Quick Answer
Cabarete and Las Terrenas are the top picks for most expats wanting beach life with real infrastructure, good internet, and established communities. Sosua is the most affordable north coast option. Punta Cana and Cap Cana offer luxury but at high cost. Las Galeras and Samana are the hidden gems for those who want to truly escape.
What Makes a Beach Town Work for Expats?
A beach view is the easy part. The harder question is whether a town has reliable internet, good healthcare access, a grocery store with actual food, and enough other expats that you are not completely isolated. The beach towns on this list are ranked by their overall liveability, not just how pretty the water is.
Cabarete
Cabarete is the most internationally connected beach town in the DR. Originally built around kitesurfing and windsurfing, it now draws remote workers, freelancers, and long-term expats alongside the sports crowd. The vibe is casual and outdoorsy. English and French are widely spoken. The internet is solid.
You get real beach life here without the isolation. The main strip has restaurants, supermarkets, yoga studios, a proper coworking space (CocoNoma), and a weekly expat meetup scene. Rent is mid-range and the town is walkable or bikeable for daily life.
Las Terrenas
Las Terrenas has the largest French and Italian expat population in the DR. The result is excellent French bakeries, proper restaurants, a sophisticated cafe culture, and a surprisingly complete grocery store situation. The beaches here, particularly Playa Bonita and Playa Las Terrenas, are genuinely stunning.
The town feels polished and relaxed at the same time. It is slower-paced than Cabarete but more curated. Good fiber internet, a solid expat health network, and a strong word-of-mouth rental market make it a top-tier choice for anyone who wants quality of life near the water.
Sosua
Sosua sits right next to Cabarete on the north coast and often gets dismissed unfairly. The historic town center (built by Jewish refugees in the 1940s) is charming, and the bay beach is calmer and more sheltered than Cabarete's kite-filled stretch. It is significantly cheaper than its neighbor.
The expat scene is real but less polished than Cabarete or Las Terrenas. Good supermarkets, restaurants, and a lively social scene make it a solid long-term option for those who want affordable beach life without roughing it.
Las Galeras
Las Galeras is the anti-resort beach town. A small, genuinely remote community at the tip of the Samana Peninsula, it attracts expats who want to completely disconnect. The beaches around it, including Playa Rincon (often cited as the most beautiful beach in the DR), are extraordinary.
This is not a place for remote workers who need reliable daily connectivity. Internet exists but is unreliable. Healthcare access requires planning. But if you want slow, beautiful, real Caribbean life near some of the world's best beaches, Las Galeras delivers what the others only market.
Punta Cana / Cap Cana
Punta Cana is the DR's most famous destination but not the most popular among budget-conscious expats. Cap Cana in particular is the luxury end of the market, with gated golf communities, marina access, and everything priced at or above US levels.
The beaches are genuinely beautiful and the turquoise water photos are real. For expats who want full resort-quality amenities, US-style services, international schools, and are not worried about cost, Cap Cana and the surrounding Bavaro area deliver. Just go in expecting to pay for it.
Bayahibe
Bayahibe is a small fishing village near La Romana that most tourists bypass in favour of all-inclusive resorts nearby. That is precisely what makes it interesting for expats seeking an affordable southeast coast base. Casa de Campo resort community is nearby for amenities, but Bayahibe itself stays local.
Infrastructure is basic. Healthcare access requires driving to La Romana or further. But it has a genuine fishing village character, access to Parque Nacional del Este (snorkelling and day trips), and some of the calmest water on the south coast. Rent is low.
Always spend at least two weeks in any beach town before signing a lease. Seasonal changes are real. Cabarete's wind (great for kiting, less great for an outdoor dinner) and Las Terrenas' rainy season on the Samana Peninsula both feel different from a one-week holiday visit. Test the reality before committing.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Town | Cost | Internet | Expat Scene | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cabarete | Mid | Very Good | Large, active | Remote workers, water sports |
| Las Terrenas | Mid-High | Very Good | European, established | Quality of life, retired couples |
| Sosua | Budget | Good | Medium | Affordable beach life |
| Las Galeras | Low | Poor (Starlink) | Small | Off-grid, escape-seekers |
| Punta Cana / Cap Cana | High | Good | International | Luxury, families, golf |
| Bayahibe | Low | Fair (4G) | Very small | Budget, authentic village |