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What Is Nearshoring? Definition, Benefits, and How It Works for U.S. Market Entry

By April 5, 2026Blog

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Nearshoring is the practice of relocating manufacturing or service operations to a country that is geographically close to the primary target market — rather than distant offshore locations. For companies targeting the U.S. market, nearshoring to the Dominican Republic combines geographic proximity (3–4 days to Miami) with CAFTA-DR duty-free access and Law 8-90 free zone tax elimination.

Nearshoring vs Offshoring

Offshoring relocates production to distant, low-cost countries — typically Asia — primarily to minimize labor costs. Nearshoring prioritizes proximity to the target market, reducing transit times, freight costs, and supply chain risk. For U.S.-targeted manufacturing, nearshoring to the Caribbean or Central America provides labor costs 80–90% below U.S. domestic levels while cutting transit times from 30–45 days (Asia) to 3–5 days. Nearshoring also provides greater supply chain visibility and management accessibility for U.S.-based operations teams.

Why the Dominican Republic Is a Leading U.S. Nearshoring Destination

The DR combines all the attributes of effective nearshoring: geographic proximity to U.S. ports (3–4 days sea freight via Caucedo), CAFTA-DR duty-free U.S. access, a mature free zone ecosystem with 700+ established operators, competitive manufacturing labor costs, and a stable political and economic environment. The combination of Law 8-90 tax exemptions and CAFTA-DR market access creates a cost structure that pure offshore locations — however cheap their labor — cannot replicate once tariffs, transit costs, and inventory carrying costs are factored in.

The Caribbean Corridor as a Nearshoring Framework

The Caribbean Corridor is a structured nearshoring framework specifically designed for foreign companies — particularly from the Middle East and Europe — targeting the U.S. market. It layers legal structure (free zone entity, CNZFE license), trade agreement access (CAFTA-DR), and operational infrastructure (park facilities, logistics) into a repeatable market entry model.

Is Nearshoring Right for Your Business?

Nearshoring to the Dominican Republic makes economic sense for companies where: U.S. import tariffs are a significant cost factor, transit time or supply chain resilience is a competitive variable, the product can satisfy CAFTA-DR rules of origin, and production volume justifies free zone establishment costs. Contact EGS to assess your nearshoring fit.

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