Digital Nomad Guide to the Dominican Republic - DR Living Index
Digital nomad guide

Working remotely from the Dominican Republic

A practical guide to the DR for digital nomads: the best areas, internet reality, coworking spaces, visas, costs and what working remotely from the Caribbean actually looks like day to day.

Internet speeds Coworking Visa situation Best areas Costs
Quick answer

The DR works well for remote work if you choose your location carefully and set up the right infrastructure.

Internet in the DR has improved significantly. Fiber is available in most expat and urban areas. Power backup is the bigger daily challenge. Nomads who get reliable connectivity and backup power sorted in the first week, then build a working routine, typically find the DR genuinely productive and enjoyable.

Internet reality

Fiber available in most expat areas. Speeds of 50 to 300 Mbps achievable. Power outages are the main challenge, not internet quality itself.

Best areas for nomads

Cabarete and Las Terrenas for lifestyle. Santo Domingo for urban infrastructure. Punta Cana for a more comfortable but more expensive base.

Visa situation

No digital nomad visa. Most nomads operate on tourist visas (renewable) or transition to residency for longer stays. Legally workable for foreign-income earners.

Best areas for remote work

Where digital nomads actually base themselves in the DR

The right area depends on whether you want beach lifestyle, city infrastructure, coworking access or a mix. These are the most popular nomad bases with honest notes on each.

Cabarete

The most popular nomad base on the north coast. Strong expat community, surf and kite culture, good coworking options and a genuine remote-work scene.

  • CocoNoma coworking space
  • Multiple cafes with reliable WiFi
  • Strong digital nomad community
  • Good fiber internet availability
  • Active outdoor lifestyle alongside work
Las Terrenas

Beautiful beach setting with a genuine expat community including many remote workers. Good fiber, some coworking and a relaxed pace that suits creative and independent work.

  • Growing coworking scene
  • Good fiber in most expat areas
  • Strong European remote-worker community
  • Better suited to solo workers than teams
  • More social than Santo Domingo
Santo Domingo

Best city infrastructure. Multiple coworking spaces, most reliable internet, most cafes with WiFi and easiest banking and admin. Less lifestyle appeal but most professional infrastructure.

  • Multiple established coworking spaces
  • Best banking and services access
  • Most reliable power in expat neighborhoods
  • Less beach lifestyle
  • Stronger for longer-term professional stays
Punta Cana

Growing nomad infrastructure. Comfortable environment, some coworking options and good flight connections. Higher costs than the north coast but solid reliability in resort zones.

  • Good internet in resort areas
  • Growing expat community
  • Easy international flights
  • Higher costs due to tourist pricing
  • Less nomad-specific community feel
Sosua

Close to Cabarete with lower costs and a quieter pace. Some nomads prefer Sosua as a base and commute to Cabarete's coworking spaces when needed. Good value option on the north coast.

  • Lower cost than Cabarete
  • 10 minutes from Cabarete coworking
  • Good local market prices
  • Established international community
  • Quieter working environment
Santiago

Less popular with nomads but has solid infrastructure, good internet, lower costs and some coworking options. Better suited to those who want to live like a resident rather than a nomad in paradise mode.

  • Lower costs than coastal expat areas
  • Good fiber internet access
  • Less nomad community, more real city
  • Good value for longer stays
  • 90 minutes to north coast beaches
Internet and power

The real working environment in the DR

The truth about DR internet for remote work:

Internet quality in the DR has improved dramatically in the past 5 years. Fiber is genuinely available in most expat areas and speeds are workable. The main challenge is power outages (apagones), not internet quality. A property with a good inverter or generator backup makes the difference between a productive and a frustrating remote work experience. Verify backup power before committing to any housing.

Home fiber internet

Claro and Altice both offer fiber in most urban and expat areas. Plans run $40 to $100 per month for 50 to 300 Mbps. Installation takes 2 to 4 weeks. Start this process immediately on arrival or even before.

Mobile data backup

A local SIM (Claro or Altice) with a data plan serves as a backup when home internet goes down. Claro has the widest national coverage. A hotspot from your phone typically covers video calls during power or internet interruptions.

Power backup

Non-negotiable for remote workers. Most good expat housing includes an inverter (battery backup) that handles power cuts for several hours. Some have full generators. Always verify backup power capability before renting.

Coworking spaces

Available in Cabarete (CocoNoma), Santo Domingo (multiple options) and growing in Las Terrenas and Punta Cana. Day passes run $10 to $25. Monthly memberships $100 to $250. Good option for guaranteed connectivity and social connection.

Cafes with WiFi

Available widely in expat areas but reliability varies. Test before you commit to a client call. Many nomads use cafes for casual work and coworking spaces or home offices for important calls and video meetings.

Time zones

The DR is UTC-4 year-round (no daylight saving time). Aligns well with US East Coast (1 to 2 hours different depending on season), manageable with Europe, workable for West Coast with early starts. Time zone overlap is generally good for US and Canadian clients.

Visa and legal status

The visa situation for digital nomads

The Dominican Republic does not have a specific digital nomad visa. Most remote workers operate on one of the following:

Status Duration Best for Notes
Tourist visa (card) 30 days, extendable Short-term stays and testing the DR Exit and re-enter to renew. Fine payable on overstay at airport departure.
Extended tourist status Up to 6 months Medium-term stays without commitment Extensions available. Not a long-term solution.
Residency (Rentista) Ongoing Long-term remote workers with stable foreign income Requires $2,000/mo demonstrable income. 6 to 18 month process.
Residency (Investor) Ongoing Those investing $200k+ in DR property or business Investor route available for significant property investment
Tax note for remote workers:

The DR's territorial tax system means foreign-sourced income (your remote income from a foreign employer or clients) is generally not subject to Dominican income tax. However, your home country obligations remain. US citizens in particular must continue filing US taxes and reporting foreign bank accounts regardless of where they live. See our taxes guide for details.

Nomad costs

What remote work life in the DR actually costs

Category Monthly range (USD) Notes
Housing (1-bed in expat area) $700 to $1,400 Cabarete and Las Terrenas mid-range; SD varies by neighborhood
Home internet $40 to $100 Fiber plans. Plus mobile data backup $15 to $30.
Health insurance $80 to $300 Local plan or international plan. Do not skip this.
Coworking (if used) $0 to $250 Day passes $10 to $25; monthly membership $100 to $250
Food and restaurants $400 to $900 Mix of cooking at home and eating out. Local restaurants very affordable.
Transport $100 to $400 No car needed in walkable areas; motoconchos and Uber available
FAQ

Digital nomad FAQ

Is the Dominican Republic a good place for digital nomads?

Yes, for nomads who choose their location carefully and set up reliable internet and power backup. Cabarete in particular has an established nomad community, good infrastructure and a lifestyle that many remote workers find hard to leave. The learning curve in the first month is real but the DR genuinely works as a remote work base once sorted.

What internet speeds can I expect in the DR?

Fiber connections in expat areas typically deliver 50 to 200+ Mbps down. Speeds have improved significantly in the past few years. The bigger variable is power outages which can interrupt sessions without backup power. Verify your specific address has fiber available (not all streets do) and confirm inverter or generator backup before signing any housing lease.

Do I need a car as a digital nomad in the DR?

Depends on your area. In walkable expat areas like Cabarete, Las Terrenas and parts of Santo Domingo, a car is not essential. Motoconchos (motorcycle taxis), Uber (in Santo Domingo) and walking cover most daily needs. If your housing is more isolated or you want to explore the country, a vehicle is very useful. Renting long-term can be expensive; buying a second-hand car is often better value for stays over 6 months.

Is there a digital nomad visa for the Dominican Republic?

No specific digital nomad visa exists as of 2026. Most nomads operate on tourist status (which can be extended or renewed by leaving and re-entering) for short to medium stays. For longer stays, the Rentista residency requires demonstrating $2,000 per month in foreign income and takes 6 to 18 months to process. Many nomads who fall in love with the DR eventually begin that process.

Where is the best coworking space in the DR?

CocoNoma in Cabarete is the most well-known nomad-specific coworking space, with good internet, community events and a beach-town atmosphere. Santo Domingo has multiple professional coworking options including WeWork and local alternatives. Las Terrenas has smaller coworking options that are growing. Search current expat Facebook groups for the most up-to-date recommendations as the coworking scene evolves quickly.

The nomad reality

The DR works as a remote work base. Power backup is the variable that makes or breaks the experience.

Get your connectivity infrastructure right in week one and the rest of DR nomad life tends to take care of itself. Skip that step and you spend months working around it.

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