Dominican Senate Raises Corporate Tax to 30% for Large Firms
Dominican Republic · Economy
Key Facts
—Duration The 30% rate is a temporary measure applying only to tax years 2026, 2027, and 2028, after which the rate is scheduled to revert to 27%.
—Threshold Only companies with annual revenues exceeding DOP 1 billion (about US$17 million) must pay the higher 30% rate, representing less than 0.8% of all registered firms.
—MSME Protection Micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises are explicitly exempt from the increase, and microenterprises will see their advance corporate tax payments eliminated entirely.
—Fiscal Goal The government aims to raise between RD$40 billion (about US$685 million) and RD$50 billion (about US$680 million to US$850 million) annually to buffer public finances against rising global oil prices.
—Cross-Border Impact A new 15% withholding tax now applies to international payments for software, online advertising, and data storage services, directly affecting tech costs for businesses.
The Dominican Senate approved a corporate income tax increase to 30% for large taxpayers as part of a sweeping fiscal package signed by President Luis Abinader on June 18, 2026.
Who Is Affected by the 30% Rate
The temporary 30% corporate income tax rate applies exclusively to “large taxpayers” with annual revenues exceeding DOP 1 billion (about US$17 million). This threshold captures just over 1,000 companies out of nearly 140,000 that filed corporate tax returns in 2025, representing less than 0.8% of all corporate taxpayers.
Microenterprises and small businesses are explicitly exempt from the increase and will continue paying the standard 27% rate. In a further relief measure for smaller firms, Law 30-26 eliminates advance corporate income tax payments (anticipo) for microenterprises and reduces their frequency for small businesses.
Fiscal Rationale and Revenue Targets
Finance Minister Magín Díaz explained the increase “seeks to concentrate collection efforts on companies with greater economic capacity,” focusing on taxpayers with a higher ability to pay while shielding most citizens. The government framed the law as pro-growth economic measures, fiscal simplification, and mitigation of the international crisis.
Authorities aim to generate between RD$40 billion (about US$685 million) and RD$50 billion (about US$680 million to US$850 million) in additional annual revenue from the broader package. The reform is designed partly as a buffer against global turbulence, particularly rising oil prices linked to Middle East conflicts that raise the cost of fuel subsidies in the import-dependent economy.
Broader Tax Changes Affecting Investors
Beyond the corporate rate, Law 30-26 introduces a 15% withholding tax on cross-border payments for software licences, online advertising services, and data storage or hosting. These new rules directly impact operating costs for businesses that rely on international digital services.
The reform also reshapes capital gains taxation, setting a flat 10% rate on real-estate capital gains at sale. Starting in fiscal year 2027, personal income tax brackets will be updated with a higher tax-exempt threshold and a new 27% rate for high-income individuals, while rental income tax for individuals is slated to rise from 10% to 15%.
Impact on Business Competitiveness
Before the reform, the standard corporate tax rate in the Dominican Republic was 27%, already above the OECD average of 21.5%. Local think-tank Crees has argued that the prior rate hampered competitiveness, and analysis suggests the new 30% band may place the country in the bottom third of nations by corporate-tax competitiveness.
However, proponents emphasize that the higher rate is temporary and narrowly targeted. The government’s long-term fiscal strategy aims to move the country from speculative-grade to investment-grade sovereign credit, which would lower interest rates and attract more foreign direct investment, including from institutional investors.
Why This Matters for Residents and Investors
The vast majority of businesses and individual taxpayers remain unaffected by the corporate rate increase, preserving the operating environment for small and medium enterprises. The government explicitly chose not to raise the value-added tax (ITBIS) rate or broaden its base, a move widely welcomed after earlier reform attempts met significant public resistance.
Investors should note the law’s staggered implementation schedule, with the corporate rate differential locked to tax years 2026 through 2028, while many other measures phase in between 2026 and 2029. A tax amnesty for certain outstanding liabilities remains available until December 31, 2026, offering a one-time window for regularization.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the new corporate income tax rate in the Dominican Republic?
The standard rate remains 27% for most companies. A temporary 3-percentage-point surcharge raises the rate to 30% exclusively for large taxpayers with annual revenues exceeding DOP 1 billion (about US$17 million) for fiscal years 2026, 2027, and 2028.
Are small businesses affected by the tax increase?
No. Microenterprises and small businesses are explicitly exempt from the 30% rate and continue paying 27%. Microenterprises also benefit from the complete elimination of advance corporate income tax payments under the new law.
How does the new withholding tax affect international services?
Law 30-26 imposes a new 15% withholding tax on payments abroad for software licences, online advertising services, and data storage or hosting. This increases costs for companies that purchase these digital services from foreign providers.
Sources: PwC: Dominican Republic raises corporate rate, adds withholding taxes and accelerated depreciation, Rio Times Online: Dominican Republic Signs a 30% Tax on Its Biggest Firms Into Law, Regfollower: Dominican Republic Temporarily Increases CIT Rate Amongst Other Reforms, LLB Solutions: Law 30-26 Dominican Republic, AP News: Dominican Republic tax increase oil prices, Orbitax: Dominican Republic Enacts Fiscal Reform
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