
Expert advice, market trends, and guides to help you navigate the Dominican real estate and mortgage landscape.

The hidden cost of a cash purchase is skipping institutional due diligence.

Pre-construction discount plus CONFOTUR tax benefits — double advantage.

How bank statement evidence compensates for employment instability at closing.

A month-by-month checklist from purchase decision to closing day.

DR banks are relationship-driven. 12-18 months of history changes everything.

The structured path from purchase decision to mortgage closing.
“Real estate is not just about the property — it's about building a life.”
— Anonymous

Under-declared property values create hidden IPI tax liabilities that follow the property — not the seller. Why cash deals hide what mortgages catch.

The designated zones, the active hotspots, and the frontier areas most buyers don't know about. Region-by-region breakdown with verified project examples.


FHA, VA, and USDA programs don't exist in the DR. Apostille pipelines, FATCA compliance, and a 3-to-5-month timeline — what American buyers need to know.


Down payments, stress tests, apostille requirements, processing times, and the documentation gap — a side-by-side guide for Canadian buyers considering DR property.

How Dominican banks evaluate Social Security, pensions, IRA distributions, and annuity income — plus strategies for buyers 55+.

Developer payment plans, deposit structures, fiducia protections, and due diligence steps for en planos transactions in the DR.
“Buy land. They're not making it anymore.”
— Mark Twain

Freelancers, business owners, and consultants — how Dominican banks evaluate non-payroll income and exactly what documentation you need.

How co-applicants affect DR mortgage eligibility, loan amounts, and title ownership — and when adding one is the key to approval.

How the Torrens system works, what a Certificado de Título is, why there's no title insurance, and the 7-step attorney checklist for verifying clean ownership.

Gross yield, net yield, cash-on-cash return, and cap rate explained. Full worked example with realistic Punta Cana numbers and CONFOTUR impact.

DR vs. Barbados, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Turks and Caicos, and the Cayman Islands — prices, yields, mortgage access, and where each market genuinely wins.

Zone-by-zone breakdown for foreign investors: Punta Cana, Santo Domingo, Las Terrenas, North Coast, La Romana — yields, appreciation, and honest verdicts.
“Real estate cannot be lost or stolen, nor can it be carried away.”
— Franklin D. Roosevelt

GDP growth, tourism records, mortgage market expansion, and where prices are heading — the data-driven view for foreign buyers in 2026.

CONFOTUR does not change your mortgage terms but changes your total acquisition cost by USD 9,000+ at closing and annual holding costs by USD 5,900+/year.

Where to search, how to verify certification independently, and the red flags that signal a property is being misrepresented as CONFOTUR-certified.

CONFOTUR eliminates Dominican income tax on rental income for the certification period. Worth USD 5,000–9,000/year for a well-managed Punta Cana rental.

The 3% transfer tax is the largest single closing cost in a DR property purchase — CONFOTUR eliminates it entirely.

How Law 158-01 works, what benefits it provides, who qualifies, and why it matters for your mortgage and investment returns.
“Ninety percent of all millionaires become so through owning real estate.”
— Andrew Carnegie

Yes — every stage of the process works remotely via poder notarial, digital submissions, and HipoTech's platform.

Exactly what Dominican banks want to see from US-based applicants — W-2, 1040, self-employment, retirement, and investment income all covered.

A practical 10-step roadmap for Dominicans living abroad who want to invest in property back home — from first decision to signed title.

Yes — and you have advantages most foreign buyers don't. What diaspora applicants need to know about documentation, cédula benefits, and the best banks for your profile.

The complete guide for foreign buyers in the DR's most active real estate market — neighborhoods, prices, mortgage options, and CONFOTUR incentives.

Why banks reject tasadores, the three possible outcomes, the cost in time and money — and the one verification step that prevents it entirely.
“The best investment on earth is earth.”
— Louis Glickman

The criteria banks use to evaluate a tasacion: panel membership, format compliance, comparable quality, title clarity, construction permits, and occupancy status.

Fee ranges by property type and size, what the fee includes, when it is paid, and how to put it in context of total closing costs.

Where the SB registry and bank panel lists are, what certifications to verify, and why the bank approved panel must be your starting point.

The buyer-commissioned DR property appraisal explained: who orders it, who pays, what it determines, and why it can make or break your loan amount.

Credit thresholds, income requirements, LTV limits, and property restrictions across major DR lenders. Why the same profile can be approved at one bank and declined at another.

Which structure makes more sense — and how Dominican banks price each. The two questions that determine the right answer for your situation.
“Don't wait to buy real estate. Buy real estate and wait.”
— Will Rogers

Current rate ranges across all major DR lenders — and why the published rate is not what you will actually pay. The peso vs. dollar loan decision explained.

Two mid-tier DR banks compared — APAP specialization vs. BHD flexibility. Which fits your buyer profile?

The two largest Dominican banks compared on rates, LTV, foreign buyer policy, and approval speed. Why applying to both simultaneously is always the right move.

From commitment letter to keys: reviewing the offer, title clearance, property insurance, the closing, title registration, and setting up your first payment from abroad.

The complete cost breakdown: 3% transfer tax, notary fees, bank origination, appraisal, and platform fee. Total cash needed: 40–45% of the purchase price for non-residents.

Side-by-side comparison for American buyers: rates, down payments, the Torrens title system, buyer-commissioned appraisals, and the peso vs. dollar loan decision.
“In the Caribbean, every investment comes with a sunrise.”
— HipoTech

TransUnion RD score bands, how foreign applicants with no DR credit history qualify, and what to do if your score falls below standard thresholds.

Non-residents are active borrowers in the DR mortgage market. LTV limits, income documentation requirements, and what changes if you later gain residency.

Yes — US citizens are among the most common foreign applicants in the DR. The exact documents Dominican banks want, how your FICO is evaluated, and key US tax obligations.

Non-resident foreigners typically need 30–40% of the appraised value. LTV ratios explained with a real example, plus the closing costs most buyers forget to budget.

30–90 days from application to closing, depending on document completeness and how many banks you approach. Here is how to get to the faster end.

The complete checklist for foreign buyers — personal ID, income proof, bank statements, and property documents. Gather everything before you apply.
“The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
— Mark Twain

Step-by-step guide for international buyers: who qualifies, which documents you need, what banks evaluate, and how to get from first inquiry to signed approval.

11.6 million visitors, no national STR restrictions, and CONFOTUR tax incentives. Everything a foreign buyer needs to know about daily rental investing.

At 5.5% of GDP, the DR mortgage market is practically untouched. IMF data shows banks are well-capitalized and ready to lend.

Property values in the DR rise 7-11% per year. When you do the math, the interest rate is only half the story.

Stand out from the competition and sell faster by making your property mortgage-ready. A guide for sellers.

You chose this country as your next home—now it's time to embrace its pace. Why delays aren't bugs, they're features.
“Real estate is the purest form of entrepreneurship.”
— Anonymous
“Real estate is not just about the property — it's about building a life.”
— Anonymous
Get the latest mortgage rates, investment tips, and market updates delivered straight to your inbox.
We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe at any time.