Starting a Business in the Dominican Republic - DR Living Index
DR Living Index Guide

Starting a Business in the Dominican Republic

Company formation, legal structures, tax registration, labor law, and what expats need to know before opening a business in the DR.

Quick Answer

Foreigners can legally own and operate businesses in the DR. The most common structure is the SRL (Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada), equivalent to an LLC. Formation takes 4 to 8 weeks and costs $500 to $1,500 in professional fees. You will need a bilingual lawyer. Tax registration, labor compliance, and a local accountant are non-negotiable from day one.

Can Foreigners Own a Business in the DR?

Yes. Dominican law allows foreigners to own 100% of a business in most sectors. There are no foreign ownership caps in the majority of industries. Tourism, retail, hospitality, services, and online businesses are all open to foreign ownership without a local partner requirement.

A few sectors have restrictions or special licensing requirements: media, certain natural resources, and some agricultural activities. For the typical expat business (restaurant, tour company, online business, boutique, rental property management), full foreign ownership is entirely straightforward.

Business Structures

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SRL (Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada)

The most common structure for small and medium expat businesses. Equivalent to an LLC. Limits personal liability, minimum 2 shareholders required, minimum capital of RD$100,000 (about $1,700). Flexible management structure. Best choice for most expats.

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SA (Sociedad Anónima)

The Dominican equivalent of a corporation. Required for larger companies or those with more than 20 shareholders. More complex and expensive to set up and maintain. Minimum capital of RD$30 million for publicly traded companies. Rarely needed for typical expat businesses.

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Empresa Individual (Sole Proprietorship)

Simplest structure, one owner. No separate legal entity, meaning personal assets are exposed to business liabilities. Lower setup cost and less paperwork. Suitable only for very small, low-risk operations. Most lawyers will recommend an SRL instead.

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Foreign Branch Office

If you already have a company registered abroad, you can register a branch in the DR. Requires legalised corporate documents from your home country and registration with the Registro Mercantil. More complex but can work for multi-country operations.

The Formation Process

Engage a bilingual lawyer

This is not optional. A Dominican lawyer drafts the company statutes (acta constitutiva), handles notarisation, and manages filings. Get referrals from expat business groups. Expect to pay $500 to $1,200 in legal fees for a standard SRL formation.

Reserve the company name

Name availability is checked and reserved through the Registro Mercantil. Your lawyer handles this. Have 2 to 3 name options ready as your first choice may already be taken.

Draft and notarise the statutes

Your lawyer drafts the company statutes detailing shareholders, share distribution, management structure, and company purpose. These are notarised by a Dominican notary public.

Register with the Registro Mercantil

The company is registered with the Santo Domingo or regional Chamber of Commerce (Cámara de Comercio). This creates the legal entity. Annual renewal is required to keep the company in good standing.

Register with the DGII (tax authority)

The Dirección General de Impuestos Internos (DGII) issues your RNC (Registro Nacional del Contribuyente), the equivalent of a tax ID number. Required for issuing invoices, hiring employees, and paying taxes. Your accountant handles ongoing DGII compliance.

Open a business bank account

A company bank account is required to operate. Major banks (Banco Popular, Banco Santa Cruz, BHD León) require the company statutes, RNC, and shareholder IDs. Some banks require proof of business address. The process takes 1 to 3 weeks.

Obtain sector-specific licences

Depending on your business type, additional permits apply. Restaurants need health permits from the Ministry of Health. Tourism businesses need MITUR registration. Retail businesses need a municipal licence. Your lawyer advises on which apply.

Formation and Running Costs

ItemEstimated CostNotes
Lawyer fees (SRL formation)$500 to $1,200One-time, shop around for quotes
Registro Mercantil registration$150 to $400Depends on share capital declared
Annual Registro Mercantil renewal$100 to $250Required every year
Accountant (monthly)$150 to $400Essential for DGII compliance
ITBIS (VAT) returnsFiled monthly18% on taxable sales, via accountant
Corporate income tax27% of net profitAnnual filing with DGII
Sector licence (restaurant etc.)$100 to $500Varies by municipality and type

Business Taxes

Dominican businesses pay the following main taxes:

  • Corporate income tax (ISR): 27% on net taxable profit. Filed annually with the DGII.
  • ITBIS (VAT): 18% on most goods and services sold. Filed and paid monthly. Collected from customers and remitted to the DGII.
  • Asset tax: 1% annually on company assets if no income tax is owed or if income tax is less than 1% of assets.
  • Withholding taxes: Applied to certain payments to suppliers and contractors. Your accountant manages this.
⚠️ Hire a Local Accountant from Day One

The DGII is strict about filing deadlines and penalties accumulate quickly. A competent local accountant (contador) who knows Dominican tax law is essential, not optional. Monthly fees of $150 to $400 are far cheaper than the fines and stress of non-compliance. Get a recommendation from the expat business community rather than finding one cold.

Hiring Staff and Labor Law

Dominican labor law strongly protects employees. Understanding your obligations before you hire your first staff member is critical.

  • Employment contracts: All employees must have written contracts registered with the Ministry of Labor (Ministerio de Trabajo).
  • AFP (pension): Employers contribute 7.10% of salary to the employee's pension fund. Employees contribute 2.87%.
  • SFS (health insurance): Employers contribute 7.09% of salary. Employees contribute 3.04%. Enrollment in the national health system is mandatory for all employees.
  • Regalía Pascual (Christmas bonus): All employees are legally entitled to one month's salary as a Christmas bonus, paid in December. This is not optional.
  • Severance (prestaciones laborales): Terminating an employee triggers legally mandated severance payments that increase with tenure. Firing incorrectly is expensive. Consult your lawyer before any termination.
  • Vacation: 14 working days after the first year of employment. This is a legal minimum.
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Restaurants and cafes

One of the most common. Success depends heavily on location and local vs tourist clientele mix. Food service requires Health Ministry permits. High failure rate but strong success stories exist in expat areas.

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Water sports and tours

Kite schools, surf lessons, dive shops, and tour operators in Cabarete, Las Terrenas, and Punta Cana. Requires MITUR registration and relevant safety certifications. Seasonal income variation to plan for.

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Property rentals and management

Managing short-term rentals (Airbnb, VRBO) or long-term rentals for absent owners. Popular among expats who buy property. Lower overhead than physical businesses. Tax implications should be reviewed with an accountant.

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Online and remote businesses

Freelancers and online business owners often register an SRL to invoice clients professionally and maintain legal residency justification. Requires the same tax compliance as any local business.

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Wellness and fitness

Yoga studios, gyms, massage, and wellness services are popular in expat areas. Relatively low startup cost. Client base depends heavily on expat and tourist population size in your chosen location.

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Retail and e-commerce

Boutiques, imported goods, and local craft retail. Import duties make some product categories uneconomical. Success often depends on finding a niche with local sourcing or services Dominicans and expats both want.

Before You Sign Anything

Verbal agreements, handshake deals, and informal business arrangements are common in the DR but leave you completely unprotected legally. Every business relationship involving money, property, or staff must be documented in writing. This applies to partnerships, supplier agreements, lease agreements, and employee contracts. Do not let the relaxed culture persuade you to skip paperwork.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a Dominican partner to start a business?
No. Foreign nationals can own 100% of most business types in the DR. A Dominican partner is not legally required. If someone tells you otherwise, get a second legal opinion. The requirement for local partners was removed for most sectors under Dominican investment law.
How long does it take to form a company in the DR?
With a competent lawyer, a standard SRL can be registered in 4 to 8 weeks. The Registro Mercantil and DGII processes both take time. Delays happen. Starting the process before you need to open is essential. Some lawyers who specialise in fast-track formation can do it in 3 weeks.
Can I run an online business from the DR without registering a company?
You can operate informally for a period but it creates tax and residency complications. If you are earning income in or from the DR, registering a company protects you legally, allows you to open a business bank account, and demonstrates economic activity for residency purposes. Most long-term online workers register an SRL within their first year.
What is the biggest mistake expats make when starting a business in the DR?
Underestimating setup time and bureaucracy, then launching without proper permits or compliance in place. The second biggest mistake is not understanding labor law before hiring. Terminating an employee incorrectly in the DR is expensive. The third is doing it without a local accountant, then facing DGII fines for missed filings.
"The DR rewards businesses that serve a real need. Do the paperwork first and the rest gets easier."DR Living Index

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