
Money, Safety and eSIM in the Dominican Republic
The Dominican Republic's currency is the peso (DOP), but USD is widely accepted directly at resorts, tour operators, and many tourist-area restaurants and shops — you can genuinely get by on US dollars alone in the main tourist zones, though pesos stretch further for local restaurants and taxis. Tipping is expected, even at all-inclusive resorts. Safety is heavily concentrated by location: resort zones and the main tourist areas of Santo Domingo, Puerto Plata, and Samaná are well-policed and considered safe with normal precautions.
The practical questions that actually shape how smooth your trip feels: whether to bother getting pesos at all, how tipping actually works at an all-inclusive resort, what the real safety picture looks like away from the internet's worst-case stories, and how to get connected the moment you land.
Pesos or dollars — do you need to exchange money?
Not really, if you're staying entirely within Punta Cana's resort zone — USD is accepted directly almost everywhere tourists go, including most excursions, gift shops, and resort extras. That said, small change and prices at local, non-touristy restaurants, taxis, and markets are usually quoted in pesos, and you'll get noticeably better value paying in pesos outside the resort bubble. As a rough planning anchor, $1 has recently traded around 58-61 Dominican pesos — check a live rate before you go, since it moves.
| Payment method | Where it works best |
|---|---|
| US dollars (cash) | Resorts, tours, tourist-area restaurants and shops |
| Dominican pesos (cash) | Local comedores, taxis, markets, smaller towns — better value |
| Credit/debit card | Hotels, larger restaurants, chain stores in tourist areas |
ATMs and fees
ATMs are widely available in Punta Cana, Santo Domingo, Puerto Plata, and Samaná's main towns, dispensing pesos. Expect a foreign-transaction fee from both your own bank and the local ATM operator — withdrawing a larger amount less often is generally more cost-effective than several small withdrawals. A card with no foreign-transaction fee is worth having if your bank offers one.
Tipping culture
Tipping is genuinely expected in the Dominican Republic, even at all-inclusive resorts where it might feel unnecessary given everything's technically 'included.' A common baseline: $1-2 per drink at the bar, $2-5 per day for housekeeping, and 10% at a la carte restaurants if a service charge isn't already added to the bill. Tour guides (especially for physically demanding activities like Damajagua's waterfalls) rely heavily on tips and appreciate $5-10 per person for a half-day tour.
Is the Dominican Republic safe?
The honest picture: the areas the overwhelming majority of tourists actually spend time in — Punta Cana's resort zone, Santo Domingo's Zona Colonial and main hotel districts, Puerto Plata and Samaná's tourist areas — see heavy security presence and are considered safe with the same common-sense precautions you'd use in any major tourist destination. Petty theft (unattended bags, phones left on beach loungers) and persistent timeshare or excursion touts are far more realistic everyday concerns than serious crime. As with any destination, check your government's current travel advisory before finalizing plans, and use registered taxis or ride-hailing/hotel-arranged transport rather than hailing an unmarked vehicle, especially at night.
eSIM and staying connected
eSIM works well for most modern phones and is the easiest option — Airalo and Holafly both sell Dominican Republic data plans from roughly $5-15 for 7-15 days, activated before you even land. A physical local SIM (Claro or Altice, sold at the airport or in any city) costs a similar range and is easy to set up once you've cleared immigration. Most resorts also offer free WiFi throughout the property, which covers a lot of basic needs if you'd rather not buy data at all.
Water and basic health
- Don't drink tap water directly — bottled water is cheap and available everywhere, including inside resorts (usually included) and at any corner store (colmado) outside them.
- Ice at resorts and established restaurants is normally fine; be more cautious at very informal roadside stalls if you have a sensitive stomach.
- Mosquito repellent is worth packing, especially outside resort grounds in the evening — standard travel precautions apply, no different from most of the Caribbean and Central America.












































