Expat Mistakes in the Dominican Republic - DR Living Index
Honest guide

The most common expat mistakes in the Dominican Republic

The mistakes that cost people time, money and happiness in the DR are remarkably consistent. Most are preventable. This guide covers what experienced expats wish they had known before they moved.

Housing mistakes Money mistakes Community mistakes Region choice Real expectations
The pattern

Expat mistakes in the DR are remarkably consistent. Most can be avoided with better information upfront.

The same mistakes come up again and again in expat communities, Facebook groups and conversations with people who have been in the DR for 3 to 5 years. They are not unique to any nationality or age group. They are the predictable result of making big decisions based on insufficient information.

Most expensive mistake

Buying property before renting first. Getting trapped in the wrong location with capital tied up is the costliest expat error by far.

Most common mistake

Choosing a region based on vacation impressions without understanding what daily logistics and infrastructure actually look like for a resident.

Most fixable mistake

Isolation. Not building community is damaging but entirely fixable if you address it deliberately rather than hoping it solves itself.

The mistakes

15 mistakes experienced DR expats see again and again

1

Choosing a region based only on how it felt on holiday

This is the root cause of most subsequent problems. A place that felt magical during a 10-day trip in January can feel very different when you are there for a rainy September, dealing with power outages, a long school commute and the absence of your social network. The factors that make somewhere a great holiday destination are not the same as the factors that make it a great place to actually live.

Fix: Visit your target region for at least 2 to 4 weeks as a prospective resident, not a tourist. Rent an apartment rather than a hotel. Test commutes, visit supermarkets and talk to people who live there permanently.
2

Buying property before renting for at least a year

The DR real estate market has complexities that are not visible on a first visit: title issues, HOA situations, noise problems, flooding in rainy season, development construction nearby, neighborhood change and infrastructure that looks better than it performs. Buying too soon locks capital into a situation you have not yet fully understood. Many experienced expats who bought in year one wish they had waited until year three.

Fix: Rent for a full year minimum, ideally across all four seasons. Use that time to understand the market, the neighborhood and what you actually want from your DR home before committing significant capital.
3

Not getting health insurance before it is needed

Running without health insurance is common among people in their 30s and 40s who feel healthy and are trying to minimize costs. One dengue hospitalization, a car accident or an unexpected illness changes the calculation instantly. DR healthcare can be excellent in private clinics but the out-of-pocket costs without insurance are significant. This is one of the most preventable sources of financial pain for expats.

Fix: Get private health insurance in place before you arrive or on your first week. Local plans start around $80 to $150 per month. Do not operate uninsured at any point.
4

Underestimating the DR learning curve

Banking takes weeks. Driving requires genuine adaptation. Administration is bureaucratic. Power goes out. Plans change at the last minute and timelines slip constantly. Expats who arrive expecting a smooth, predictable experience get frustrated fast. Those who expect the learning curve and approach it with flexibility and humor settle much better.

Fix: Give yourself 3 to 6 months of grace period where you expect things to take longer than planned and go less smoothly than expected. Budget time and patience for the setup phase.
5

Not building community deliberately

Isolation is the quiet destroyer of expat happiness. Many people arrive thinking they will naturally build friendships through proximity. They do not. Building community requires deliberate effort, especially in the first 6 months: joining groups, saying yes to invitations, attending community events and building regular touchpoints in your weekly routine.

Fix: Join expat Facebook groups immediately and use them actively. Find a regular gym class, yoga studio, sports club, language exchange or community group. Create structure that brings you into contact with other people consistently.
6

Signing a long lease without visiting at multiple times of day

A neighborhood that is quiet and pleasant at 11am can be noisy, crowded and uncomfortable at 7pm or 6am. Generator noise from neighboring buildings can be constant. Construction nearby can begin after you move in. Traffic during school drop-off time can make a route that seemed manageable into a daily frustration.

Fix: Visit any rental property morning, afternoon and evening before signing. Check neighbors' generator setup. Ask about nearby construction plans. Test the school commute or work route at peak times.
7

Ignoring the importance of backup power

Power outages (apagones) are a normal part of DR life. How well your home handles them makes a significant daily quality-of-life difference. No inverter or generator means phones die, internet goes down, the fridge warms up and fans stop in 35-degree heat. Expats who did not build this into their housing criteria often wish they had.

Fix: Verify backup power setup before signing any lease. Most good expat housing includes an inverter or generator. This is non-negotiable for anyone who works from home.
8

Delaying residency document gathering

If you plan to pursue Dominican residency, you need apostilled documents from your home country: police background check, birth certificate and sometimes others. Getting these documents from inside the DR is possible but significantly harder, slower and more expensive than doing it before you leave your home country. Many people delay and then spend months navigating this from abroad.

Fix: Research residency requirements before you leave your home country and gather all required documents with apostille stamps while you are still there, even if you are not sure you will pursue residency. Documents cost little to get; not having them costs months of delay.
9

Expecting home country standards everywhere

The DR is not a defective version of your home country. It is a genuinely different country with different standards, expectations and ways of doing things. Roads are rougher, services are less reliable, timelines are less predictable and bureaucracy is more Byzantine. Expats who approach these differences as problems to fix are perpetually frustrated. Those who accept them as features of a different place adapt much better.

Fix: Adjust your baseline expectations before you arrive. The DR is excellent at different things than your home country. Learning which things those are, and appreciating them, is part of what makes long-term DR life work.
10

Not learning any Spanish

You can survive in established expat areas without Spanish, particularly in tourist-oriented businesses. But daily life outside the expat bubble, genuine relationships with Dominican neighbors, better pricing in local markets, dealing with bureaucracy and accessing services all require at least basic Spanish. Expats who make no effort at Spanish often describe a feeling of permanent outsider status that limits their experience significantly.

Fix: Start Spanish before you arrive if possible. Continue with a tutor or app after arrival. Even modest progress dramatically opens up daily life. Commit to it as an ongoing project, not a task to complete.
11

Underestimating traffic and commute times

Santo Domingo traffic is genuinely difficult, especially during school hours and evening rush. A distance that looks 15 minutes on a map can take 45 to 60 minutes in practice. Expats who choose housing without considering their daily commute often find that the commute itself becomes the dominant negative in their DR experience.

Fix: Test your actual commute route at actual commute times before committing to housing. Distance on a map is almost meaningless in the DR without testing it in real traffic conditions.
12

Trusting verbal agreements without written contracts

The DR culture is relationship-based and verbal agreements are common and often honoured. But for significant matters like property rentals, construction work, business arrangements and service agreements, a written contract is essential. Verbal agreements do not hold up if a relationship sours.

Fix: Get any significant arrangement in writing in Spanish, reviewed by a local lawyer if the amounts are meaningful. Do not rely solely on handshakes or WhatsApp messages for important agreements.
13

Not sorting money management before arrival

Arriving and scrambling to figure out banking, transfers and ATM fees while also navigating a new country adds unnecessary stress and cost. Paying 2 to 4% on every ATM withdrawal, unfavorable exchange rates and international transfer fees are real money drains that experienced expats eliminate early.

Fix: Before arrival, set up Wise for international transfers and get a Schwab or similar fee-free ATM card. Open a Dominican bank account in week two. Establish your money system in the first month.
14

Dismissing local knowledge and advice

Expats who have been in the DR for 5 years have made many of the mistakes on this list themselves. Their advice is hard-won and specific. Newcomers who dismiss it as overly cautious or too negative often discover it was accurate. Ask experienced expats in your specific region for their honest opinions. They will tell you things that no guide can.

Fix: Actively seek out expats who have been in your region for 3 to 5 years and ask them what they know now that they did not know when they arrived. Listen carefully to the answers, especially the uncomfortable ones.
15

Burning out on the adaptation process

Months 3 to 6 are often the hardest. The novelty has worn off, the logistical challenges are still present and the deep community roots that make long-term DR life excellent have not yet formed. Many people leave at exactly the point where things are about to get significantly better. Knowing this phase exists helps enormously.

Fix: Expect the 3 to 6 month dip. It is normal and almost universal. Build community deliberately before you hit it and have a plan for maintaining connection with your support network. The expats who get through this phase consistently report that life in the DR becomes genuinely excellent on the other side.
FAQ

Questions about avoiding expat mistakes

What is the single biggest mistake expats make in the DR?

Choosing a location based on vacation impressions rather than resident-reality research. This single mistake leads to most of the subsequent problems: wrong housing, bad commute, inadequate school access, isolation and ultimately the decision to leave before giving the DR a proper chance. Spending time in your target region as a potential resident rather than a tourist changes the decision-making entirely.

How do I know if I have chosen the wrong region?

Signs you may have chosen the wrong region include: a daily commute that dominates your mood, social isolation with no clear path to building community, inadequate access to healthcare or schools for your situation, infrastructure that does not match your working-from-home needs, and a persistent feeling that you are working around your location rather than living comfortably within it. The good news is that renting means you can move. Many expats move regions in the first year before finding the right fit.

Is it ever too late to fix expat mistakes?

Almost never, if you are still renting. If you have bought property in the wrong location, it is more complicated but still solvable through rental income on that property while you live elsewhere. The most important thing is to recognize when something is not working and address it rather than hoping it improves on its own. Most problems that expats identify early are fixable. Problems that are ignored tend to become embedded into a daily life that makes them harder and harder to address.

The honest view

Almost every mistake on this list is preventable with better information and more patience upfront.

The DR rewards people who do the groundwork before committing. The mistakes that cost the most are almost always the ones made in the first 6 months before people had the knowledge to make better decisions.

Start with the right region

The first mistake to avoid is choosing the wrong region.

Answer 7 questions and get a DR region recommendation based on your actual priorities, not postcard impressions.

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