Opening a bank account in the DR is achievable. It is also slower and more paperwork-heavy than most things in the country, which is saying something. Knowing what to expect before you walk into a branch saves a lot of wasted time.
Can you open a bank account without residency?
Sometimes. With more difficulty.
A few banks will open a non-resident account with just your passport and proof of income. This is the exception rather than the rule and the product you get is more limited (lower transaction limits, no credit facility, sometimes no debit card). Requirements change, and individual branches apply them differently.
The straightforward version: get your cedula first, then open the account. The cedula is the national identity document you receive with DR residency. With a cedula, the process becomes normal. Without it, you’re asking for an exception that the bank may or may not grant on a given day.
Which banks work best for expats?
Banco Popular Dominicano is the largest private bank in the DR and the most commonly used by expats. Wide branch network, ATMs everywhere, English-speaking staff in the main branches in expat areas. The most practical choice for day-to-day banking.
BHD León is the second major private bank. Well-regarded, good service in the main branches, similar coverage to Banco Popular. A solid alternative.
Scotiabank has branches in the DR and is sometimes more accessible for non-residents because of its international banking infrastructure. Worth enquiring if you’re trying to open an account before getting residency.
Banreservas is the state bank. The most bureaucratic option. Not typically recommended for expats as a first choice.
What documents do you need?
With residency (cedula):
- Cedula (national ID)
- Passport
- Proof of income (employment letter, bank statements, pension statement)
- Proof of address in the DR (utility bill or rental contract with your name)
- Two recent passport photos (some banks)
Without residency:
- Passport
- Proof of income
- Some banks require a letter of reference from your home bank
- Requirements vary by bank and sometimes by branch
Call the specific branch before going. Requirements change and individual managers have discretion on non-resident applications.
How long does it take?
With residency and complete documents: same day in most cases. You leave with a temporary card and the permanent one arrives within 2-3 weeks.
Without residency: longer, if approved at all. The branch may refer you to a relationship manager. Expect a few days at minimum.
What are the practical alternatives while you’re sorting this out?
Wise (formerly TransferWise) is what most expats use in the interim. Hold multiple currencies, send money internationally at near-interbank rates, and use the debit card anywhere Mastercard is accepted. In the DR, that covers most places expats actually use. Wise doesn’t replace a local bank account for everything (utility direct debits, rent payments by local transfer, receiving Dominican pesos) but it handles 90% of day-to-day spending.
Your home country bank with an internationally-enabled debit card covers ATM withdrawals. Exchange fees add up over time, but it’s a functional solution for the first few months.
ATM availability in the DR is good in expat areas. Cabarete, Las Terrenas, Santo Domingo, and Punta Cana all have accessible ATMs. Banco Popular and BHD León ATMs are the most reliable.
What do expats actually do in practice?
Most operate with a combination:
- Wise for international transfers and most spending
- ATM withdrawals from a home country card or Wise card for local cash
- DR bank account (once residency is sorted) for rent, utilities, and anything requiring a local transfer
The DR remains partly cash-based. Motos, local markets, colmados, and many smaller businesses are cash-only. Budget for this. Withdraw regularly rather than carrying all your cash at once.
What about sending money to the DR from abroad?
Wise is the cheapest for most currencies. Western Union and MoneyGram have locations throughout the DR and are widely used by Dominicans receiving remittances. The exchange rates are worse but the locations are ubiquitous.
Bank-to-bank international transfers are slow and expensive. Avoid for regular transfers once you’ve set up Wise.
