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Nearshoring to the Dominican Republic means relocating or partially moving manufacturing operations to a CNZFE-designated free zone in the DR — gaining 0% corporate income tax under Law 8-90, duty-free U.S. market access via CAFTA-DR, and 2–4 day ocean transit to the U.S. East Coast. Setup runs 60–90 days for a free zone company. All-in labor for entry-level assembly operators runs $3–4/hr including statutory benefits.

This page connects every key decision point: cost structure, tax incentives, free zone setup, sector fit, and comparison to Mexico. Use the internal links to go deeper on any element.

FactorDR Free ZoneMexico IMMEXVietnamU.S. Southeast
Entry-level labor (all-in/hr)$3.00–$4.00$4.83–$8.50$2.50–$4.00$18–$25
Corporate income tax0% (Law 8-90, no limit)30% (IMMEX = duty deferral only)~20%21% federal + state
U.S. import duty0% (CAFTA-DR qualifying)0% (USMCA qualifying)MFN rate appliesN/A (domestic)
Transit to U.S. East Coast2–4 days sea3–7 days truck/rail18–30 days sea1–3 days truck
Free zone setup time60–90 days90–180 days60–120 days180–360 days
Section 301 tariff exposureNoneNoneHigh (Chinese inputs)None

Sources: CNZFE, CONASAMI 2026, VGCL 2025, Tetakawi. All figures approximate.

Four Reasons DR Free Zones Outperform for East Coast Manufacturing

1. CAFTA-DR: Permanent 0% U.S. Import Duty

The Dominican Republic is a CAFTA-DR member. Goods manufactured in DR free zones and meeting the applicable rules of origin enter the U.S. duty-free — permanently, not subject to renegotiation. For textiles, electronics, and medical devices, this advantage over non-FTA countries is worth 5–32% of FOB value depending on HTS category.

How to obtain a CAFTA-DR Certificate of Origin →

2. Law 8-90: 0% Income Tax with No Expiry

Dominican Republic Law 8-90 grants free zone companies complete exemption from corporate income tax, import duties on inputs, export taxes, and local ITBIS (VAT). Unlike Mexico’s IMMEX program — which defers import duties but does not exempt income tax — Law 8-90 provides a full tax shield on profits. There is no 20-year expiry for manufacturing operations; the exemption is renewed at the same terms.

Full Law 8-90 incentive structure →

3. Labor Cost: $3–4/hr All-In

DR free zone minimum wage is RD$18,871/month (~$325 USD) effective June 2025, rising to RD$20,875/month (~$360 USD) in June 2026. With social security, statutory benefits, and fringe included, entry-level all-in cost runs $3–4/hr — 30–40% below Mexico border zones and competitive with Vietnam on a fully-loaded basis when you include U.S. duty savings.

Full DR free zone labor cost breakdown →

4. Proximity: Same Time Zone, 2–4 Day Sea Transit

The Dominican Republic operates on Eastern Time. That means real-time production oversight, same-day issue resolution, and no overnight communication lag. Port Caucedo (DP World) and Haina handle regular container service to Miami, New York, and other East Coast ports — 2–4 days vs. 18–35 days from Asia.

Ready to Run the Numbers for Your Operation?

Esco Global Strategies builds fully-loaded cost models comparing DR free zone manufacturing to your current production base — including labor, tax, duty, logistics, and setup costs. We work directly with CNZFE operators, not as brokers.

Schedule a Free Qualification Call →

Free Zone Setup: How It Works

All manufacturing operations in DR free zones are regulated by CNZFE (National Free Zone Council). Setup follows a defined process:

  1. Site selection — Choose between shell space, turnkey fitted units, or build-to-suit within an established park. Major parks: Zona Franca Santiago, San Pedro de Macorís, La Romana, Bonao, Haina.
  2. CNZFE registration — Application review runs 30–45 days. Requires business plan, investment projection, employment plan, and lease agreement or letter of intent from the park operator.
  3. Entity formation — Dominican SRL or SA registered with the Mercantile Registry. Typically 2–3 weeks concurrent with CNZFE process.
  4. Operations launch — Import equipment and inputs duty-free under Law 8-90. Recruit and train local workforce. First shipment possible within 60–90 days of CNZFE approval.

Complete DR free zone setup guide →

Industrial lease costs and available space →

DR vs. Mexico: The Key Decision Points

For manufacturers choosing between the Dominican Republic and Mexico as a U.S.-proximate nearshoring location, the comparison comes down to five variables:

Decision FactorDR Free Zone Wins When…Mexico IMMEX Wins When…
Tax structureProfit margins are high — 0% income tax compoundsOperation is loss-making in early years (tax irrelevant)
Labor costEast Coast U.S. is primary market — DR labor + shipping beats MexicoLandlocked U.S. markets or heavy truck freight dependency
Trade agreementProduct qualifies under CAFTA-DR (textiles, electronics, medical)Product qualifies under USMCA; Mexico has deeper supply chain integration
LogisticsOcean freight to East Coast ports is primary channelCross-border truck is faster for U.S. interior distribution
Setup speed60–90 day timeline required — DR CNZFE is fasterComplex assembly requiring Mexican supplier ecosystem

Full DR vs. Mexico nearshoring comparison with cost model →

Sectors Operating Successfully in DR Free Zones

DR free zones currently house 600+ companies across multiple manufacturing verticals. The sectors with proven operator infrastructure and CAFTA-DR qualification pathways:

  • Textiles and Apparel — DR’s largest free zone sector by employment. Yarn-forward CAFTA-DR qualification is well-established. Textiles manufacturing guide →
  • Electronics Assembly — PCB assembly, wire harnesses, consumer electronics. CAFTA-DR substantial transformation rules apply. Electronics assembly guide →
  • Medical Devices — FDA-registered facilities operating in DR free zones. Strong CAFTA-DR alignment. Medical device manufacturing guide →
  • Tobacco — Historic sector with deep operator expertise in Santiago free zones.
  • Footwear and Leather Goods — Growing sector with CAFTA-DR tariff advantages.

When Nearshoring to DR is the Right Move

  • You’re paying 15–32% U.S. import duty on goods currently sourced from Asia. CAFTA-DR eliminates this cost entirely on qualifying DR-manufactured goods.
  • You have Section 301 China tariff exposure. Moving assembly to DR removes that risk without the supply chain complexity of reshoring to the U.S.
  • Your customer base is East Coast-concentrated. 2–4 day sea transit from Caucedo makes DR the logistics equivalent of U.S. Southeast manufacturing for inventory planning purposes.
  • Tax structure matters to your investors or P&L. 0% corporate income tax under Law 8-90 is a material advantage vs. any onshore or Mexico-IMMEX structure.
  • You need to move in 60–90 days, not 18 months. DR free zone operators have ready shell and turnkey space; CNZFE approval is faster than comparable programs in Mexico or Central America.
  • You want proximity to the U.S. without paying U.S. labor rates. Same time zone, 3-hour direct flight from Miami, English-speaking management pool — without the $18–25/hr all-in labor cost of U.S. manufacturing.

Is DR Free Zone Manufacturing Right for Your Company?

Esco Global Strategies qualifies each engagement before committing your time. Tell us your sector, production volume, and target market — we’ll tell you within 48 hours whether DR makes economic sense and what the setup path looks like.

Start the Qualification Process →

Dominican Republic Manufacturing (2026): Free Zones, Sectors, Costs, and Setup

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to set up manufacturing in a Dominican Republic free zone?

60–90 days is the typical timeline from CNZFE application submission to first operational shipment, assuming a turnkey or shell space lease is in place. Build-to-suit facilities add 6–18 months depending on scope. CNZFE registration itself takes 30–45 days.

Do you need a local partner to operate in DR free zones?

No. Foreign companies can own 100% of a DR free zone entity. There is no mandatory local ownership requirement under Law 8-90. You do need a registered Dominican legal entity (SRL or SA) and a signed lease agreement within a CNZFE-approved park.

Does CAFTA-DR apply to all products manufactured in DR free zones?

No. Products must meet the specific rule of origin for their HTS category — most commonly a substantial transformation test or, for textiles, a yarn-forward rule. Free zone location alone does not confer CAFTA-DR status. A certificate of origin must be issued by the exporter or producer. See the CAFTA-DR certification guide →

How does DR nearshoring compare to reshoring to the U.S.?

DR free zone manufacturing typically costs 60–75% less than equivalent U.S. operations on a fully-loaded labor basis, while maintaining 2–4 day sea transit to East Coast ports and 0% import duty under CAFTA-DR. For companies that need to reduce Asia dependence without absorbing U.S. labor costs, DR is the most cost-competitive near-U.S. alternative for East Coast distribution.

Also see: DR Free Zone Company Formation | Tobacco & Cigar Manufacturing in DR | DR Free Zone Exports Guide

Before you leave — see what DR manufacturing would cost your company Get my cost breakdown →
Pillar Guides:Free Zone SetupCAFTA-DRLaw 8-90CNZFEDR vs MexicoLogistics