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Policy on permits required to enter Dominican Republic
Visitors to the Dominican Republic must obtain a visa from one of the Dominican Republic diplomatic missions unless they are citizens of one of the visa-exempt countries.
Visa policy of the Dominican RepublicDominican Republic
Visa not required
Visa required
Holders of passports of the following countries and territories may enter the Dominican Republic without a visa for tourist purposes for up to 30 days (unless otherwise noted). Extension of stay is possible for up to 120 days for a fee.[1][2]
1 - 90 days.
2 - 60 days.
3 - 60 days within any 180-day period.
This list is
incomplete; you can help by
adding missing items.
(July 2017)Cancelled:
A visa is not required for citizens of any country who were born in the Dominican Republic according to their travel document.
Holders of a valid visa or residence card of any member state of the Schengen Area, Canada, Cyprus, Ireland, the United Kingdom or the United States may enter the Dominican Republic without a visa.[2]
Non-ordinary passports[edit]Holders of diplomatic, official or service passports of Argentina, Belize, Brazil (60 days), Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador (90 days), El Salvador, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Israel, Japan, Malaysia, Morocco (60 days), Nicaragua, India (30 days), Panama, Paraguay, Peru (60 days), Russia, Serbia (60 days), Singapore (90 days), South Korea, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Taiwan, Trinidad and Tobago, Ukraine, Uruguay and Vietnam may enter the Dominican Republic without a visa for up to 30 days (unless otherwise noted).
The Dominican Republic has signed visa exemption agreements with the following countries, but they have not yet been ratified:
Country Passports Agreement signed on Rwanda[14] All September 2024Visitors are required to pay a tourist fee of 10 USD, except:[15]
This fee was previously charged in the form of a tourist card on arrival, but as of 25 April 2018, the card is no longer required of those arriving by air. Instead, the fee is charged with the airfare for all tickets issued outside the Dominican Republic.
Visitors who were automatically charged the fee with the airfare but satisfy one of the exemptions may request a refund of this fee online, to be issued within 15 days on a credit card, check or local bank account.[15][16]
Visitors who enter the Dominican Republic by land or sea (and are not exempt) are still required to purchase a tourist card on arrival, which costs 10 USD or 10 EUR.[17]
Admission restrictions[edit]Passengers and airline crew arriving from Equatorial Guinea are not allowed to enter.[2]
Passengers and airline crew who have been in or transited through Equatorial Guinea on or after 8 February 2023 are not allowed to enter.[2]
Visitor statistics[edit]Most visitors arriving in the Dominican Republic were from the following countries of nationality:[18]
Country/Territory 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 United States 2,073,963 2,085,186 2,001,909 1,784,486 1,587,404 Canada 827,721 768,486 745,860 706,394 684,071 Germany 265,709 259,133 247,613 230,733 214,151 Russia 245,346 136,249 71,572 180,821 188,110 France 221,492 232,024 227,483 229,678 232,754 Argentina 182,170 137,642 133,888 112,489 107,305 Spain 177,993 169,760 172,245 150,859 142,207 United Kingdom 177,534 165,111 142,083 126,563 108,236 Puerto Rico 111,095 121,131 115,084 103,891 74,580 Venezuela 109,734 170,713 167,176 112,854 75,173 Colombia 103,444 N/A N/A N/A N/A Total 5,354,017 5,178,050 4,872,319 4,511,062 4,117,493RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
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