Private healthcare in the DR can be genuinely good.
The gap between public and private healthcare in the Dominican Republic is significant. Most expats rely entirely on private hospitals and private insurance, and in the major cities that system works well for routine and specialist care. The main limitation is geographic: outside the main urban areas, even private healthcare becomes thinner.
Private hospitals
Modern, well-equipped facilities in Santo Domingo, Santiago and increasingly in Punta Cana. English-speaking doctors are common. Comparable in quality to mid-tier US or European private hospitals for most conditions.
Public system
Exists and functions, but with inconsistent quality, long wait times and limited English support. Most expats use public facilities only for emergencies when a private option is not close. Not recommended as primary care.
Insurance matters a lot
Good private health insurance significantly changes what care is accessible and affordable. Without it, a hospital stay can be expensive. With it, most routine and urgent care is well-covered within the private network.
Where to find strong private hospitals
Healthcare quality is heavily concentrated in Santo Domingo and Santiago. Outside these two cities, private options exist but specialist access and emergency capacity drop considerably.

Santo Domingo
The strongest concentration of private hospitals, specialists and advanced diagnostic facilities in the country. Hosts the best oncology, cardiology, orthopaedics and neurology services in the DR.
- Clinica Abreu, HOMS, Plaza de la Salud
- Full specialist coverage across most disciplines
- International insurance widely accepted
- Medical tourism destination for broader Caribbean

Santiago
Strong private healthcare options and better value than the capital in many cases. Well-suited for expats who want to avoid Santo Domingo's traffic and cost while still having access to real specialist care.
- Centro Medico Cibao, Hospital Metropolitano
- Good specialist coverage for most conditions
- Lower costs than equivalent Santo Domingo facilities
- Shorter wait times in most cases

Punta Cana
Rapidly improving healthcare infrastructure, partly driven by the large tourist and expat population. Better than most beach areas but still requires travel to Santo Domingo for complex specialist care.
- Hospital General Plaza Punta Cana
- Good for emergencies and routine care
- International insurance accepted at main facilities
- Complex cases still refer to Santo Domingo
The difference matters for expats
The DR has a public healthcare system that serves the majority of Dominican citizens. For expats, the practical reality is that private healthcare is almost always the better choice wherever it is accessible.
| Factor | Public | Private |
|---|---|---|
| Wait times | Often long, unpredictable | Usually fast, same-day appointments common |
| Facility quality | Varies heavily by location | Generally modern and well-maintained |
| English-speaking staff | Very limited | Common, especially in cities |
| Specialist access | Limited and unpredictable | Broad specialist coverage in major cities |
| Diagnostic equipment | Often outdated or unavailable | Modern labs, imaging and diagnostics |
| Cost | Free or very low cost | Requires insurance or out-of-pocket payment |
| Used by most expats | Rarely | Yes, almost always the default choice |
Most expats choose private insurance
Private health insurance is not technically required for living in the DR, but going without it is a significant financial risk. A hospital admission without coverage can easily run $2,000 to $10,000+ USD depending on the condition and facility.
Local Dominican insurance
Plans from local providers like ARS Humano, Mapfre and Universal are cheaper than international plans. Monthly premiums for individuals typically run $80 to $180 USD. Cover is solid within the DR private hospital network.
Best for expats who are confident they will stay long-term and do not need international coverage. Network access can vary, so confirm your preferred hospitals are included before signing.
International insurance
Providers like Cigna Global, Allianz Care, Safety Wing and Bupa International offer coverage that works across borders. Monthly costs typically run $150 to $400 USD depending on age, coverage level and deductible.
Best for frequent travellers, people who are not yet settled on staying long-term, or those who want the option of returning to their home country for treatment. More expensive but far more flexible.
Out-of-pocket care
Routine appointments at private clinics are affordable without insurance. A GP visit costs $40 to $80 USD. Blood tests $30 to $80 USD. Dental work is typically 50 to 70% cheaper than US prices.
Out-of-pocket works for healthy younger people managing only routine care. It is not a substitute for insurance once you factor in the risk of hospitalisation, emergency surgery or a serious diagnosis.
Location affects emergency access significantly
Remote beach towns
Areas like Las Galeras, Barahona and some parts of the north coast are beautiful to live in but have limited emergency infrastructure. A serious incident means a long ambulance or car journey on roads that may not be straightforward.
Most expats in remote areas maintain good insurance and accept this tradeoff consciously. Many keep a private car for exactly this reason. If you or a family member has a chronic condition, factor this in carefully before choosing a remote location.
Mid-tier areas
Cabarete, Las Terrenas and Puerto Plata have private clinics and good first-response care. Complex emergencies or specialist referrals still typically require transfer to Santiago or Santo Domingo, which is 2 to 3 hours from most north coast locations.
For most healthy expats, this is a reasonable and accepted tradeoff for the lifestyle benefits. The local clinics in Cabarete and Las Terrenas have improved significantly in recent years.
Cities
Santo Domingo and Santiago have the fastest emergency response, best hospital capacity and the broadest specialist coverage. If healthcare proximity is a high priority, the city is the right choice.
Private ambulance services operate in both cities. Response times in urban areas are meaningfully faster than anywhere else in the DR. For anyone with a serious ongoing health condition, proximity to a major city hospital should be a primary factor in region selection.
Private healthcare costs in the DR
Private care is considerably cheaper than equivalent treatment in the US. Compared to Western Europe it is broadly similar or slightly cheaper depending on the treatment. The key variable is whether you have insurance covering the cost.
| Service | Typical private cost (uninsured) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| GP or general consultation | $40 to $80 USD | Same-day appointments common at private clinics |
| Specialist consultation | $60 to $150 USD | Varies significantly by specialty and clinic |
| Blood test panel | $30 to $80 USD | Full metabolic panels are very affordable |
| Dental check and clean | $40 to $70 USD | Dental work is one of the most affordable services |
| Dental crown or filling | $80 to $200 USD | 50 to 70% cheaper than equivalent US treatment |
| Minor emergency visit | $80 to $200 USD | Sutures, minor fractures, acute illness |
| Hospital admission (per night) | $400 to $1,500 USD | Depends heavily on facility and level of care |
| Surgery (routine) | $2,000 to $8,000 USD | Appendix, hernia, gallbladder — varies by complexity |
| Private health insurance (monthly) | $80 to $400 USD | Depends on provider, age and coverage level |
Dental care and everyday health
Beyond hospital care, the DR has a strong network of private dental clinics, physiotherapists, dermatologists and wellness providers, particularly in the main cities and expat beach towns.
Dental care
Private dental care is one of the best value services in the DR. Quality is high in cities and expat areas. Routine treatment, cosmetic work and implants are all significantly cheaper than US or UK prices. Many expats schedule dental work they had been putting off at home.
Mental health
English-speaking therapists and psychiatrists are available in Santo Domingo and Santiago. Online therapy platforms like BetterHelp and Cerebral are widely used by expats outside the cities. Availability is more limited in smaller towns.
Pharmacies
Pharmacies are well-stocked in cities and most towns. Many common medications are available over the counter that would require a prescription in the US or Europe. Costs are generally low. Brand-name medications are available but generics are often far cheaper.
Common healthcare questions
Is healthcare good in the Dominican Republic?
Private healthcare in the major cities is genuinely good and compares favourably with mid-tier European private hospitals for most conditions. Santo Domingo in particular has internationally trained specialists, modern diagnostic equipment and facilities that handle complex cases from across the Caribbean. The caveat is location: outside the main cities, even private options become thinner. Public healthcare is not recommended as primary care for most expats.
Do I need health insurance in the DR?
You are not legally required to have health insurance to live in the DR, but going without it is a real financial risk. A hospitalisation without insurance can cost $2,000 to $15,000 USD depending on the treatment. Most long-term expats have either local Dominican insurance ($80 to $180 per month) or international coverage ($150 to $400 per month). Out-of-pocket is workable for routine care but not for emergencies or serious illness.
Where is the best healthcare in the Dominican Republic?
Santo Domingo has the strongest hospital infrastructure and the broadest specialist coverage in the country. Santiago is a strong second, with good facilities at better value than the capital. Punta Cana is improving but still refers complex cases to Santo Domingo. Beach towns like Cabarete and Las Terrenas have decent local clinics for routine care, but serious conditions typically require transfer to a city hospital.
Can I find English-speaking doctors in the DR?
Yes, especially in private hospitals in Santo Domingo, Santiago and Punta Cana. Many DR doctors trained in the US, Spain or other English-speaking countries. In expat beach towns, most private clinic staff speak at least functional English. In smaller or more rural areas, English-speaking medical staff are rarer and a local translator or bilingual contact can be helpful.
Is local or international health insurance better for the DR?
It depends on your situation. Local Dominican insurance (from providers like ARS Humano or Mapfre) is cheaper and provides excellent coverage within the DR private network. International plans are more expensive but allow you to get treated anywhere in the world, which matters if you travel frequently or want the option of going home for treatment. If you are fully settled in the DR long-term and rarely travel, local insurance usually makes more financial sense.
What should I do in a medical emergency in the DR?
In major cities, call a private ambulance service or go directly to the nearest major private hospital emergency room. In Cabarete and Las Terrenas, the local private clinics can handle most urgent situations. For serious emergencies in remote areas, a car will usually be faster than waiting for an ambulance. Pre-identifying the nearest private hospital before you need it is genuinely worth doing when you first move to any area.
Can I use my home country insurance in the DR?
Travel insurance from your home country typically covers emergency care during visits. For long-term living, most home-country health insurance policies do not cover you once you have been abroad for 30 to 90 days, depending on the provider. Check your policy terms carefully and arrange appropriate expat or international health coverage before your home policy stops applying.