← Back to Blog

Due Diligence When Buying Property in the DR

May 22, 2026 · 10 min read

You found a property on the Dominican Republic's north coast that checks every box. The price seems right, the views are stunning, and the seller is eager to close. So why should you slow down and spend weeks — and a few thousand dollars — on due diligence before signing?

Because in the DR real estate market, what you don't know can absolutely hurt you. Title fraud, boundary disputes, unpaid taxes, illegal construction, and competing ownership claims are not theoretical risks — they happen. Due diligence is the process that separates a smart purchase from a costly mistake.

If you are a vacation guest thinking about making the leap from renter to owner, this guide will show you exactly what a thorough due diligence process looks like — and why every step matters.

What Is Due Diligence in DR Real Estate?

Due diligence is the investigation period between agreeing to buy a property and closing the sale. It is your opportunity to verify that the property is exactly what the seller claims it is — legally, physically, and financially. A proper due diligence period is typically 30 to 60 days, and it should be written into your Promesa de Venta (Promise to Sell) as a contingency.

This is not optional. As we cover in our guide to how foreigners buy property in the DR, hiring an independent attorney to conduct due diligence is one of the most important steps in the entire buying process.

The Due Diligence Checklist

1. Title Verification

This is the foundation of everything. Your attorney will request a Certificacion del Estado Juridico del Inmueble (Certificate of Legal Status) from the local Registro de Titulos (Title Registry). This document confirms:

Your attorney should also check the chain of title going back several owners to make sure there are no gaps, forged transfers, or disputed inheritances in the property's history. Title problems from decades ago can resurface and create headaches for the current owner.

2. Cadastral Survey

A licensed Dominican surveyor (agrimensor) should visit the property and verify the physical boundaries against what the title documents show. This is critical on the north coast, where parcels have been subdivided informally over the years and what the seller calls "the property line" may not match the official records.

The surveyor will produce a plano catastral (cadastral plan) showing the exact dimensions and location of the property. Compare this carefully to what you were shown during property visits. Surprises at this stage — a neighbor's fence encroaching three meters into your lot, or the building sitting partially on an adjacent parcel — are better discovered now than after closing.

3. Tax Status Review

Your attorney should verify that all property taxes are current. In the DR, this means checking:

Unpaid taxes create liens against the property. If you buy without clearing these, you inherit the debt. For more on costs and taxes, see our detailed cost breakdown.

4. Zoning and Land Use Verification

Confirm with the local ayuntamiento (city hall) that the property is zoned for your intended use. If you plan to operate a vacation rental, for example, make sure the zoning permits it. If the property includes an existing structure, verify that it was built with proper permits and complies with current building codes.

On the north coast, this is particularly important in coastal areas where setback requirements restrict how close to the shoreline you can build, and in areas with environmental protections that limit development.

5. Environmental and Flood Zone Assessment

The north coast is generally not prone to the same hurricane risks as the south, but flooding, landslide zones, and environmental restrictions still matter. Your due diligence should include:

6. Utility and Infrastructure Verification

Confirm the availability and status of:

7. HOA and Community Review

If the property is in a condominium complex or gated community, review:

8. Physical Inspection

Hire a qualified inspector to evaluate the physical condition of any existing structures. The DR's tropical climate is hard on buildings — look specifically for:

9. Seller Verification

Confirm that the person selling the property is who they say they are and has the legal authority to sell. Your attorney should:

Red Flags That Should Stop a Sale

Walk away — or at minimum, pause and investigate further — if you encounter any of the following:

How Long Does Due Diligence Take?

A thorough due diligence process typically takes 30 to 60 days, depending on the complexity of the property and how responsive the local government offices are. Title searches in smaller registries can move quickly, while complex properties with multiple parcels or older title histories may take longer.

Do not let anyone rush this process. A few extra weeks of investigation could save you years of legal headaches and tens of thousands of dollars.

What Does Due Diligence Cost?

Budget approximately US$1,500 to US$3,000 for a complete due diligence package, including:

This is a small fraction of the property's value and is arguably the most important money you will spend in the entire buying process.

Choosing the Right Attorney

Your due diligence is only as good as the attorney conducting it. Look for:

At Caribbean Breeze Real Estate, we maintain a network of trusted, vetted attorneys on the north coast and can connect buyers with the right legal representation.

The Bottom Line

Due diligence is not bureaucratic busywork — it is your insurance policy against the things that can go wrong in a Dominican real estate transaction. Every seasoned expat on the north coast has a horror story about someone who skipped it. Do not become one of those stories.

If you are a vacation guest who has been dreaming about buying, start by learning how the buying process works for foreigners, then let a qualified team walk you through every step — including a thorough due diligence investigation.

Thinking About Buying on the North Coast?

Caribbean Breeze Real Estate is our buyer's brokerage — we help foreign buyers find, evaluate, and close on north coast properties.

Explore Real Estate →