Family life in the DR can work well, but region choice and school planning matter more than anything else.
Families need to think more carefully than solo expats or retirees. School access, pediatric healthcare, transport and day-to-day routine structure are the variables that determine whether a family thrives or struggles. Get those right first.
Main benefit
Outdoor lifestyle, warm weather, more family time, lower cost of living and a slower pace that many families find genuinely better for children than life back home.
Biggest factor
School quality and proximity. This single decision shapes your region, your housing, your commute and your daily schedule more than any other.
Common mistake
Choosing a beautiful area because it felt wonderful on holiday, before checking school availability, commute times and pediatric healthcare access.
Where families actually settle in the DR
Not all regions work equally well for families. Private school access, pediatric care, expat family communities and safe residential areas are concentrated in specific locations. These are the most common choices and what makes each one worth considering.
Best overall access to schools, hospitals, activities and city infrastructure. The most practical family choice if you prioritize logistics over beach lifestyle.
- Most international schools
- Best pediatric hospital access
- Activities, sports clubs, extracurriculars
- Well-established expat family communities
- Piantini and Naco neighborhoods are popular
Growing private school options, modern infrastructure, strong expat residential community and good airport access. Higher costs but well-serviced within the resort corridor.
- CAP (Caribbean American Private School)
- Growing number of bilingual schools
- Well-planned gated residential areas
- Hospital General Plaza for healthcare
- Good international flight connections
Second city with solid private schools, good healthcare and significantly lower costs than coastal expat areas. More practical and less tourist-oriented than beach towns.
- Good bilingual private school selection
- Centro Medico Cibao for healthcare
- Lower cost of living than the coast
- Quieter and more family-oriented pace
- Less tourist-oriented pricing
Popular with European families. Beautiful lifestyle but school options are more limited. Works best for families with younger children or those willing to homeschool or use a smaller bilingual school.
- Small bilingual private schools
- Strong European expat family community
- Beautiful outdoor lifestyle for children
- Limited secondary school options
- 2 to 3 hours to Santo Domingo for specialists
Active outdoor lifestyle suits families with older children who enjoy sports and outdoor activities. Small international school community. Less ideal for families with complex schooling needs.
- Kitesurf, surf, yoga culture
- Small international school options nearby
- Active expat community including families
- 30 mins to Puerto Plata for healthcare
- Better for active families than very young children
Gated resort communities with planned infrastructure. Safe, well-maintained and growing in family-oriented amenities. School options improving. Premium cost but high comfort level.
- Safe, planned residential environment
- Growing school and activity options
- Strong community of expat families
- Premium pricing throughout
- Limited local culture integration
School choice shapes everything else.
For most families, the school decision drives the region decision, the neighborhood decision and the daily schedule. Research schools before you commit to any location. Visit in person before any long lease or property purchase. Waitlists at popular schools are real, especially for primary years.
| School type | Good for | Monthly cost (USD) | What to check |
|---|---|---|---|
| International schools | Families wanting continuity with foreign curriculum (IB, US, British) | $600 to $1,500 | Waitlists, curriculum continuity, English instruction quality |
| Bilingual private schools | Families wanting Spanish and English immersion | $300 to $800 | Language balance, academic standards, extracurricular offering |
| Local private schools | Families planning very long-term stays and wanting Dominican integration | $150 to $400 | Spanish proficiency required, teaching style, commute |
| Homeschooling | Flexible remote-working families or those in areas with limited school options | Variable | Legal considerations, community, structure and routine |
Schools that look good online can feel very different in person. Visit during school hours, meet teachers, ask about support for English-speaking children arriving mid-year and check what extracurricular activities exist. The school run commute in real traffic conditions is worth testing before choosing your neighborhood.
Pediatric care and emergency access matter more than most families expect.
Day-to-day pediatric care is available in most established expat areas. For emergencies, serious illness or specialist care, proximity to a good private hospital matters significantly. The distance from Las Terrenas to a well-equipped Santo Domingo hospital is two to three hours. Factor that into region decisions, especially for younger children.
Routine pediatric care
Private pediatricians are available in most expat areas. Many speak English or French. Visits typically cost $40 to $80. Most vaccinations are available, though some parents bring specific vaccines from home. Establish a relationship with a local pediatrician early.
Emergency access
Clinica Abreu and HOMS in Santo Domingo are the strongest pediatric options. Remote beach areas have local clinics adequate for minor issues but transfer serious cases. Know your nearest emergency facility and have a plan before you need it.
Private health insurance
Essential for families. Local DR family plans run $200 to $500 per month. International plans with better emergency and specialist coverage run $400 to $900. Get this in place before arrival, not after. Some plans have waiting periods for pre-existing conditions.
Dental care
Generally good quality and significantly cheaper than North America or Europe. Private dentists in most expat areas. Orthodontics and specialist dental work also available at lower cost. Worth finding a good dentist early.
Medications and pharmacy
Most common medications available at pharmacies, some without prescription. Specific branded medications may need to be imported or brought from home. Establish your supply chain for any critical medications in the first months.
Mental health support
English-speaking therapists and counsellors are available in larger expat areas, some offering online sessions. Children adjusting to a new country sometimes benefit from professional support. Look into what is available before you need it.
Family budgets vary widely. School and housing dominate.
The overall cost of living for a family depends heavily on school fees, housing size, healthcare and how often parents travel for work or family visits. These are the real cost drivers for most families, not groceries or utilities.
| Category | Monthly range (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| School fees (per child) | $300 to $1,500 | International schools at the higher end; local private at lower end |
| Housing (3-bed) | $1,200 to $2,500 | Families need more space; gated communities add to cost |
| Private health insurance (family) | $300 to $700 | Depends on ages, plan type and coverage level |
| Transport (car) | $300 to $600 | School runs and activities usually require a vehicle |
| Food and household | $600 to $1,200 | Imported foods cost significantly more |
| Activities and extracurriculars | $100 to $400 | Sports, music, clubs vary by region and availability |
What families often underestimate about daily life in the DR
School commutes
Traffic in Santo Domingo and even smaller expat towns can be significant. A school run that looks manageable on a map can take 40 minutes each way in rush hour. Test commutes in real conditions before choosing your neighborhood.
Activities and extracurriculars
Sports clubs, music lessons, swimming, martial arts and other structured activities exist in larger areas but vary significantly by region. In smaller towns the options are more limited and may require longer drives.
Expat family community
Having other families nearby makes the transition dramatically easier. Facebook groups for expat families in your target region are a good starting point. Kids adapt faster when they have peers in a similar situation.
Domestic help
Full or part-time domestic help is affordable and normal in the DR. Many expat families use helpers for cleaning, childcare and household tasks. This can genuinely improve quality of life, especially for dual-income remote-working families.
Power and internet
Power outages and internet reliability vary by area. Remote-working parents need to verify their specific location has reliable connectivity. Backup power (inverter or generator) is standard in most expat housing.
Language and integration
Children typically pick up Spanish faster than adults. Attending a bilingual or local school accelerates this significantly. Many expat children become genuinely bilingual within a year or two, which is one of the most valuable long-term outcomes of DR family life.
What to check before choosing a region
Common family questions
Is the Dominican Republic a good place to raise children?
For many families, yes. Children in the DR tend to develop strong Spanish, have more outdoor time, experience a more relaxed lifestyle and often become genuinely cross-cultural in ways that serve them well long-term. The families who struggle tend to have underestimated logistical challenges like school commutes, healthcare access or the isolation that comes from choosing a region without a strong expat family community.
Where is best for families in the Dominican Republic?
Santo Domingo offers the most complete package: international schools, pediatric hospitals, activities and established expat neighborhoods. Punta Cana is growing rapidly with good infrastructure. Santiago is the most practical and affordable city option. Las Terrenas works for families with younger children or those committed to a beach lifestyle with limited schooling needs. The right answer depends on your school requirements, budget and lifestyle priorities.
Are there international schools in the DR?
Yes, primarily in Santo Domingo and Punta Cana. Santo Domingo has the largest selection including IB programs and US curriculum schools. Punta Cana has growing options. Bilingual private schools exist in most larger expat areas including Santiago, Cabarete and Las Terrenas. Availability and quality vary significantly so visiting in person is essential before making any decisions.
How much do private schools cost in the Dominican Republic?
International schools with foreign curriculums run $600 to $1,500 per child per month. Bilingual private schools run $300 to $800 per month. Local private schools run $150 to $400 per month. Registration fees, uniforms and activity fees add additional costs. For families with multiple children, school fees become the single largest budget item.
How do children adjust to living in the Dominican Republic?
Most children adjust faster than adults. Younger children (under 10) typically adapt within a few months and often become fluent Spanish speakers within a year or two. Teenagers can find the transition harder, particularly if they are leaving established social networks at home. Having other expat children nearby and a good school environment significantly speeds up the adjustment for any age.
Should families rent before buying?
Yes, strongly. Rent first in your target region for at least a full school year if possible. Living near a school is very different from holidaying near a beach, and the daily reality of commutes, infrastructure, weather and community often changes family priorities significantly once real life starts. Many families who bought quickly based on vacation impressions wish they had rented longer first.