Electricity, Water, and Operating Costs in Dominican Republic Free Zones (2026)
Industrial electricity in Dominican Republic free zones runs $0.16–0.22/kWh — higher than U.S. ($0.07–0.12/kWh) or Mexico ($0.08–0.12/kWh) industrial rates. Most established parks include backup diesel generation at no extra cost, protecting operations against DR grid outages.
Utility Cost Comparison: DR Free Zones vs. U.S. and Mexico (2026)
| Utility | DR Free Zone | U.S. Average | Mexico Border Zone |
|---|---|---|---|
| Electricity (industrial) | $0.16–0.22/kWh | $0.07–0.12/kWh | $0.08–0.12/kWh |
| Backup power generation | Included (most parks) | Rarely included | Rarely included |
| Industrial water | $1.50–3.00/m³ | $3.00–6.00/m³ | $1.00–2.50/m³ |
| Wastewater treatment | Included (most parks) | $2–5/m³ billed separately | Variable |
| Telecom / internet | $200–600/mo business fiber | $200–800/mo | $150–500/mo |
Sources: EDES/EDENORTE/EDESUR 2026 industrial tariff schedules; EGS operator surveys. Rates vary by consumption volume, park location, and contracted demand.
Electricity: The Key Consideration
Electricity is the most significant utility cost variable for DR free zone manufacturers, and it runs higher than comparable rates in the U.S. and Mexico. The Dominican Republic’s electricity grid has historically been constrained, with periodic outages — the primary reason why established free zone parks invest in backup diesel generation capacity. Most major parks guarantee 95–98% uptime through combined EDES grid supply and on-site generation.
For light manufacturing (textiles, apparel, assembly), electricity typically represents 3–6% of total operating cost. For energy-intensive operations (food processing, plastics, metal fabrication), electricity can reach 10–15% of cost — at DR rates, this meaningfully narrows the labor cost advantage. Energy-intensive operators should model electricity cost carefully before committing to DR vs. Mexico or other locations.
What Free Zone Parks Typically Include
Most established DR free zone parks bundle the following infrastructure into the lease or as separately metered but park-managed services: backup power generation (diesel gensets, some parks with 100% capacity), water treatment and pressurized supply, wastewater collection and treatment, perimeter security and CCTV, common area maintenance, and truck access roads and loading infrastructure. This bundled infrastructure reduces the capital requirement for new entrants and provides operational continuity that a standalone facility outside a free zone cannot match.
Total Utility Cost for a Typical 100-Person Assembly Operation
A 100-person light assembly operation in a DR free zone running one 8-hour shift will typically consume 15,000–25,000 kWh/month in electricity (lighting, small equipment, HVAC). At $0.20/kWh average, that’s $3,000–5,000/month in electricity. Water consumption for a light assembly operation is relatively low (2–5 m³/day), adding $90–450/month. Total utilities for this profile: approximately $3,500–6,000/month, or $42,000–72,000 annually.
Related Resources
- DR Manufacturing Cost Structure 2026
- DR Manufacturing Labor Costs 2026
- Total Cost of Manufacturing in DR 2026
- Manufacturing in DR Free Zones: Complete Guide
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