Nomad insurance
Digital nomad insurance for Dominican Republic
Built for people who stay in Dominican Republic for months at a time but aren't relocating. Hybrid medical + travel + gear cover, written for the way nomads actually live.
The Dominican Republic is a popular Caribbean nomad base, Punta Cana, Las Terrenas, Cabarete and Santo Domingo, but, unlike many neighbours, it has no dedicated digital nomad visa. Nomads use long tourist stays or a fast residency route. It has a genuine nationwide 911, good private hospitals in the cities, and serious cases are flown to the US. The honest headlines: some of the most dangerous roads in the hemisphere, hurricane season, and dengue.
What nomad insurance covers in Dominican Republic
Nomad insurance is built for long-stay nomads, perpetual travelers, slowmads who change country every few months. The lines below are the base. Exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Dominican Republic situation you care about.
What you get
- Medical care while abroad (inpatient + outpatient on better plans)
- Trip cancellation and luggage
- Laptop / camera / gear cover (add-on)
- Adventure activities included by default on most nomad plans
- Multi-country coverage without resetting the policy
What it won't do
- Treatment in your home-country tax residence (often excluded)
- Long-term chronic-condition management on the cheaper plans
- Routine preventive care (varies by plan)
Typical local costs in Dominican Republic
What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Dominican Republicand between public and private facilities; these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.
| Private GP or consultation | about US$40 to US$60 |
|---|---|
| Emergency room visit (private) | US$100 to US$300 |
| Admission deposit (uninsured) | often US$1,500 to US$2,000 demanded upfront |
| Serious admission with surgery | into the thousands (a multi-day surgical stay can run around US$6,000) |
These are indicative private figures, not an official tariff. The two things to remember: you typically prepay, and a serious case may mean an air evacuation to the US, which is the bill that makes evacuation cover essential.
Healthcare in Dominican Republic: what you're dealing with
The Dominican Republic has a two-tier system: a limited public sector, and good private hospitals in the cities that run well below US prices. The ones to know are Hospiten (with branches in Santo Domingo and Punta Cana/Bávaro), CEDIMAT in Santo Domingo, and Centro Médico Punta Cana, which has a 24-hour ER and an international department. English is reliable in the tourist-zone private hospitals and among top Santo Domingo specialists; elsewhere, Spanish dominates.
Two practical realities shape insurance here. First, private hospitals expect upfront payment or a large card hold before they treat you, and US insurance is generally not accepted directly, so you pay and claim. Second, serious cases are routinely evacuated to the US, usually Miami, at your cost. The emergency number is a genuine nationwide 911 (integrated across about half the country). Pharmacies (farmacias) are widespread, with many medicines available without a prescription.
What to watch out for in Dominican Republic
- The roads. This is the serious one: the Dominican Republic has among the highest road-death rates in the world, with most fatalities among motorbike riders. Take real care, especially on a moped.
- Hurricane season. June to November brings storms, heavy rain and dangerous seas; build in flexibility.
- Mosquito-borne disease. Dengue is widespread and year-round, peaking in the rainy season; use repellent. Malaria is low-level and mostly rural or near the Haitian border, not the tourist zones.
- Upfront payment and US evacuation. Private hospitals want payment or a card hold before treating you, and serious cases fly to the US, so carry cover that handles both.
- Crime and water. Petty theft and some violent crime occur; take normal precautions. Tap water is not safe to drink, so stick to bottled and skip the ice outside good hotels.
FAQ
Dominican Republic doesn't usually require visitors to carry nomad insurance for short stays, but the moment something goes wrong it's cheaper to have it than to buy at the hospital. Check the visa-class requirements for your specific situation.
Premiums vary by age, plan and deductible far more than by country; the underwriting risk is priced, not the postal code. Use the "Typical local costs" table above to gauge what your insurance protects you from, then run a real quote to see your own number.
It depends on your situation: how long you're staying, your visa class, your age and health, and whether you want cashless treatment or are fine with reimbursement. Rather than push one plan, we match you against the options that actually fit a stay in Dominican Republic: answer a few honest questions and see only what's relevant.
No. Unlike many neighbours, it has no dedicated nomad visa. Nomads use the tourist entry (30 days, extendable to about 120) or a fast residency route (Pensionado, Rentista or investor).
No, travel insurance is not a legal entry requirement, and the COVID-era free traveler health plan has ended. But given the prepay-and-evacuate reality, carrying cover with evacuation is strongly advised.
You get 30 days on entry, extendable at the migration office up to about 120 days; longer overstays are settled with a fee on exit.
Because serious cases are routinely flown to the US (Miami) for treatment, at your cost, and private hospitals expect upfront payment. A policy with medical evacuation is the one that counts.
The private hospitals in the cities (Hospiten, CEDIMAT, Centro Médico Punta Cana) are good and English is reliable in the tourist zones. Public care is limited. Most nomads use private care and prepay.
No. Drink bottled water and avoid ice outside reputable hotels and restaurants.
Other insurance for Dominican Republic
Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Dominican Republic.
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