Southwestern Eastern region · ~77–95k people · 12,147 km²
Ñeembucú. Wetland triangle, Pilar riverport.
Ñeembucú occupies the wedge of land where the Paraguay and Paraná rivers meet — the southwestern tip of eastern Paraguay, pointed directly at the Argentine Mesopotamia. It is one of the lowest-population departments in the country (~77–95k depending on which 2022 figure you use; later projections have run higher than the initial DGEEC release) and one of the wettest, with vast esteros (seasonally flooded marshes) covering much of the interior. Pilar, the capital, is a calm river port opposite the Argentine city of Formosa, with a small textile mill, a 24-hour vehicle ferry, and an old colonial grid. Almost no foreigners live here, but a steady sport-fishing community cycles through the lodges around Humaitá in dorado season.
- Capital Pilar
- Population ~77–95k (2022 census; later estimates higher)
- Area 12,147 km²
- 2-bed rent US$ 150–300/mo
- Climate Subtropical, very humid, 12–35 °C
- Argentina border Pilar ferry to Formosa province
01 / overview
What Ñeembucú is
Pilar has roughly 30,000 people, a colonial centre laid out on a riverbank above the Paraguay, and Pilar Manufacturas — a textile mill that has historically employed a significant share of the town. A vehicle + foot-passenger ferry crosses 24 hours a day to the Argentine side, giving Pilar residents direct access to the supermarkets and services of Formosa province. Inland, the wetlands dominate: the Esteros del Ñeembucú occupy a large portion of the department and the dry-season road network shrinks dramatically in the November–March rains. Humaitá, downstream, holds the ruins of the 1860s Triple Alliance War fortifications — Paraguay's most-visited war-history site outside Asunción.
02 / economy
Textiles, cattle, river-based trade, fishing
Ñeembucú has a narrower economic base than most departments. Pilar Manufacturas — the cotton + textile mill — has been the largest single employer in the capital for decades and is the reason the town has a salaried middle class at all. Outside Pilar, the economy is cattle on the higher ground above the wetlands, rice in irrigated areas, and small river-port trade with Argentina. Sport fishing for dorado and surubí supports a niche but real lodge economy around Humaitá and the smaller riverside settlements. Rural land is cheap by national standards but harder to value than in dryer departments — half the department is unusable in the wet season, and access depends entirely on which dirt road sits above flood line.
03 / places to live
Pilar, Humaitá, Alberdi
Pilar is the only practical relocation option in the department — everything else is a fishing camp or a cattle outpost. The town's colonial centre is walkable, calm, and roughly 30% cheaper than Encarnación. Alberdi (northeast) sits across the river from Formosa's second town and has a similar river-ferry rhythm. Humaitá is small but draws fishing tourism. Rural areas have no foreigner-friendly infrastructure.
- Pilar (capital, ~30k) — colonial centre, textile mill, 24-hour Argentina ferry
- Alberdi (~10k) — second river port, opposite Formosa province
- Humaitá — war-history ruins, sport-fishing lodges
- Cerrito + Villalbín — cattle on the higher ground above the esteros
- Mayor Martínez + Tacuaras — very rural, wetland-fringe
04 / practical life
Internet, healthcare, getting out
Tigo + Personal fibre reaches Pilar; expect ~100 Mbps for around US$ 28/month. Rural districts depend on fixed wireless or Starlink. Pilar has one regional public hospital, a small private clinic, and pharmacies — adequate for routine work, not for anything serious. The advantage Ñeembucú has over Caazapá or San Pedro is the ferry: complicated medical cases often cross to Formosa (Argentina), which has tier-2 hospitals and direct flights to Buenos Aires. Driving to Asunción takes 4–5 hours via Route 4 through Misiones and Paraguarí; there is no scheduled passenger flight. The climate is the daily reality — humidity is consistently above 75% most of the year, and mosquito load in the wet season is high even by Paraguayan standards.
05 / who it fits
Best for
- Sport fishers
Some of the most accessible dorado + surubí fishing in South America. Lodges around Humaitá run April–October.
- Argentine-leaning quiet retirees
The Pilar ferry gives a calm, cheap base with same-day access to Formosa province for shopping, medicine, and Buenos Aires flights.
- River-based small business
Cross-border trade, ferry-tied logistics, eco-tourism lodges. Niche but viable.
- War-history + heritage researchers
Humaitá and the Curupaytí line are the most significant Triple Alliance War sites in the country.
相鄰省份
比較鄰近地區
資料來源
查證官方資料來源
本頁每一項事實皆連結至巴拉圭政府機關或公認的第三方資料來源。
- INE — National Statistics Institute ine.gov.py ↗
Department populations, areas, and capital identifiers.
- BCP — Central Bank bcp.gov.py ↗
Exchange rate for region rent + cost lines.
- STP — Technical Planning Secretariat stp.gov.py ↗
Regional infrastructure, public-investment plans by department.
規劃你的搬遷
Pilar fishing trip or quiet relocation?
We can connect you with fishing lodges around Humaitá or with realtors handling colonial-centre properties in Pilar. Send your dates + interest on WhatsApp.