Pedernales sits at the extreme southwest tip of the Dominican Republic, bordering Haiti. It is one of the most remote and least developed areas in the country. The appeal is entirely natural: Lago Enriquillo (the largest lake in the Caribbean), flamingos, iguanas, dry forest, and some of the most untouched coastline in the DR. There is almost no expat community here and infrastructure is basic. People who choose Pedernales are making a conscious choice to disconnect.
Map of Pedernales
Living in Pedernales
Pedernales is not for most people, and it knows it. The town itself is small and functional rather than attractive. The draw is entirely the surrounding nature: Lago Enriquillo, the Jaragua National Park, and a coastline that barely registers on most maps. For eco-tourists, birders, and people who genuinely want to disconnect from everything, it is unlike anywhere else in the DR.
Living in Pedernales: the honest picture
What works well
- Extraordinary natural environment
- Lago Enriquillo and flamingos nearby
- Lowest cost of living in the DR
- Almost no tourists
- True off-grid living
Watch out for
- Extremely remote, hours from any major city
- Very limited medical and commercial infrastructure
- Not suited to anyone needing regular services
- Heat and dry climate
- No expat community to speak of
Photos from Pedernales
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Frequently asked questions
Ground floor. The new international airport outside Pedernales is under construction and expected to open 2026 to 2027. When it opens, the southwest DR will change fast. The people moving there now are doing so before that happens: property prices are low, the nature is extraordinary, and Bahu00eda de las u00c3u0081guilas is 45 minutes away. It is genuinely pioneer territory and not suitable for everyone.
Internet is unreliable for serious remote work. The nearest full hospital is in Barahona, about 1.5 hours away. Services are basic. There is no expat community to lean on. Spanish is essential. The Dominican side of the border town is relatively calm, but it is a frontier zone and situational awareness matters. Cost of living is among the lowest in the DR, from $600/mo.
It covers the far southwestern tip of the island and includes Bahu00eda de las u00c3u0081guilas, Lago Oviedo, and some of the most arid, alien-feeling landscape in the Caribbean. Rhinoceros iguanas are everywhere. Flamingos feed on the lake. The coastline is mostly inaccessible without a boat or 4WD. It is one of the largest national parks in the Caribbean and has almost no visitor infrastructure.
The plan is for an international airport capable of handling direct flights from North America and Europe, aimed at unlocking the southwest coast for tourism. If it delivers, property values will rise, services will improve, and Pedernales will not be the off-grid option it is today. The timeline has slipped before, so build that uncertainty into any investment decisions.
The Dominican side of Pedernales is a functioning border town with a normal daily rhythm. It is not dangerous in the way that media coverage might suggest. The border crossing itself and the surrounding area require normal caution. Stick to the Dominican side, avoid the crossing itself unless you have a reason to be there, and use local knowledge. Most residents report it as quiet.