Cost of living 2018 in Dominican Republic
As per our annual tradition, we invite you to share your experiences and tell us more about the average prices of products and services in your town/city/area, so that we have updated information regarding cost of living and inflation in Dominican Republic.
Thanks to your contribution, future expats in Dominican Republic will be more informed and will be able to refine their budget and better prepare for their big move.
How much does it cost to rent an apartment or a house in Dominican Republic?
How much does it cost to buy an apartment or a house in Dominican Republic?
How much do you pay on average for public transportation (bus, subway, train, tram, taxi)?
How much do you pay for basic food items such as rice, bread, and pasta?
What is your monthly budget for groceries?
How much does it cost to see a doctor/dentist/physician/specialist in Dominican Republic?
How much do you pay for health insurance per month?
How much does childcare cost on average per month?
What is your child's schooling budget per month?
How much does it cost to fill up your carยs fuel tank?
How much do you pay for electricity/gas/water etc., per month?
How much do you pay for your internet and phone subscription?
How much do you pay for your lunch pack on weekdays?
How much do you pay for an espresso coffee?
How much do you pay for a cinema ticket?
How much does a gym membership cost in Dominican Republic?
Thank you for sharing your experience.
Priscilla
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Bob K
Location -ย upscale neighborhood in Santo Domingo
How much does it cost to rent an apartment or a house in Dominican Republic? 3 bedroom 3 bathroom apartment - 4th floor with underground parking and security 24/7ย 35,000RD
How much does it cost to buy an apartment or a house in Dominican Republic?ย Ridiculous question!
How much do you pay on average for public transportation (bus, subway, train, tram, taxi)?ย ย Subway isย 20RD for one direction.ย Bus or gua gua depends onย duration.ย Bus Santo Domingo to Puerto Plataย 380 RD
How much do you pay for basic food items such as rice, bread, and pasta? Depends white rice is cheap,ย brown rice is expensive.ย Pasta - depends on quality from 18RD a pound to well over 100RD
What is your monthly budget for groceries?ย Single person who doesn't cook -ย US 100 a month toย US 150 a month
How much does it cost to see a doctor/dentist/physician/specialist in Dominican Republic?ย Again it depends -ย without insurance specialist isย 2,000RD,ย generalistย 1,000 RD.
How much do you pay for health insurance per month?ย Current inside a group planย 2,400 RD includes prescription and dental plan
How much does childcare cost on average per month? No idea.
What is your child's schooling budget per month?
How much does it cost to fill up your carโs fuel tank? 2,200 RD but I have a small car.ย This is gasoline.
How much do you pay for electricity/gas/water etc., per month? Electricity withย electric hot water and 2 air conditioners monthly aboutย 3,200 RD.ย I dont pay the others
How much do you pay for your internet and phone subscription? I have a package - 20 down, 3 up,ย landline of 500 minutes,ย HD cable with 2 boxes,ย 3,200 RD a month
How much do you pay for your lunch pack on weekdays?
How much do you pay for an espresso coffee? I dont
How much do you pay for a cinema ticket? 75 RD to 150 RD depending on day of the week.
How much does a gym membership cost in Dominican Republic? 1,000RD to 3,000 RD a month.
Hair salon -ย wash and blow dry - 250RD
Manicure - 200RD
Pedicure - 300 RD
Cell Phone -ย 200
minutes a month plus FULL data - 1,030 RD tax in.
Since we are an island almost everything is imported.
Things that are labor intensive tend to be less expensive - services etc.
ย ) and stick to the local products.ย Coffee at (dark roast) in grano, I like grinding my beans every day for the freshest coffee, at $5.15 US a pound cannot be beat or found back in the US.ย Milk at $1 US a quart is cheaper here as are eggs, butter, veggies, and the list goes on and on.ย I have said it before but our grocery bill here is about 40% less then in the US>.Bob K
The coffee here is inexpensive when compared to good coffee in North America.ย It rocks!ย I love Dominican coffee.ย BUT be careful what you buy, much of what is marketed as local coffee is imported and bagged here! It is not local coffee.
The milk here is disgusting at any price. Lol. I will take the other over this any day at any price. Cheaper is definitely better.
Agree on wine - very expensive as.is pretty much everything that is not rum.
Of course all the illegal knock off designer brands are cheap here! Well as long as you don't look too close.
Can't comment on the beer -ย eeeyuck.ย

See you feel better already!

Bob K
--- I am currently in Australia, and I can buy a 4 liter Box of very drinkable Chardonnay for about $12 (which is a little more than 5 Bottles of wine) so figure about $2.50 a bottle.ย (Beer and Hard Liquor is expensive here)
There are multiple threads that include costs here on the forum.ย Use the search function.
And now it is covered here again
Bob K
Cheapย Chardonnay will run from $5-$7 a bottle here in Sosua.ย Best place is Super Pola where just about every week some good wine sales can be had.
Bob K
A cheap bottle is easily 5 to 7 dollars. Good wine is much more. I saw boxed wine a few times but did not note the price.
Here most stick to local made rum which is various degrees of taste and price! But all still way less.than imported alcohol.
the tinker40 wrote:7 year old rum, 700ml is between $5.50 to $6.00.ย ( Columbus ) Made by Barcelo Ind. Often on sale, a good every day rum. It is not an equal to a Cruzan "Single Barrel" rum.ย Coca Cola is bottled here & is a little sweeter than U.S. made. 2 liter bottle is about $0.87.
Do they make a 'Diet Coke' ?
Sometimes you can find diet ginger ale and diet root beer!
We have lived here for 12 years and the most important medical insurance we have is...EVACUATION insurance in case one of us needs "advanced" medical care.
And NOTE your husbands medicare coverage will not do him any good here as it does not cover him here.ย IF he has a great supplemental part B coverage he might qualify for a 60 day coverage in a foreign country.ย So once again medical insurance should not be the driving force to move here.
Bob K
The cost of insurance OR the level of health care.ย ย
Bob K
Insurance and medical care are big items for many.ย Then there are a thousand other things to consider.
Here is what I recommend -ย decide what yourย deal breakers are, go research those.ย Got them covered, now you look at all the thousands of other 'things' that make life better or worse for you here. BUT if your deal breakers are covered then you are good to go.
For many health care access,ย cost etc can be deal breakers.
For some it is access to great golf.
For some its is being close to the ocean
For some it is schools for their kids.
You get my point. For me -ย access to great latin dancing,ย health care,ย work that I love doing.ย Those were my deal breakers. Everything else is details for me.
There are many other reasons besides health insurance for our interest in living the DR, and Bob no we do not plan on using Medicare as we are well aware it's not accepted, we both plan on getting local/private health ins with the evacuation plan when we live there. We are both healthy now with no issues, but well aware that anything can happen in the future.
We have been researching the DR and several other islands for years seeing which one is for us.ย We have traveled all over the Caribbean for the past 30 years and know we love the slower lifestyle, the people, the tropical weather and the ocean (we live in SW Florida so we are used to hot conditions and hurricanes). There is no paradise on this earth, it's a matter of looking at the pros/cons of the decisions I make....and the pros/cons have to be based on YOURSELF (and whoever is moving with you) because we talk to people every week and some think "Wow that sounds like an adventure!" and others look at us like "Are you out of your minds!ย It's clearly not for everyone.
We owned a condo in Punta Cana but sold it and are now looking for a single family villa possibly going to check out Sousa too.ย We will definitely try it for a while (at least 5 years) and if we really miss the rat race, the taxes and the political BS we will begin the next adventure of life and move back to the US, it's only 2-1/2 hrs away to FL :-)ย I appreciate your concern, I have gotten great advice and many questions answered on this forum :-).ย ย
(Note: sorry if this posts twice, I am still having trouble with this site, since August I have not been getting an email every time someone posts on the DR forum, I have to manually go into the Expat.com site to see what people are talking about and to see if people respond to me...it's been a real pain but the Customer Support says everything on their end looks good and Google/Microsoft can't seem to figure it out either, (and I don't have the site blocked).....I miss being in the loop!ย :-)))ย If anyone else has experienced this let me know how you solved it .ย Thanks!
It is unfortunate but after living here for a while you will forget and not miss for a nano second the rat race life of theย US or the political BS.ย However the damn taxes will still haunt you

Bob K
One other reason is Indy Car. Lololol.. my husband can't imagine missing the Indy 500 and a couple other races he goes to. I am sure I will enjoy my solo time on Sosua beach during that time. ๐๐
If I can help with tech issues let me know!!!
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