Dominican Republic vs Mexico for Manufacturing: 2026 Cost Comparison

0% vs 30%
Corporate Tax · DR vs Mexico
$3.40 vs $5.44
All-In Hourly · DR Blended Est. vs Mexico
2–4 vs 3–7
Days to U.S. East Coast
~37%
Lower All-In Labor Cost

Full 2026 Comparison: Dominican Republic vs Mexico

FactorDominican Republic (CAFTA-DR)Mexico (USMCA)
Corporate income tax0% in free zones (Law 8-90)30% standard rate
Import duties on inputs0% in free zonesDeferred under IMMEX; not eliminated
All-in hourly labor (2026)~$3.40/hr all-in (blended est.)$4.83–8.50/hr border zone, fully fringed (Tetakawi)
Transit to U.S. East Coast2–4 days by sea3–7 days truck/rail from central Mexico
Profit repatriation100%, no withholding10% withholding on dividends
Mandatory profit sharingNone in free zones10% of pre-tax profits (PTU), mandatory
U.S. duty on exports0% under CAFTA-DR0% under USMCA
Auto RVC requirement35–50% under CAFTA-DR75% under USMCA for vehicles
Security environmentControlled free zone parksVaries by region; elevated risk in some corridors

Sources: CONASAMI 2026; Tetakawi 2025 ($5.44/hr Mexico entry-level confirmed); DR ~$3.40/hr is EGS blended estimate based on CNZFE wage data + TSS contributions; Law 8-90; IMMEX Decree; USMCA text; CAFTA-DR text.

When the Dominican Republic Wins

The DR has a structural advantage for companies where tax burden matters more than industrial scale. A manufacturer generating $10M in annual profit pays $0 in corporate tax in a DR free zone versus $3M in Mexico (30% rate). Add zero import duties, zero export taxes, no mandatory profit sharing, and no dividend withholding, and the effective total tax burden difference can exceed 40 percentage points.

The DR also wins on speed-to-market for U.S. East Coast distribution. Ocean transit of 2–4 days from Puerto Caucedo to Miami versus 3–7 days by truck from central Mexico gives DR operations an edge for replenishment-driven supply chains in textiles, medtech, and consumer goods.

When Mexico Wins

Mexico has deeper industrial ecosystems in automotive, aerospace, and heavy manufacturing. Companies requiring large-scale Tier 1 supplier networks, 10,000+ employee operations, or USMCA-specific content requirements may find Mexico’s infrastructure more developed for their needs. Mexico also has a larger trained manufacturing workforce and more established vocational training programs.

For companies shipping to U.S. West Coast or central U.S. destinations, Mexico’s land border advantage reduces transit time and simplifies logistics compared to ocean freight from the Caribbean.

The Hybrid Approach

Some manufacturers operate in both jurisdictions: Mexico for high-volume, capital-intensive production serving western and central U.S. markets, and Dominican Republic free zones for East Coast distribution, tax-optimized operations, and product lines where CAFTA-DR origin rules are easier to satisfy than USMCA requirements.

Which Is Right for Your Operation?

The answer depends on your product, volume, target market geography, and tax situation. EGS advises manufacturers evaluating both destinations and structures entry for companies choosing the Caribbean Economic Corridor.

Get a free analysis to see how your operation maps to DR free zone advantages, or contact us directly.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is Dominican Republic cheaper than Mexico for manufacturing?

For labor-intensive manufacturing, DR is approximately 37% cheaper all-in than Mexico’s northern border zone (~$3.40/hr (blended est.) vs. $5.44/hr (Tetakawi) all-in per Tetakawi 2026). DR also offers 0% corporate tax for 15–20 years vs. Mexico’s 30% rate. Mexico has an advantage in scale and automotive ecosystem infrastructure.

Do both Dominican Republic and Mexico offer duty-free access to the U.S. market?

Yes. Dominican Republic exports qualify under CAFTA-DR (0% tariff). Mexico exports qualify under USMCA (0% tariff). Both agreements require products to meet rules of origin — specific requirements vary by HTS code and differ between the two agreements.

What types of manufacturers should choose Dominican Republic over Mexico?

DR is most advantageous for labor-intensive sectors: textiles, apparel, footwear, light assembly, medical devices, and food processing. Companies seeking maximum tax elimination (0% for 15–20 years vs. Mexico’s 30%) and U.S. East Coast proximity benefit most from the DR free zone structure.

What types of manufacturers should choose Mexico over Dominican Republic?

Mexico is better suited for automotive supply chain integration, high-volume electronics manufacturing, and operations requiring a large skilled industrial workforce. Mexico’s proximity for land freight and deep manufacturing infrastructure supports complex, high-volume production at scale.

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