If you are NOT a honduran citizen, you will be required the following documents:
- A valid passport
- A certified copy of your birth certificate
- A certified copy of your police record
- An Affidavit of Single Status
- If you are marrying a Honduran citizen, your future spouse will require the following documents:
- A Honduran identity card (”tarjeta de Identidad”)
- A Certificate of Single Status issued by the Civil Registry (”Certificado de Soltería del Registro Civil”)
- If you have been married before, you will require these additional documents:
- A certified copy of the divorce decree or
- A certified copy of your previous spouse’s death
The information offices are located:
Copán
Copan Ruinas
Karla Leiva
e-mail: info@copanhonduras.org
Coordinator of the municipality unit of tourism in Copan Ruinas Office: Chamber of commerce of Copan
Choluteca
Choluteca
Sergio Lobo
Tel.882-4401, 882-3876
Tourism Office
South Guanaja
Guanaja
David Bodden
Coordinator of the municipality unit of tourism in Guanaja
Tel.453-4351
La Ceiba
La Ceiba
Maribel Espinoza
Coordinator of the municipality unit of tourism in La Ceiba
Tel.440-3044
Policía de Turismo
Sheriff: Juan Lopez Rochez
Office: Nacional Police behind bus stop
Tel. 441-6288
Cel. 970-4296
e-mail rochez@iht.hn
La Moskitia
Tourism information available in La Ceiba
Travel to Honduras and experience mountains, rivers, oceans, beaches, and ancient history. No place else can you have such diversity in close proximity to each other. Contact any travel agent for packages to your liking. You’ll be happy you came to Honduras! Other sites with information on Honduras: Honduras Information Honduras Travel Mountain Peaks of Honduras
Tela:
A sleepy coastal town, Tela has been slowly, but surely working its way to becoming an important beach destination. Located less than 90 km east of San Pedro Sula’s International airport, and connected by an excellent paved highway, Tela is very easily reached from San Pedro Sula. If you are driving your own car, the driving time is under one hour from San Pedro Sula.
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Picture from Tela:
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Guanaja:
Lying almost directly east of Roatan, Guanaja was first discovered by Columbus during his fourth and last voyage to the Americas on July 30, 1502. Upon arriving there, he found excellent quality water, as well as natives in giant canoes holding up to 25 men each. Thus, we know that the Paya Indians populated Guanaja during this time.
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The region east of Trujillo, and towards the Nicaraguan border is generally referred to as La Moskitia, or the Mosquito Coast. It is very sparsely populated, inaccessible by land and home to the largest tract of virgin tropical rain forest in the North American hemisphere. A good part of this area is protected by law under one of five distinct zones: The Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve, the Tawahka Anthropological Reserve, the Patuca National Park, the Cruta Caratasca Wildlife Refuge and the Rus Rus Biological Reserve. The area is populated by several indigenous groups, of which the Pech, Tawahka, Garifuna, Miskitos and native mestizos are the most predominant.
Valle de Angeles, Santa Barbara, Tegucigalpa, Guanaja, Ocotepeque, Santa Rosa de Copan and Pico Bonito - all beautifull mountainous regions in Honduras waiting for you to visit.