding Carmelitas neighbourhood for evening dining.

Circuito de Oro — Areguá, Caacupé & Yaguarón

The Circuito de Oro is a 200-km loop of small Franciscan and Jesuit-era towns within an hour or two of Asunción. Areguá, on Lake Ypacaraí, is the colourful pottery town with strawberry fields and a steep cobbled main street; Itauguá is the centre of ñandutí lace, the spiderweb embroidery on display at the annual July Festival; Caacupé holds Paraguay's most important pilgrimage basilica with the great 8 December feast of the Virgin of Caacupé; Yaguarón has the country's most extraordinary Franciscan baroque interior, with hand-carved altars and ceilings by Guaraní craftsmen; Atyrá and Tobatí round off the circuit. A classic 1–2 day trip out of Asunción by hired car or organised tour.

Gran Chaco, Mennonite Colonies & Defensores National Park

Western Paraguay — the Gran Chaco — is one of South America's last frontiers: 60 percent of the national territory, only 3 percent of the population, dry thorn forest and palm savanna stretching to the Bolivian border. The long Trans-Chaco Highway (Ruta 9) runs almost 800 km from Asunción to the Bolivian border, with the German-speaking Mennonite colonies of Filadelfia, Loma Plata and Neuland — settled by Plautdietsch- and German-speaking Mennonites from Russia and Canada in the 1920s and 1930s, still running their own dairy cooperative (Trébol/Co-op Chortitzer), Mennonite museums and German-language schools — as the only sustained settlements. Defensores del Chaco National Park (780,000 hectares) is one of South America's biggest jaguar reserves; visiting the Chaco requires a 4x4, an experienced guide, and best done May to September (dry season).

Tereré, Sopa Paraguaya & Harp Music

Paraguayan culture is unusually distinct on the continent. Tereré — cold mate served with medicinal yuyo herbs, drunk continuously through the hot day — is the country's social signature; UNESCO recognised tereré culture in 2020 as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. The cuisine — sopa paraguaya (the national baked cornmeal-and-cheese cake, despite the name), chipa (the ring-shaped cheese-and-cassava-flour bread), mbeju, milanesa and asado — is reliable and inexpensive everywhere. Music carries the Guaraní heritage forward: the arpa paraguaya (the lyric Paraguayan harp, with the bell-like Pájaro Campana as standard repertoire), the polka paraguaya and the guarania ballad form invented by José Asunción Flores in 1925.

Money & Currency

Money & Currency

Paraguayan Guaraní (PYG)

Currency code: PYG

Practical Money Tips

Paraguayan Guaraní (PYG) — very low denomination; 1 USD ≈ 7,500 PYG; notes come in denominations of 1,000 to 100,000 PYG; USD and BRL widely accepted in Ciudad del Este and border towns; EUR exchangeable in Asunción at Banco Continental, Itaú, BBVA, Banco Regional; exchange houses (casas de cambio) in Asunción and Ciudad del Este

Paraguay uses the Paraguayan Guaraní (PYG), a very low-denomination currency — prices are in thousands and millions. Notes come in 1,000; 2,000; 5,000; 10,000; 20,000; 50,000; and 100,000 PYG. 1 USD ≈ 7,500 PYG. In Asunción, USD and EUR can be exchanged at Banco Continental, Itaú, BBVA, Banco Regional, and casas de cambio (exchange houses) along Palma and Chile streets in the city centre. USD is also readily accepted in restaurants, hotels, and shops in Asunción and Ciudad del Este. BRL is widely accepted in Ciudad del Este due to proximity to Brazil. Near the Argentine border, ARS is sometimes accepted but at poor rates.

ATMs in Asunción and major cities — Banco Continental, Itaú, BBVA, Banco Regional, Banco GNB Sudameris in Asunción (Shopping del Sol, Paseo La Galería); Ciudad del Este has dense ATM coverage; coverage drops outside cities; Visa and Mastercard accepted; carry PYG cash for rural areas, small towns

ATMs are readily available in Asunción and Ciudad del Este. Banco Continental, Itaú, BBVA, Banco Regional, and GNB Sudameris have ATMs in Asunción shopping centres (Shopping del Sol, Paseo La Galería, Multiplaza) and the city centre. Ciudad del Este, as Paraguay's major commercial hub near the Brazil–Argentina border, has dense ATM coverage throughout the shopping district. In smaller towns (Encarnación, Pedro Juan Caballero, Concepción) ATMs are present but less numerous. Rural communities and small villages may have no ATMs — carry PYG cash when leaving the cities.

Cards accepted at hotels, malls, and major restaurants in Asunción and Ciudad del Este — Visa and Mastercard standard; Apple Pay not available; Google Pay limited availability; cash preferred at markets, small restaurants, street vendors, rural towns; Paraguay is one of the most affordable destinations in South America

Card acceptance in Paraguay is decent at mid-range and upscale establishments in Asunción and Ciudad del Este. Visa and Mastercard are accepted at most international hotels, major restaurants, supermarkets (Stock, Superseis, Disco), and shopping centres. Apple Pay is not available in Paraguay. Google Pay has very limited availability. Cash is preferred and often required at local restaurants, markets (Mercado 4 in Asunción), bus stations, local transport, and smaller towns. Carry PYG cash outside main commercial areas.

One of South America's most affordable destinations: budget guesthouse in Asunción PYG 80,000–200,000/night (USD 11–27); mid-range hotel Asunción USD 40–90/night; restaurant meal PYG 30,000–80,000 (USD 4–11); long-distance bus Asunción–Ciudad del Este ~PYG 60,000; Ciudad del Este: major duty-free shopping zone for electronics, perfumes, alcohol

Paraguay is one of the most affordable countries in South America. Budget guesthouse in Asunción: PYG 80,000–200,000/night (USD 11–27). Mid-range hotel in Asunción: USD 40–90/night. Quality hotel: USD 90–200/night. Restaurant meal (main course): PYG 30,000–80,000 (USD 4–11). Menu del día (lunch set): PYG 15,000–30,000 (USD 2–4). Cold beer at a bar: PYG 8,000–15,000. Long-distance bus Asunción–Ciudad del Este: PYG 55,000–70,000 (USD 7–9, approx 4–5 hours). Ciudad del Este is the second-largest duty-free zone in the world — electronics, perfumes, alcohol, clothing significantly cheaper than in Brazil or Argentina. Tipping: 10% is standard at restaurants in Asunción.

Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.

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