The Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA-DR) gives qualifying companies the ability to export manufactured goods into the US market at 0% tariff. For foreign manufacturers evaluating Caribbean Economic Corridor entry, CAFTA-DR eligibility is often the primary commercial driver behind the decision to establish production in the Dominican Republic.
However, CAFTA-DR eligibility is not automatic. It is determined product by product, based on rules of origin that require a defined level of transformation to occur within a CAFTA-DR member country.
What Are CAFTA-DR Rules of Origin?
Rules of origin define how much of a product must be made in a qualifying country for it to receive preferential tariff treatment under CAFTA-DR. The Dominican Republic is a qualifying country. The US is the primary destination market.
The three primary tests applied under CAFTA-DR rules of origin are:
Tariff shift test: The finished product must fall under a different HTS tariff classification than the inputs used to make it. This indicates that a meaningful transformation has occurred during production in the DR.
Regional value content (RVC): A defined percentage of the product’s value must be attributable to materials originating within CAFTA-DR member countries or to production costs incurred within those countries. RVC thresholds vary by product category.
Specific manufacturing processes: Certain product categories require that specific operations, such as spinning, weaving, or cutting and sewing in the textile sector, occur within CAFTA-DR territory regardless of where raw materials originate.
Which Company Types Qualify
CAFTA-DR eligibility is open to any company that manufactures or substantially transforms goods within the Dominican Republic, regardless of the nationality of ownership. A foreign company, whether based in the Middle East, Europe, Asia, or Latin America, can establish DR free zone operations and qualify for CAFTA-DR benefits on exports to the US.
The sectors with the clearest CAFTA-DR qualification pathways include: medical devices, textiles and apparel (under specific fiber-forward and yarn-forward rules), pharmaceutical products, electronics and electrical equipment assembly, footwear, agro-industrial products, and light manufactured goods in multiple categories.
Companies that import raw materials from outside the CAFTA-DR region can still qualify if the transformation occurring in the DR is sufficient to trigger a tariff shift or meet the applicable RVC threshold for their product category.
The Combined Free Zone and CAFTA-DR Structure
The most efficient Caribbean Economic Corridor structure combines DR free zone status with CAFTA-DR compliance. Under this structure, the company benefits from 0% corporate tax and 0% import duties on inputs via Law 8-90, while simultaneously qualifying for 0% US tariff on exports via CAFTA-DR.
This dual benefit is the foundation of the CEC model. It is not available simply by registering in the DR. It requires a structured setup in which production processes are specifically designed to satisfy CAFTA-DR rules of origin for the company’s product category.
Common Disqualifiers
Companies that fail CAFTA-DR eligibility reviews typically encounter one of the following issues: minimal processing operations that do not constitute substantial transformation, failure to meet the tariff shift requirement due to how inputs are classified, RVC shortfalls where the majority of value remains attributable to non-CAFTA-DR inputs, or documentation gaps in the certificate of origin process.
EGS conducts a CAFTA-DR pre-qualification review before any mandate engagement begins. This review identifies potential disqualifiers and structures the production model to satisfy applicable rules of origin from day one.
Documentation and Customs Compliance
To claim CAFTA-DR preferential tariff treatment, exporters must provide a valid certificate of origin with each shipment. The certificate must be completed by the exporter or producer and is subject to US Customs and Border Protection verification. Inaccurate or unsupported certificates of origin can result in retroactive duty assessments and penalties.
A properly structured CAFTA-DR operation includes ongoing compliance monitoring, record-keeping systems, and periodic internal audits to sustain preferential treatment across shipment cycles.