Quick Answer
The DR has a well-developed pharmacy network. Common medications are widely available and significantly cheaper than in North America or Europe. Many drugs that require a prescription at home are sold over the counter here. Controlled substances follow strict rules. If you take regular medication, bring a supply and find a local doctor who can prescribe the equivalent before you run out.
This guide provides general practical information for expats managing their health in the DR. It is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified doctor before changing, substituting, or stopping any medication. Never self-diagnose or self-prescribe based on this or any online guide.
The Pharmacy Landscape
Pharmacies (farmacias) are everywhere in the DR. Every town has multiple options and most cities have 24-hour pharmacies. Major chains like Carol, Farmacia El Manglar, and regional independent pharmacies are well-stocked with the most common medications.
Pharmacists in the DR are often the first point of contact for minor health concerns. They can advise on common ailments, recommend over-the-counter treatments, and in practice often assist with questions that would require a doctor visit elsewhere. This is culturally normal in the DR and throughout Latin America.
Over the Counter vs Prescription
The line between prescription and over-the-counter is more flexible in the DR than in North America or most of Europe. Many medications that strictly require a prescription at home are routinely sold without one at Dominican pharmacies. This includes some antibiotics, antihistamines, blood pressure medications, and hormonal products.
While this flexibility is convenient for minor situations, it creates risk for people who self-prescribe complex medications without proper diagnosis. Use the availability wisely, and always see a doctor for anything beyond a straightforward minor ailment.
| Category | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Pain relief and fever reducers | OTC | Widely available, cheap, generic versions common |
| Antihistamines (allergy) | OTC | Good variety available without prescription |
| Antibiotics | Often sold without Rx | Common types sold freely; use with caution |
| Blood pressure medications | Often sold without Rx | Common brands available; doctor oversight recommended |
| Cholesterol medications | Prescription recommended | Available but see a local doctor for continuity |
| Diabetes medications (oral) | Prescription recommended | Common generics available; doctor oversight essential |
| Insulin | Available, prescription advised | Main types available; refrigerated storage matters |
| Psychiatric medications | Prescription required | Some available locally; bring supply and see a doctor |
| Controlled substances (opioids, benzodiazepines) | Strictly controlled | Bring documented supply; customs declaration required |
| Contraceptives | OTC widely | Most types available at pharmacies without prescription |
| Dermatology creams and treatments | OTC | Good range available, tropical-specific products too |
| Asthma inhalers | Available, prescription advisable | Main types available; bring your usual brand as backup |
If You Cannot Find Your Medication
The DR's pharmacies stock common international medications but the specific brand or formulation you use at home may not exist here. Generic equivalents with the same active ingredient are often available under different names.
- Know the generic (chemical) name of your medication, not just the brand name. This is essential for finding equivalents.
- Ask the pharmacist for the generic equivalent by active ingredient. Dominican pharmacists are generally knowledgeable and helpful.
- If the medication is not available locally, Santo Domingo has the widest pharmacy selection. Large pharmacies in Piantini and Naco neighborhoods carry an extensive range including some imported specialties.
- Some expats use online pharmacies in their home country to ship medication to the DR. Check Dominican customs rules for importing medication by mail as quantities are restricted.
- A local doctor can often prescribe a locally available alternative that achieves the same therapeutic outcome.
Bringing Medications into the DR
Personal supply in carry-on
Bring all regular medications in your carry-on baggage, never checked luggage. Carry original packaging with labels intact. A letter from your prescribing doctor stating what each medication is and why you need it is good practice for any border crossing.
How much to bring
Bring at least a 3-month supply of any critical or hard-to-source medication. Use the first 3 months to establish a relationship with a local doctor who can prescribe locally or advise on alternatives. Do not arrive with only a 2-week supply of essential daily medication.
Controlled substances
Controlled medications (opioids, benzodiazepines, stimulants) require a doctor's letter and should be declared at customs if in significant quantity. Bringing controlled substances without documentation is a serious legal risk. Check DNCD (DR drug authority) guidelines before travelling with these.
Temperature-sensitive medications
Insulin and some biologics require cold chain management. Travel with a proper medical cooler. Confirm your accommodation has a reliable refrigerator. Power cuts are real, so a UPS for your fridge or a plan for cut-related temperature changes is important if you depend on refrigerated medication.
Medication Costs
Medication in the DR is significantly cheaper than in the United States and somewhat cheaper than in most of Europe. Generic medications are priced at a fraction of branded equivalents. Always ask for the generic version (genérico) at the pharmacy to save money.
The DR has a strong generic pharmaceutical market. For most common medications, the generic equivalent costs 30% to 70% less than the branded version. Always ask "¿Tiene el genérico?" (Do you have the generic?) at the pharmacy. The active ingredient is identical; the price is not.
Finding a Doctor for Prescription Continuity
If you take regular prescription medication, establishing a relationship with a local doctor within your first month is a priority. You need someone who can:
- Review your existing prescriptions and understand your health history
- Issue local prescriptions for ongoing medications
- Advise on locally available alternatives where your specific drug is not stocked
- Serve as your primary care contact for health questions
Ask the expat community for doctor recommendations in your area. English-speaking doctors exist in Santo Domingo, Cabarete, Las Terrenas, and some other expat towns. In smaller towns without English-speaking doctors, bringing your medication list translated into Spanish by a bilingual person before appointments helps enormously.