Skip to content
Safe Trip
Dominican Republic·Crime baseline

Dominican Republic crime rate and safety

Crime baseline derived from UNODC homicide-rate data plus the urban-pattern detail that travel advisories add. The pattern that affects visitors is rarely the national headline; it is district-specific. Read alongside the country safety guide.

Crime sub-score
54Heightened risk
Overall Safe Trip Score 69

Recent signals

No active crime baseline signals in Dominican Republic as of the latest ingest. The sub-score reflects baseline conditions and the major foreign-ministry advisories rather than acute events.

Foreign-ministry advisories

Practical guidance

What the crime sub-score means for you

Dominican Republic’s crime sub-score sits at 54/100 (moderate band). That number is anchored on UNODC homicide statistics plus the urban-pattern detail foreign-ministry advisories add, so it captures the national baseline rather than tonight on your specific street. National rates are dominated by domestic and organised-crime violence that visitors rarely encounter; the question for a tourist is not “is the country dangerous” but “what crime patterns target tourists here, and in which neighbourhoods.” The country safety guide goes neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood; this page is the headline.

Crime patterns that affect travellers

The five recurring patterns across most destinations: opportunistic pickpocketing in transit hubs and at landmarks; taxi overcharging and unmetered fares (use Uber, Bolt, Grab, or the local equivalent); ATM card skimming (use machines inside bank branches in daytime); distraction scams targeting groups at bars and clubs; and bag or phone snatching from passing scooters in dense urban areas. In Dominican Republic the specific variant matters: the safety guide covers which districts and which times of day concentrate the risk. One generalisable rule: keep a backup card and a small cash reserve in a separate location from your wallet so a single loss doesn’t strand you.

If something happens

Report at the nearest police station within 24 hours; you need the police report for any insurance claim. Most travel-insurance policies require it within 48 hours and reject claims without one. For passport loss, contact your embassy or consulate; emergency travel documents typically take 24 to 72 hours to issue. The Field Manual guide Staying safe in cities, anywhere covers the 11-habit urban-safety baseline that applies regardless of destination.

Related for Dominican Republic

Long-form context

Travelling safely in the Dominican Republic

The Dominican Republic is the most-visited Caribbean tourist destination by some distance (over 8 million visitors a year), with the all-inclusive resort model (Punta Cana, Bávaro, Samaná, Puerto Plata, La Romana) operating as a tourism-zone bubble that is statistically very safe. Outside the resort zones, the country has a higher crime and infrastructure-variability baseline than other Caribbean destinations. Foreign ministries set the DR at the standard tier of caution with explicit notes about resort vs outside-resort patterns. The structural risks are concentrated and addressable: the Atlantic hurricane season (June through November, peak August through October), beach rip currents, contaminated-alcohol incidents that received international media attention in 2019 and continued in milder form since, the practical considerations of the resort-vs-outside-resort gap, and the standard tropical-disease baseline. This guide unpacks the entry mechanics, the resort and Santo Domingo dynamics, the hurricane and natural-hazard calendar, and the practical contacts for a Dominican itinerary.

13 min read →

Frequently asked about Dominican Republic

What is the crime rate in Dominican Republic?

Dominican Republic's crime sub-score is 54/100, anchored on UNODC homicide statistics plus the urban-pattern detail foreign-ministry advisories add. National rates are dominated by domestic and organised-crime violence visitors rarely encounter; traveller-targeted crime (pickpocketing, scams, ATM skimming, taxi overcharging) follows different patterns. The country safety guide breaks it down neighbourhood by neighbourhood.

Is Dominican Republic safe for tourists?

Dominican Republic's overall Safe Trip Score is 69/100 (low risk · exercise caution). Tourist safety depends on which neighbourhoods, what time of day, and what activity. The five recurring patterns travellers encounter most: pickpocketing in transit hubs, taxi overcharging, ATM skimming, distraction scams at bars, bag snatching by scooter. The country safety guide covers which districts and times concentrate the risk.

What are the most common scams in Dominican Republic?

The recurring travel-scam patterns globally: unmetered taxis, fake police asking for "passport inspection", distraction theft at restaurants, ATM skimmers, and "free" tour offers that pressure you into expensive purchases. The country safety guide and the Field Manual urban-safety guide cover the specific variants reported in Dominican Republic.