Noise and the DR - Be Warned
Living in the capital can be painful for those who like peace and tranquility.
The noise from constant traffic alone can be uncomfortable, but add to that poorly maintained gas oil heavy goods vehicles splurting out exhaust noise and the incessant use of horns at every hour, the noise is such that living close to any frequently used road is a bad choice.
We then have to contend with the Dominican habit of not simply talking at a normal level but rather at a level that everybody within a hundred metres can hear. It continues to confound me why they need to speak so loud and conduct conversations at great distance shouting to each other. Add to that the arguments between couples and family members, and believe me if you live in an apartment block you will quickly understand where strained relationships exist.
Perhaps the biggest dislike is the blasting out of music from sound systems at colmados at the like and from vehicles at excessive levels, distorted and foul sounding. Worse still is that the base sound is exaggerated, and for most Dominican music and the sounds the youth like, you have a repetative 'boom' 'boom' 'boom' which is hard to drown out even with ear plugs. There seems to be a complete lack of percussion and bass guitar skills in current music selections going around the country. Oh for Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker.
On the positive side there is an attempt by government to apply the environmental rules on noise and now we have curfew. But not everyone complies from their own home.
Moving to the campo was, on my part, a hope to see less of this noise and enjoy some peaceful nights and hear nature again. But I am not so naive as to think the campo folks don't make just as much noise at times having lived that life before. It is much better and not at all hours, but a few of the colmados do start the distorted sound at 8am in the morning and seem to like having the whole village tolerate the same repetative music over and over again. Curfew is not respected here and so we get late night sounds too. Add to all this the local preacher and his tone deaf daughter - and they have sound systems too - and it can be a little annoying at times. But I can wander off away from the noise so it is better than city life. Oh, forgot to mention cocks crowing early morning, pigs squeeling and dogs.....
We often advise on this forum to first investigate by visiting the places you plan to relocate, and the ambient noise throughout the day and night is one subject you need to consider seriously before any move.
A recent post on Las Terrenas mentioned the noise in the town and the posters had decided as a result to build in the Coson Hills. Having lived in both LT town and those hills I understand clearly the motive.
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Don't expect miracles, but if you don't try it, it definitely won't work.
How about this concept... Let people enjoy their lives. Go buy 99 cent ear plugs. Or better yet, go back to the states in a private community and you can talk about how “those people are so loud” from your gated community.
GregInTheDR wrote:Wow, just wow... The audacity of Americans expecting the island to change for YOU?
How about this concept... Let people enjoy their lives. Go buy 99 cent ear plugs. Or better yet, go back to the states in a private community and you can talk about how “those people are so loud” from your gated community.
Are you implying the anti-noise line was implemented for Americans?
In your few months here, have you had a next-door neighbor who plays regaetton at full blast at 2-3 am?
Do you enjoy street music at 6 am on Sunday mornings?
How about those wonderful sound trucks with 40-50 speakers blaring so loud your windows rattle and your ears hurt?
Do you think the majority of Dominicans enjoy blaring music at all hours?
If you do you're sadly mistaken.
A comment from someone who lives is a regulated society who has toss all idea about DR (except probably on vacations) and can't share his experiences of living integrated in Dominican society for 15 years for other expats to understand!!! ......and JDJ has 30 years here I believe!!
Come share with this expat community when you have several years of living here 24/7 in various parts of this country when you really understand a wee bit more about DR.
It’s like when people visit Chicago and complain about the sound of the El Train. I mean, really... If you don’t like it - put in ear plugs.
Ever been to Jamaica? Puerto Rico? It’s the same concept. Loud music. Roosters. Sirens. And it’s gonna be worse in a city of millions of people.
Reggaeton at 3am? Enjoy your life and family, enjoy your good times. I’ll put in ear plugs, I won’t expect other people to change their lives and culture for me.
(On a side note, I’m 36 and a guitarist. Ginger Baker is the best drummer of all time, so don’t misunderstand my post as a knock on the greatest of all time. RIP GINGER)
We don't need to debate this subject it is a fact, and as JDJ has stated, Dominicans too dislike the excesses and the Ministry of the Envorinment is gradually taking action to bring society in line with what is more the norm in the developed world.
DR is worse than virtaully all other Caribbean countries for noise in my wide experience of travel and living throughout the Caribbean where noise laws are enforced better.
For me I live integrated in the campo and have no qualms about the occassional loud music and I am supportive of the community who also have reason to complain about the high volumes preferred by the youth here especially late at night. We can't complain about the preacher though.
Got good ear plugs when needed too but that does not drown out low frequencies
So, I get it. Noise is a cultural thing. I understand the shouting at each other and such, but is it really necessary to slap a cheap tin muffler on your motorcycle to make as much noise as possible! My understanding is the current mayor in LT was considering outlawing those mufflers. So, at least someone in authority recognizes that noise for the sake of noise is a bit unnecessary.
In the 10 minutes taken to write this I have experienced every single sound Lennox described in this initial post, and a few additional things. LOL. Where are my 99 cent ear plugs!

When I lived in the city the neighbours kept an old rooster and hen as pets next door in a 5 metre by 5 metre concrete hard enclosed by block walls. They fed them left over meal scraps..rice which got shared by resident pidgeons.
The rooster was regular...4am, 4.30, 5.00, 5.30, 6.00 daily, 20 crows each time and loud echoed by the enclosure. The hen would add a chorous each time which was squawky. Ear plugs were effective to avoid that early alarm call.
I have resident big frogs living outside our bedroom now in the campo where they get their fill of bettles attracted by the exterior night lights. Their croaks are pleasant. The occassional rooster passes close by and the crowing is a passing sound. The pigs kept by a neighbour at some distance will sometimes squeel at each other but barely noticeable. The occassional mule or cow noise from the adjacent field is relaxing. Dogs can be a pain though at night especially if one is on heat and all the local loose males are in persuit. And finally we have our resident couple of birds..fly catcher type..who tap on the windows at dawn and throughout the day too. It is those windows with reflective glazing that attracts them as well as other birds. They cant see you and so you can observe them at close quarters.
Yes the sounds of nature are mostly pleasant in open country. It is humans that struggle to exercise control.
lennoxnev wrote:When roosters are free to roam they cause little annoyance.
@lennox - I respectfully disagree!
The roosters by us are free range and they crow all night! We have several in the area (maybe that's the problem?) and it's like "dueling roosters" some times!
And we occasionally have a horse right next door. One day we thought we heard a horse and looked out the window...and there he was. We throw him apples. I kind of want to take him with us too :0)
My hen house is 100 yards from the back of the house so no issue there. The visiting roosters are mobile looking for their hens...a crow here then over there, so no problem now for me.
I have heard some people say too that the sound of roosters is relaxing...but not so many.
It was NOT necessary to be rude Greg. Your comments were not helpful. You do not live here so you really have no idea. Several posters with years of experience here are describing reality!
For those wanting to live here this is educational and helpful as its outside many peoples experiences.
I have been here 17 1/2 years now and one thing I know is that finding a quite place to reside is very important. I love the culture and I love the music. What I do not love and will no longer tolerate is music blasting until 5 in the morning ! That is unacceptable in any culture. And especially at 83 decibels. One year at Christmas, 2 years ago, I experienced 6 days of this. 83 decibels almost 22 hours a day for 6 straight days. It was so loud my bed literally vibrated. I called the police no less than 50 times! AND no earplugs helped!
One thing I always add to the advice - when looking at a place to rent or buy, check it out every day of the week and weekend. A nice quiet place on weekdays can turn into a nightmare on weekends!
By the way, nice quiet places are available in this country! You can find them, even in the city! I currently live in the quietest place I have ever lived in here! Its amazing, inexpensive and close to everything (except my office)
I also had a neighbour opposite in Miramar SD whose son had multiple motorbikes and a silencerless quad. He took pleasure in blasting away from his house on the quad and in doing so setting off all the car alarms nearby. It was deliberate I am sure. He seemed to enjoy it.
Before that in Bella Vista there was a Harly owner nearby who likewise liked to throttle up to set off car alarms when leaving or arriving home.
Here in the campo the smaller bikes aren't a problem.
My advice in general would be to avoid apartments as a first choice home. A stand alone dwelling away from main roads and buisinesses especially colmados and of course any entertainment spots. Wherever you like, check it out at all hours. Most of us are sensitive to excess noise and having to use ear plugs after investing won't make you happy.
Coson Hills - Loma Ana - was the quietest place I have lived in DR.

It was not an “educational” post. It was a blowing off steam post.
My response wasn’t rude. There are countless ways to respond and a disagreement is one of them.
You have no idea if he was blowing off steam or not. I have read probably 98 % of his posts over many years. I am also the moderator here.
Until you have actually lived here for many months and experienced this I suggest you take a step back! You have no actual idea of what it is to live here.
Disagreement is always welcome here. Opinions are welcome. Facts are welcome. Rude is not.
noisier roosters here - the all night kind !!
clearly Greg is here..
wearing his Toque...... de queda !!
hahaha
FRANCE
Jan. 24, 2021Updated 12:41 p.m. ET
PARIS — The crow of a rooster and the ringing of a church bell at dawn. The rumble of a tractor and the smell of manure wafting from a nearby stable. The deafening song of cicadas or the discordant croaking of frogs. Quacking ducks, bleating sheep and braying donkeys.
Perennial rural sounds and smells such as these were given protection by French law last week, when lawmakers passed a bill to preserve “the sensory heritage of the countryside,” after a series of widely publicized neighborhood spats in France’s rural corners, many of them involving noisy animals.
In a nation still attached to its agrarian roots and to its terroir — a deep sense of place tied to the land — the disputes symbolized tensions between urban newcomers and longtime country dwellers, frictions that have only grown as the coronavirus pandemic and a string of lockdowns draw new residents to the countryside.
“Life in the countryside means accepting some nuisances,” Joël Giraud, the French government’s junior minister in charge of rural life, said on Thursday. It would be illusory, he said, to idealize the countryside as a picture-perfect haven of tranquillity.
Perhaps the most prominent of these noisy animals was Maurice, a rooster in Saint-Pierre-d’Oléron, a town on an island off France’s western coast. His owner had been sued by neighbors — regular vacationers in the area — because he crowed too loudly.
Politicians and thousands of petitioners rushed to the Gallic rooster’s defense, and a court eventually ruled in 2019 that Maurice, who died last summer at the age of 6, was well within his rights.
New York Today: Compelling daily stories, transit news and a glimpse at the lighter side of life in the city.
“Our rural territories are not just sceneries, they are also sounds, smells, activities and practices that are part of our heritage,” Mr. Giraud told lawmakers in the French Senate. “New country dwellers aren’t always used to it.”
The bill was passed by the National Assembly, France’s lower house of Parliament, last January. In a rare show of parliamentary and political unity, the Senate unanimously passed an unamended version of the bill on Thursday.
Greg can either add value or ask useful questions or go away!
To name but a few recent cases: In Dordogne, a region of southwest France, a court ordered a couple to drain their pond after neighbors complained about incessant frog croaking; in Alsace, in eastern France, a court ruled that a horse had to stay at least 50 feet from the neighboring property after people grumbled about smelly droppings and droves of flies; in Le Beausset, a small village in southern France, residents were shocked when tourists complained about the singing of cicadas. (The mayor responded last year by installing a six-foot statue of one.)
In one of the more tragic cases, over 100,000 petitioners clamored for justice last year after Marcel, a rooster in Ardèche, in southeastern France, was shot and beaten to death by a neighbor infuriated by its crowing. The man later received a five-month suspended prison sentence.
The new law tweaks France’s environmental code to say that the “sounds and smells” of France’s natural spaces are an integral part of its legally defined “shared heritage.” And it urges local administrations to draw up an inventory of their areas’ “sensory heritage,” to give newcomers a better sense of what to expect.
The law doesn’t carry any specific penalties or create a list of specifically protected sounds or smells, but Mr. Levi, who represents Tarn-et-Garonne, a mostly rural area of southwestern France, said it would give mayors more authority to smooth over disputes before they ended up in court and would give judges a firmer legal footing to settle the cases that reached them.
“This law doesn’t mean that farmers are going to be able to do whatever they please,” he said. “The idea is to create a code of good conduct.”
It is too late for Maurice. But his successor, Maurice II, can now crow with the full-throated confidence of someone who has the law on his side. Corinne Fesseau, his owner, told France 2 television this past week that she was thrilled by the new law.
“The city has its noises,” she said. “So does the countryside.”
Are we in kindergarten or is this an online discussion forum? Wow.
Yes, we have a kindergarten for people like you, until we are fed up and you get fired.
“Planner” the moderator, when you read this.... you should be ashamed of yourself
YOU are the one who should be ashamed. You are a total newcomer in the DR and on this Forum. You know nothing about both. You arrived with a frontal bashing of Lennox and a complete set of bad manners. This thread has been turned into a complete mess since you posted.
Moreover, we do not need you nor your input. Some of us speak fluent Spanish and know the country for 10, 15 or 20 years.
This is a friendly place until rogue elements confuse this Forum with the Social Media bullshit. This is a privately owned Website and there is a code of conduct you should have read. Planner is in charge and if you are not ok with that, you are free to dismiss.
https://listindiario.com/la-republica/2 … iar-ruidos
For a few years, the National Emergency and Security Assistance System 911 is where calls have been received to report noise pollution actions. There the process begins that is not always fulfilled. The reason? God knows. It is not known if the Anti-Noise Department of the National Police does not receive the report or if it ignores the complaint when it receives it.
Until a few weeks ago, you called 911 and spoke with an operator, who assured you that they would go to control the noise in your sector or residential area. Now, when you dial, the answering machine tells you that to report noise you must give option two, which according to Máximo Cabrera, they never answer. He has lived this experience on more than one occasion and they have never solved the problem. He lives near El Bolsillo, a small neighborhood in Ensanche Quisqueya.
Given the high incidence of noise in the country, LISTÍN DIARIO was interested in knowing what measures the authorities will adopt to combat the problem that is becoming more and more disturbing. The answer comes from Magistrate Francisco Contreras, Attorney General of the Courts, and head of the Special Prosecutor's Office for the Defense and Protection of the Environment and Natural Resources, who announced that, starting tomorrow, they will initiate a work plan in coordination with the Anti-noise Department of the National Police to provide a solution.
"Actually, we have kept working on this, but it has been very difficult because with the confinement, the noise pollution has increased, and the National 911 System has not been able to respond as it would like because they have to attend to many health cases," he explains Contreras.
He maintains that to control noise they carry out operations, talks, closings and raids of establishments, and visit homes where social peace is being disturbed. “Once again we will ask the judges for orders to reinforce this type of work and achieve control of the situation. Citizens have the right to live in peace and we are going to work on that with new mechanisms, because sometimes they receive our agents with bottles and lots of violence. But we are going to be more drastic with this. "
The magistrate says that they receive complaints of this nature in all the attorney's offices in the country and that they always try to respond. He provided these numbers for those who wish to make their noise complaints, via WhatsApp 809-480-9525 and calling the office at 809-533-3522, option 3.
911 to the noise
According to Law 184-17 that modifies the National System of Attention to Emergencies and Security 911, its function in what has to do with noise pollution, is that, after receiving calls from citizens for red-handed to the laws 64 -00, on Environment; 42-01, Health and 287-04, on Prevention and Limitation of Noxious and Annoying Noise, the agents of the Anti-Noise Department of the National Police appear at the places where they legally proceed before the offenders, who are subjected to the Justice.
But, despite all this, which can be heard very well just by reading, service users complain about the little attention paid to them when calling to report noise in their sector. “Right now, with the situation that we are experiencing of tension due to the coronavirus, one wants to be calm, but there are people who do not understand it, and the authorities have been careless with this. If things continue as they are, we will all be deaf or crazy ”.
That is the thinking of a school teacher who assures that he can no longer put up with the noise at all hours of the day that they do in his area of Las Caobas. He comments that, given the "inoperability", as he calls the attitude of the 911 or Anti-noise operators, he called line 311, which he understands is to report the inefficiency of public servants. "And guess what ... They didn't listen to me either, they took some data from me and that's where it was. Those who have to ensure that noise is not made continue to ignore it, and of course, around my house they continue to make more noise than ever, with everything and a curfew ”, says Roberto García.
Despite what Greg thinks, noise is a huge problem in DR especially for those that choose to live in apartment blocks in the cities. You need to research throroughly, live there all hours before making your move, otherwise you may have thrown your money down the drain literally with an inconvenience you never thought could be so possibly bad.
https://www.expat.com/forum/viewtopic.p … 35#5022922
Here a quick translation.
“Noise pollution in Las Terrenas”
It has been more than a year that villas sold by French nationals to wealthy dominican were turned into outdoor discos in our most famous quarters like “Las Ballenas”, “Cosón” and “Bonita”.
We are in distress because we are obliged to undergo music vibrations for entire nights. We called on authorities, created anti -noise committees, been in gatherings with police colonels, attorneys etc ... No way. The Samaná Province authorities confess to be overwhelmed (...) They send us to speak to our Consul and Ambassador in such a way they call on the highest authorities of the capital.
We are exhausted, in a constant lack of sleep. Do we have to flee from Las Terrenas ? Not so simple if we have properties for sale in the middle of the pandemic. We got in touch with our Consul ... he is not in a hurry to respond.
Could you advise us, other than gathering proofs of those nuisances and taking pictures of those crowds of excited people who come to sow disorder ? You would be of great help. Thank you.
That does exemplify my reason for starting this thread to be informative and cautiion expats seeking to move here to research first. As OP:
We often advise on this forum to first investigate by visiting the places you plan to relocate, and the ambient noise throughout the day and night is one subject you need to consider seriously before any move.
Rocky, I am not so sure. My expereience was that every weekend and holidays, folks from the capital descended on LT to enjoy a brief vacation. Perhaps there is more partying now as a release to curfew locked up in densely spaced apartments in the capital. During weekdays LT was very peaceful from my experience.
You did right - you've seen the ugly - and are making your investment away from all this as a result.
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