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Setting up a company in a Dominican Republic free zone takes 60–90 days from application to first shipment. Under Law 8-90, foreign companies can own 100% of a DR free zone entity, access full tax exemption, and begin manufacturing for U.S. market export through CAFTA-DR. This guide covers every step.

StepActionTimelineCost (approx.)
1Select free zone park and sign LOIWeek 1–2Negotiated
2Form Dominican legal entity (SRL or SA)Week 2–4$1,500–$3,000
3Submit CNZFE operating license applicationWeek 3–5$500–$1,000
4CNZFE review and approvalWeek 5–8Included
5Sign lease agreement and fit-out facilityWeek 6–10$3–$6/sqft/month
6Hire and train workforceWeek 8–12$2.50–$3.50/hr avg
7First production shipmentWeek 10–14

Legal Structure Options

Foreign companies forming a DR free zone entity must choose between two legal structures. An SRL (Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada) is the most common — lower formation cost, simpler governance, suitable for operations with fewer than 50 shareholders. An SA (Sociedad Anónima) is required if you plan to raise external capital or list shares; higher formation cost but more flexibility at scale.

100% foreign ownership is permitted under Law 8-90. No local partner is required. A registered Dominican legal address is mandatory for CNZFE registration.

CNZFE Registration Requirements

The CNZFE (Consejo Nacional de Zonas Francas de Exportación) is the regulatory body that governs all free zone operations. To obtain an operating license, companies must submit: a completed application form, articles of incorporation, proof of financial solvency, a signed lease agreement within an approved free zone park, a business plan describing production activity and projected exports, and a roster of proposed officers.

CNZFE review typically takes 30–45 days. Once approved, the license grants access to full Law 8-90 tax exemptions for 20 years, renewable.

Free Zone Park Selection

The Dominican Republic has 78 CNZFE-approved industrial parks across 15 provinces. Key considerations when selecting a park: proximity to Santiago or Santo Domingo international airports, available shell space vs. build-to-suit, power infrastructure capacity, water access for industrial use, and port proximity (key for Textiles/heavy goods). EGS has direct relationships with park operators across the major industrial corridors.

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Total Cost to Form a DR Free Zone Company

Cost ItemEstimateNotes
Legal entity formation (SRL)$1,500–$3,000Attorney + notary fees
CNZFE license fee$500–$1,000One-time registration
Lease deposit1–3 months rent$3–$6/sqft/month typical
Fit-out (shell space)$8–$15/sqftBasic manufacturing setup
Local legal counsel (annual)$3,000–$8,000Compliance + labor law
EGS formation advisoryProject basisFull-service setup

When This Matters for Your Company

DR free zone company formation is the right path if you are a U.S.-based manufacturer, brand, or investor seeking to reduce per-unit production cost by 30–60% while maintaining CAFTA-DR tariff-free access to U.S. markets. It applies when your production volume exceeds roughly 20 workers, your sector qualifies under Law 8-90 (textiles, electronics, medical devices, tobacco, general manufacturing), and your product ships primarily to the U.S. East Coast.

It is not the right structure for pure service companies, very small pilot runs, or companies that require retail operations inside the Dominican Republic’s domestic market.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a foreign company own 100% of a Dominican Republic free zone entity?

Yes. Law 8-90 permits 100% foreign ownership of DR free zone companies. There is no mandatory local partner requirement. Foreign investors must form a registered Dominican legal entity (SRL or SA) and maintain a licensed operating address within a CNZFE-approved park.

How long does CNZFE registration take?

CNZFE license review takes 30–45 days from complete application submission. Total setup from company formation to first production shipment is typically 60–90 days with an existing shell space, or 12–18 months for a build-to-suit facility.

What is the minimum investment to qualify for Law 8-90 benefits?

There is no statutory minimum investment threshold for Law 8-90 eligibility. Companies must demonstrate export-oriented production activity and sign a lease within an approved free zone park. Practical minimum is typically 15–25 workers and a leased space of 5,000+ square feet to make economics viable.

Does EGS handle the full company formation process?

Yes. EGS manages the complete DR free zone formation process: legal entity structuring, CNZFE application, park selection, lease negotiation, and ongoing compliance advisory. Engagements begin with a qualification assessment to confirm DR is the right jurisdiction for your operation.

Related: Dominican Republic Law 8-90 Explained | DR Free Zone Guide | Nearshoring to the Dominican Republic | Start Qualification

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