Dominican Republic Embassy in Mexico City

Embassy of Dominican Republic in Mexico City, Mexico

Overview

The Embassy of the Dominican Republic in the United Mexican States represents important bilateral relations between two major Latin American and Caribbean nations sharing historical, cultural, and economic ties. Located in Mexico City's upscale Lomas Altas neighborhood in the Miguel Hidalgo borough at Paseo Lomas Altas, the embassy operates in one of Latin America's largest and most important capitals, a megacity that serves as Mexico's political, economic, and cultural center. The Dominican Republic and Mexico maintain friendly relations rooted in shared Spanish colonial heritage, linguistic bonds, regional solidarity within Latin America and the Caribbean, and complementary economic interests. Mexico represents an important partner for the Dominican Republic in regional diplomacy within CELAC (Community of Latin American and Caribbean States), SICA (Central American Integration System) engagement, climate change cooperation, disaster preparedness coordination (both countries face hurricane threats), and South-South cooperation. Economic relations include trade in goods and services, tourism exchange (Mexican tourists visit Dominican beaches while Dominicans travel to Mexico for business and leisure), investment opportunities, and cultural and educational exchange. Mexico's large economy, industrial capacity, and regional influence make it a strategic partner for Dominican economic development and regional integration. The embassy promotes political dialogue, facilitates business connections, supports cultural exchange, provides consular services to Dominicans in Mexico (including students, business people, and families), and represents Dominican interests in Latin American regional forums.
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Visa Services

The embassy processes visa applications for Mexican citizens and legal residents planning to visit or relocate to the Dominican Republic. Mexican citizens can enter the Dominican Republic visa-free for tourism stays up to 30 days with only a tourist card (approximately USD 10 or 200 Mexican pesos) purchased upon arrival at Dominican airports. However, the embassy provides visa services for extended stays, work permits, residency applications, and special purposes. Visa categories handled include tourist visas for stays exceeding 30 days, business visas for commercial activities and professional meetings, work visas for Mexican citizens seeking employment in the Dominican Republic, student visas for academic programs, residency applications for Mexican nationals planning to live in the Dominican Republic, investor visas, and family reunification permits. The Dominican Republic and Mexico maintain visa-free tourism arrangements facilitating travel between the two countries, with both nations serving as popular tourist destinations in their respective regions. Mexican tourists visit Dominican beach resorts, particularly Punta Cana, while Dominicans travel to Mexico for business, cultural tourism, and beach destinations. Visa applications typically require completed application form, valid passport with minimum 6 months validity and blank visa pages, recent passport photographs, confirmed travel arrangements, proof of financial means, accommodation confirmation, and purpose-specific documentation (work contract, university admission, business registration, marriage certificate, property documents, etc.). Processing times vary by visa type. The embassy can provide information about Dominican residency programs, investment opportunities, and requirements for Mexican nationals planning extended stays. Contact embadommexico@mirex.gob.do to confirm current visa requirements and application procedures.
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Consular Services

The embassy provides comprehensive consular services to Dominican citizens residing in or visiting Mexico. Services include passport renewals and new passport issuance, national identity card (cédula) processing, birth registration for children born in Mexico to Dominican parents, civil status registration including marriages and deaths, document legalization and apostille services for documents intended for use in the Dominican Republic or Mexico, notarial services including affidavits and powers of attorney, consular registration for Dominican nationals living in Mexico, and emergency consular assistance for Dominican citizens in distress. The Dominican community in Mexico includes students at Mexican universities (Mexico attracts Latin American and Caribbean students for higher education), business professionals working in trade, tourism, and services sectors, entrepreneurs, and families. Mexico City hosts regional offices of international organizations, development agencies, and multinational companies where Dominican professionals may work. Mexican citizens can obtain document authentication services for papers intended for use in the Dominican Republic, travel information for visiting the Caribbean, and assistance with visa applications for extended stays or residency. Both countries are parties to various Latin American agreements facilitating document authentication and legal cooperation. Consular services operate Monday-Friday 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM by appointment. Contact embadommexico@mirex.gob.do to schedule appointments and confirm document requirements.
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Business Support

The embassy actively promotes bilateral trade and investment between the Dominican Republic and Mexico, two economies with complementary strengths and regional trade integration. Mexico is a major manufacturing and industrial economy with expertise in automotive, aerospace, electronics, pharmaceuticals, and consumer goods production, while the Dominican Republic specializes in tourism, free trade zone manufacturing (textiles, medical devices, electronics assembly), mining, and agriculture. The embassy facilitates business connections, provides market intelligence about investment opportunities, assists Mexican companies exploring Dominican markets (particularly in tourism development, infrastructure construction, and manufacturing partnerships), supports Dominican exporters seeking Mexican market access, coordinates trade missions and business delegations, and works with chambers of commerce and business associations. Key sectors of mutual interest include tourism development (Mexican hotel chains and resort developers investing in Dominican Caribbean destinations), manufacturing and free trade zones (potential Mexican investment in Dominican assembly operations), construction and infrastructure (Mexican engineering and construction companies active throughout Latin America), agribusiness (trade in tropical products, coffee, cacao), pharmaceutical manufacturing, telecommunications and technology services, renewable energy projects, and retail. Both countries participate in regional trade arrangements and maintain economic ties within the Latin American and Caribbean context. The embassy promotes Dominican products to Mexican importers including organic cacao, coffee, rum, cigars, and tropical fruits, while facilitating Mexican exports to Dominican markets. Mexican companies bring industrial expertise, manufacturing technology, and construction capabilities that support Dominican economic development. The embassy also promotes the Dominican Republic's Citizenship by Investment Programme to Mexican high-net-worth individuals and facilitates investment in Dominican real estate and tourism projects.
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Cultural & Educational Programs

Cultural diplomacy strengthens fraternal ties between two Spanish-speaking nations with rich but distinct cultural traditions. The embassy promotes Dominican culture in Mexico, showcasing merengue and bachata music (both UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage), Dominican literature, visual arts, baseball culture, and Caribbean culinary traditions to Mexican audiences while celebrating the shared Hispanic heritage. Mexico's rich cultural traditions including mariachi music, pre-Columbian archaeological sites, vibrant visual arts, literature (Mexico has produced numerous Nobel Prize-winning authors), and culinary heritage (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage) create opportunities for reciprocal cultural exchange. The embassy organizes and supports cultural events, musical performances featuring Dominican and Mexican artists, art exhibitions, film screenings showcasing both cinematographic traditions, literary presentations, and gastronomic festivals highlighting Caribbean and Mexican cuisines. Major celebrations include Dominican Independence Day (February 27), restoration of independence festivities (August 16), and cultural festivals bringing together the Dominican community in Mexico. The embassy facilitates visits by Dominican artists, musicians, writers, baseball players, and cultural practitioners to Mexico, and supports collaborations between cultural institutions. Educational exchange is significant, with Dominican students attending Mexican universities attracted by academic quality, linguistic compatibility, scholarship opportunities, and regional prestige of Mexican higher education institutions including UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico) and other leading universities. The embassy promotes educational partnerships, scholarship programs, research collaborations on Latin American and Caribbean studies, and student exchange. Both countries share Spanish language and cultural references while maintaining distinct national identities, creating rich opportunities for mutual learning and cooperation. The embassy supports Spanish language and culture programs in both countries and promotes academic research on Latin American-Caribbean relations.
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Special Notes

Located at Paseo Lomas Altas, No. 132, Colonia Lomas Altas, Alcaldía Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico City, Mexico, C.P. 11950. Contact: Phone +52 55 55 20 07 79, Additional phone +52 55 55 20 76 61, Email embadommexico@mirex.gob.do, Website mex.mirex.gob.do. Office hours Monday-Friday 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM. Appointments required for all services. Social media: Twitter @RDenMexico, Instagram @rdenmexico, Facebook embardmexico, YouTube. The embassy is located in Lomas Altas, an upscale residential and commercial area in western Mexico City known for modern architecture, shopping centers, and proximity to important business districts. Mexico City, one of the world's largest metropolitan areas with over 21 million people, serves as Latin America's most important political, economic, and cultural center. Mexican citizens planning travel to the Dominican Republic should note that visa-free entry is available for stays up to 30 days with tourist card (approximately 200 Mexican pesos or USD 10) purchased upon arrival at Dominican airports. Several airlines operate direct flights between Mexico City and Santo Domingo and Punta Cana. The Dominican Republic is a popular Caribbean destination for Mexican tourists, known for all-inclusive beach resorts, water sports, golf courses, colonial heritage in Santo Domingo, and vibrant culture. The embassy maintains active social media presence for public engagement, announcements, and updates. The embassy is closed on both Dominican and Mexican public holidays. For all consular and visa services, advance appointments are essential. The Dominican Republic and Mexico maintain friendly bilateral relations within the framework of Latin American and Caribbean regional cooperation, with collaboration on climate change, disaster preparedness, migration, trade, and cultural exchange. Both countries participate in CELAC (Community of Latin American and Caribbean States) and other regional forums promoting Latin American unity and cooperation. Source: Official embassy website (mex.mirex.gob.do).
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