Complete Operator Guide — 2026

Manufacturing in the Dominican Republic:
Costs, Free Zones, and U.S. Market Access

The Dominican Republic is one of the most cost-effective and strategically positioned manufacturing locations in the Western Hemisphere. With CAFTA-DR providing duty-free U.S. market access, 15–20 year tax exemptions inside free zones, and labor costs 30–40% below Mexico’s northern border on an all-in basis, it is an established nearshoring destination for U.S.-bound manufacturers.

Labor Cost

$3.40/hr

Average free zone

U.S. Transit

2–4 days

Ocean freight to East Coast

Import/Export Tax

0%

Inside free zones

Tax Exemption

20 years

Income + corporate tax


Why Manufacturers Choose the Dominican Republic

1. CAFTA-DR Duty-Free Access. Products manufactured in the Dominican Republic and exported to the United States enter duty-free under the Central America–Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement. For most manufactured goods, this eliminates tariff costs that make Asian supply chains increasingly uncompetitive in 2025–2026.

2. Free Zone Tax Structure. Under Law 8-90, companies operating inside designated free zones receive: 0% income tax (15–20 year exemption depending on zone location), 0% import/export tax, 0% municipal and other local taxes, 0% ITBIS (DR VAT). This is not a special incentive — it is the standard operating structure for any CNZFE-licensed entity.

3. Labor Cost Advantage. Free zone manufacturing labor averages $3.40/hr all-in. Mexico’s northern border runs $5.44/hr all-in with mandatory benefits (IMSS, profit sharing, aguinaldo) per Tetakawi 2026. For labor-intensive operations — textiles, apparel, assembly, light manufacturing — the DR is approximately 37% cheaper all-in vs. Mexico’s northern border zone.

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Dominican Republic Free Zones: How They Work

Dominican Republic free zones are designated industrial areas governed by the National Free Zones Council (CNZFE). Over 850 companies operate across 90+ free zone parks (CNZFE, 2024). Companies inside receive the full Law 8-90 tax package plus access to built infrastructure — warehouses, utilities, logistics, and port proximity.

San Pedro de Macorís

Largest concentration. Textiles, apparel, footwear. Port access.

Santiago

Medical devices, tobacco, light manufacturing. Airport proximity.

La Romana

Apparel, footwear. PVH and Hanesbrands operate here.

Moca / Bani

Expanding zones. Lower lease rates. Growth corridors.

Industrial space leases at $4–7/m² per month. Most operators use turnkey facilities in established zones.

DR Free Zone Lease Costs and Industrial Space Guide

How to Get a DR Free Zone License (CNZFE Step-by-Step)


Manufacturing Cost Structure: DR vs Alternatives

Cost ItemDR Free ZoneMexico (N. Border)Vietnam
Labor (avg/hr)$3.40$23.00$3.80
Industrial space (m²/mo)$4–7$5–9$3–6
Income tax0% (20 yrs)30%20%
U.S. tariff0% (CAFTA-DR)0% (USMCA)10–25%+
U.S. ocean transit2–4 days3–7 days (land)18–35 days
Setup timeline9–14 months12–18 months18–24 months

DR vs Mexico: Full 2026 Cost Comparison


Active Manufacturing Sectors in the Dominican Republic

Textiles & Apparel

Largest sector. $463M+ exports. Hanesbrands, Fruit of the Loom, PVH. CAFTA-DR yarn-forward compliance established.

Medical Devices

FDA-registered manufacturing. Santiago free zones primary hub. Regulatory pathway established.

Automotive Parts

Emerging. CAFTA-DR compliant. 0% import/export. Growing with China tariff relocation.

Tobacco

Santiago cluster. World-class premium cigar production. Established export supply chain.

Footwear

La Romana / San Pedro. CAFTA-DR access. Competitive with Asian alternatives on landed cost.

Pharmaceuticals

FDA-aligned production. Active zone presence. Growing with nearshoring demand from U.S. buyers.

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Setup Timeline: 9–14 Months to Production

Months 1–2: Feasibility + Legal Structure

Market entry analysis, entity structure, legal counsel, CNZFE pre-consultation.

Months 2–4: CNZFE License Application

Submit free zone license. Prepare business plan, financials, capacity projections. Review: 60–90 days.

Months 3–6: Facility Selection + Lease

Zone selection, inspection, lease negotiation. Turnkey available in major zones. Custom build adds 3–4 months.

Months 5–9: Equipment + Workforce

Equipment imported duty-free. Workforce recruitment from established zone labor pools. Production line training.

Months 9–14: Production Launch

First production run. Export to U.S. under CAFTA-DR. Full scale by month 14.

CNZFE License Application: Step-by-Step

DR Labor Law for Foreign Employers


Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to manufacture in Dominican Republic?

Labor averages $3.40/hr in DR free zones. Industrial space: $4–7/m²/month. Free zone companies pay 0% income tax, 0% import/export tax, 0% corporate tax for 20 years under Law 8-90. Total cost structure is 40–60% lower than Mexico’s northern border zone.

Can I export duty-free to the United States from the Dominican Republic?

Yes. DR is a CAFTA-DR signatory. Products meeting rules of origin enter the U.S. duty-free. Textiles require yarn-forward compliance. Most manufactured goods require 35–55% regional value content.

How long does it take to set up manufacturing in the Dominican Republic?

9–14 months from feasibility to first production. CNZFE license: 60–90 days. Turnkey facilities compress the timeline. Custom builds add 3–4 months.

What tax incentives apply in Dominican Republic free zones?

Under Law 8-90: 0% income/profit tax (20 years), 0% import/export duties, 0% ITBIS (VAT), 0% municipal taxes, 0% foreign exchange taxes. Standard terms for any CNZFE-licensed entity.

Is Dominican Republic better than Mexico for manufacturing?

For labor-intensive manufacturing the DR has a major cost advantage: $3.40/hr vs. $5.44/hr all-in at Mexico’s northern border (Tetakawi 2026 benchmark). Both offer 0% U.S. tariff access. Mexico leads in automotive and advanced manufacturing infrastructure. The right choice depends on sector, volume, and supply chain structure.


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