The Dominican Republic smashed its January tourism record with 1,219,606 visitors — a 5.5% jump over 2025 and a staggering 61% surge above pre-pandemic 2019 — as booming Latin American arrivals, 82%-plus hotel occupancy, and strategic diversification beyond sun-and-sand cement the nation's grip on the Caribbean's tourism crown, now commanding 12% of all regional visitors.
The Dominican Republic welcomed 1,219,606 visitors in January 2026, a 5.5% increase over January 2025's 1,155,484 arrivals. Air arrivals reached 825,847 passengers, of which 709,886 were foreigners and 115,960 were non-resident Dominicans. North America remained the top source region at 59% of air arrivals, led by the United States with 4% growth and Canada with 24% growth. Latin America contributed 19,333 additional tourists, a 15% increase, now accounting for 21% of total air arrivals. Colombia registered the highest growth among source countries at 27%, followed by Argentina at 17%. European arrivals grew 12%, with Italian tourists up 23% and French tourists up 11%.
Punta Cana International Airport handled 63% of air arrivals with 523,307 passengers, up 10%. Las Américas followed at 18% with 151,340 passengers, up 7%. In the cruise segment, 393,759 passengers arrived, a slight 0.5% decrease. Hotel occupancy averaged around 82%, with Miches leading at 94% and Sosúa-Cabarete at 91%.
Record January arrivals by air and sea, first time exceeding 1.2 million in the month
Historic annual record, surpassing previous years and exceeding the country's population
Increase from Jan 2025's 1,155,484 visitors; air arrivals up 8.7%
Jan 2026 arrivals 61.7% above Jan 2019 levels
National average in January 2026, with Miches at 94% and Sosúa-Cabarete at 91%
North America (led by US at 35%) dominates air arrivals in Jan 2026
Dominican Republic solidified Caribbean leadership with 11.6M visitors in 2025 (+4.3% vs 2024) and record Jan 2026, driven by diversified markets and resilient growth amid global challenges
Air dominance via Punta Cana (63% of arrivals) and strong North American demand (59%) fuel surge, with Europe and Latin America accelerating
Structural strengths like new hotel rooms, cruise expansion, and 82% occupancy position DR ahead of regional peers like Mexico in growth momentum
The Dominican Republic's January record reinforces its position as the Caribbean's most formidable tourism economy. With approximately 12% of all visitors to Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean — up from 9% in 2019 — the country is gaining regional market share at a pace that should concern competitors. The diversification away from U.S. dependence toward Latin American and European markets provides a strategic buffer against volatility in any single corridor.
"January 2026 arrivals reached 1,219,606 visitors — 61% higher than January 2019 — as the Dominican Republic captured approximately 12% of all tourists visiting Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean, up from 9% in 2019."
— Dominican Ministry of Tourism and Asonahores data
In the Caribbean (mixed sentiment)
"Dominican Republic is killing it with tourism, but what about the rest of us in the Caribbean? Time to step up Jamaica!"
— Jamaica
"Proud of DR's tourism boom, shows what investment can do for the region."
— Voice from Trinidad & Tobago
"DR tourism king? At what cost to our beaches and locals?"
— Barbados resident
Key themes: economic growthregional competitionenvironmental concerns
From the Diaspora (positive sentiment)
"As a Dominican in NYC, loving how DR is the Caribbean tourism king! Planning my next trip back home."
— US diaspora
"DR's rise in tourism is inspiring for all Caribbeans abroad. Great article on how they did it!"
— Canadian diaspora
"From the UK, seeing DR become tourism king makes me proud. More reasons to visit."
— UK Caribbean community
Key themes: pride in heritagevacation appealeconomic success
Sentiment is generally positive with some mixed views on regional impacts, highlighting DR's tourism success. #DominicanRepublic #CaribbeanTourism #DRTourism
Perspectives synthesised from social media discussion on X
Government: Strategic growth is delivering results: Minister Collado framed the January record as validation of sustained policy efforts, noting growth came despite U.S. snowstorms and global uncertainty. He stated that the Ministry of Tourism will continue promoting strategic investments to sustain growth and diversify offerings, emphasizing these initiatives are key to maintaining competitiveness.
Industry: Structural transformation, not a one-off: Asonahores emphasized that leadership in 2025 and into 2026 is the result of public-private policies aimed at sustainable development, not an isolated event. The association highlighted diversification into sports, cultural, gastronomic, and meetings tourism as opening new growth avenues that complement the traditional sun-and-beach model.
Data: Latin American markets are the new growth engine: Deputy Minister Mora highlighted growth from Central America and the Caribbean adding 4,973 passengers, a 5% increase. Combined with Colombia's 27% and Argentina's 17% surges, Latin American dynamism has provided a critical buffer against softness in traditional North American and European corridors.
"Those two numbers mark another record: 8,592,694 visitors in just nine months. We've done it again."
— David Collado, Minister of Tourism, Dominican Republic, via Carib Journal
The Dominican Republic is not just breaking records — it is rewriting the Caribbean tourism playbook. While much of the region still wrestles with post-pandemic recovery and overdependence on a single source market, the DR has methodically diversified its visitor base, expanded airlift, and invested in destinations beyond the Punta Cana corridor. The 61% growth over 2019 is not a pandemic rebound story; it is a structural shift.
For the rest of the Caribbean, the message should be urgent. The Dominican Republic now captures 12% of regional tourism — up three percentage points in just seven years. That share is coming from somewhere. Smaller islands cannot replicate the DR's scale, but they can learn from its diversification strategy: cultivating Latin American markets, investing in niche tourism segments, and treating airlift expansion as a national priority rather than an afterthought.
The slight cruise dip and the concentration of arrivals at Punta Cana bear watching, but the overall trajectory is unmistakable. The Dominican Republic has earned its position at the top of the Caribbean tourism league table.
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