So you're hiring in the Dominican Republic. Smart move. Turns out there’s more than one way to find elite talent without mortgaging your office ping-pong table. But before you pop the champagne, let's talk about something that trips up almost every foreign company: public holidays.
The Dominican Republic has 12 official public holidays. A mix of national celebrations and religious observances. For you, this isn't just about scheduling meetings. It's about legal compliance, payroll, and not accidentally alienating your new A-player.
A rookie mistake is thinking all holidays are fixed. They’re not. The government has a nifty habit of moving some holidays to create long weekends. You need to know when this happens, or your project timeline will spontaneously combust.
First thing's first. You have to understand that not all holidays play by the same rules. They fall into three categories, and the difference between them is the difference between a smooth operation and a compliance nightmare.
Fixed Holidays: These are the dates you can actually count on. Think national milestones like Independence Day on February 27. They happen on the same date every year, no exceptions. Easy to plan for.
Movable Holidays: This is where the chaos begins. The Dominican government will literally shift certain holidays to the nearest Monday. Why? To create long weekends, or puentes (bridges), which boosts domestic tourism. Great for them, a potential headache for your sprint planning.
Religious Holidays: These are the big ones. Dates like Good Friday and Corpus Christi are tied to the Catholic calendar and carry deep cultural weight. The country doesn't just slow down; it shuts down.
This timeline gives you a no-fluff visual breakdown of how these holiday types are structured.

As you can see, you're juggling fixed dates, moving targets, and religious shutdowns. If you’re already struggling with the different time zones in South America and the Caribbean, adding movable holidays to the mix requires a real strategy.
We’ve been in the trenches helping companies navigate this. This guide is the playbook we built. Toot, toot!
Here’s the cheat sheet you need. This is a quick-reference table of the official public holidays in the Dominican Republic for 2026. It has the date, the day, and—most importantly—whether it’s a fixed date or a moving target.
| Date | Holiday Name | Day of Week | Type (Fixed/Movable) |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 1 | New Year's Day (Año Nuevo) | Thursday | Fixed |
| January 6 | Epiphany / Three Kings' Day (Día de los Santos Reyes) | Tuesday | Fixed |
| January 21 | Our Lady of Altagracia Day (Día de la Altagracia) | Wednesday | Fixed |
| January 26 | Duarte's Day (Día de Duarte) | Monday | Movable |
| February 27 | Independence Day (Día de la Independencia) | Friday | Fixed |
| April 3 | Good Friday (Viernes Santo) | Friday | Religious (Movable Date) |
| May 1 | Labor Day (Día del Trabajo) | Friday | Movable (Observed May 4) |
| June 4 | Corpus Christi | Thursday | Religious (Movable Date) |
| August 16 | Restoration Day (Día de la Restauración) | Sunday | Fixed (Observed Aug 17) |
| November 6 | Constitution Day (Día de la Constitución) | Friday | Movable |
| December 25 | Christmas Day (Día de Navidad) | Friday | Fixed |
Bookmark this. It's your first line of defense against payroll errors and looking like you have no idea what you're doing. Next, we'll get into the fun stuff: what each of these means and the rules you actually have to follow.

Think your standard U.S. holiday calendar will work? That's a common and very expensive mistake. Ignoring the official holidays in the Dominican Republic isn't just a cultural faux pas—it’s a direct flight to legal trouble, broken project timelines, and ticking off the exact professionals you worked so hard to hire.
Plan for a national shutdown you didn't know about? Surprise budget overruns. Tough conversations with clients about why that "urgent" project just died for a week. These are self-inflicted wounds. And they are completely avoidable.
Getting a holiday wrong isn't about hurting someone's feelings; it's a compliance failure. Dominican labor law isn't a list of friendly suggestions. If you screw up payroll by failing to pay the mandatory 100% pay premium for holiday work, you're looking at fines and instantly destroying trust with your team.
You're not just managing schedules; you're operating in their legal jurisdiction. One payroll error tells your entire Dominican team you're either sloppy or, worse, you don't care about their laws.
It’s a classic founder mistake: focusing so much on the talent that you forget the environment they operate in. In the DR, holidays are a non-negotiable part of the professional landscape. Acknowledging them isn't optional; it's a fundamental cost of doing business right.
But here’s the flip side most U.S. managers completely miss. That vibrant holiday culture—the one that brings business to a halt—also powers a world-class tourism industry. And that’s a direct benefit to you.
The DR is so popular it attracted a record 3.7 million US visitors in 2023, with peak travel seasons like December seeing nearly a million air arrivals. You can dig into the data on the DR's tourism boom in this TravelPulse.com report.
What does that mean for you? This constant flood of North American tourists has created a unique talent pool: highly skilled, bilingual professionals who are already fluent in U.S. business culture and service expectations. They've built careers supporting international clients in high-pressure roles.
So yeah, respecting the downtime is non-negotiable. But knowing the holidays also becomes a strategic advantage. It proves you're an informed employer who gets the local context. That simple awareness helps you attract and keep the kind of elite, culturally savvy talent your competitors won’t even know how to find.
Here’s where a predictable holiday calendar goes right out the window. The Dominican government has a very pragmatic—if chaotic—approach to some national holidays: they move them. The goal is to create long weekends, known locally as puentes (bridges), to fire up domestic tourism. But it can absolutely torpedo your sprint planning if you’re not paying attention.
This isn't some informal local custom; it's official policy. Law 139-97 actually gives the government the power to shift certain non-religious holidays that fall on a Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday to the following Monday. If a holiday falls on a Saturday or Sunday, it’s also typically observed on the next Monday to guarantee that three-day weekend.
Let's start with the easy ones. Fixed holidays are the bedrock of the Dominican calendar, celebrating foundational moments in the nation’s history or major religious observances. These dates are non-negotiable and never move, making them simple to lock into your project management tools.
Here are the key fixed holidays in the Dominican Republic for 2026:
These are your safe bets. Your Dominican team will be offline, and business will largely be closed. Plan accordingly.
Now for the tricky part. Movable holidays are the ones that demand your constant attention. I hope you enjoy checking for government decrees—because that’s what it can feel like if you're not prepared.
You can’t just set your calendar in January and forget it. A holiday you planned for on a Wednesday might suddenly become part of a three-day weekend, and your perfectly timed product release just ran into a wall.
For 2026, keep a close watch on these specific dates. The official holiday is one thing, but the observed day is what actually matters for your business operations.
Ignoring these shifts is like planning a launch during a hurricane—it’s a self-inflicted disaster. Your job is to stay ahead of it, communicate the correct dates to your entire company, and adjust your timelines well in advance. No surprises, no last-minute scrambles.

While the movable holidays are a logistical puzzle, the major religious observances demand a different kind of preparation. These are not just paid days off; they're deeply significant cultural events that bring nearly all commercial activity to a dead stop.
Getting this wrong signals a fundamental misunderstanding of the culture. The most important holidays in the Dominican Republic are tied to the Catholic calendar, and their observance is non-negotiable.
If you only track two religious dates, make it these. Both are nationwide shutdowns. Expect zero business activity.
Insider Tip: Assume zero productivity during Semana Santa, especially from Holy Thursday through Easter Sunday. This is not the time for "quick check-ins." Respecting this downtime is one of the easiest ways to build trust and not look like a clueless outsider.
The official holidays are December 25 and January 1. But in reality, the country's business rhythm slows to a crawl from mid-December through the first week of January. Knowing about the scale of events like the annual Dominican Christmas celebrations is critical.
This slowdown coincides with a massive tourism peak. The DR is the Caribbean's undisputed leader, with 11.6 million visitors projected for 2025. This means your top talent has plenty of other options, especially in tech and hospitality.
Acknowledging this extended holiday season isn't just a nice gesture—it's a retention strategy. It shows you see your Dominican team as partners, not just cogs in a machine.
This is where the wheels usually fall off for foreign companies. Let me be blunt: messing up holiday payroll in the DR isn't a small clerical error. It's a compliance risk that tanks morale and gets you on the wrong side of the law.
Getting this wrong is expensive, and "I didn't know" is not a defense the Dominican labor authorities accept. The rules are simple, but you have to follow them. This isn’t generosity; it’s the law.
First, let's be crystal clear: all official public holidays are paid days off. If your team member doesn't work, you still pay them their regular salary for that day. That's the baseline.
Now, what if you're in a pinch and need someone to work? The Dominican Labor Code says if an employee works on a public holiday, they get their regular day's pay plus a 100% premium.
That’s double pay. Not time-and-a-half. Think of it as a mandatory surcharge for interrupting their day off. This rule applies whether they work for one hour or the full eight.
Pro Tip: Don't try to get clever by offering a different day off instead of the premium pay. That's not compliant unless the employee agrees, and even then, it's a legal gray area you should avoid. The simplest, safest route? Pay the premium. No arguments, no risk.
Let's put this in practical terms so there's no confusion. Here are the common scenarios, using a sample daily salary of $100.
| Scenario | Is Work Required? | DR Labor Code Rule | Required Payment Calculation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Holiday – No Work | No | Holiday is a paid day of rest. | Employee receives their normal $100 salary. |
| Holiday – Work Performed | Yes | Work on a holiday requires a 100% surcharge. | Employee receives their base $100 salary + a $100 premium = $200 total. |
| Holiday Falls on Rest Day | No | If a holiday lands on a non-working day (e.g., Saturday), it's just observed then. | No extra pay or day in lieu is legally required. It's simply a non-working holiday. |
Getting holiday pay right isn't just about avoiding fines. It's about building a reputation as a good employer. The best Dominican talent has options, and they will run from companies that can't handle basic compliance.
For a full audit of your setup, our payroll compliance checklist provides a step-by-step guide. Get this right from day one and save yourself a mountain of future pain.

Alright, let's talk brass tacks. When you're running a hybrid team with people in the U.S. and the DR, a generic PTO plan is a recipe for resentment. Just slapping your U.S. holiday schedule on your Dominican team isn't just lazy; it screams, "You're an afterthought."
You're trying to build one team, not manage a list of offshore contractors. It starts with a holiday policy that's clear, fair, and culturally aware. Dominican labor law is the starting line, not the finish. The real goal is a system that works for everyone.
I’ve watched companies try two main strategies for bi-national holidays. Both tend to blow up in their faces.
The "Local Holidays Only" Model: Seems logical. U.S. team gets U.S. holidays, DR team gets DR holidays. It's legally compliant, but an operational disaster. Your U.S. team is working while your DR team is offline for Día de la Restauración; your DR team is online while the U.S. side is gone for Thanksgiving. It kills collaboration and creates two separate company cultures.
The "Give Everyone Both" Model: The feel-good option. The whole company gets both U.S. and DR holidays off. Morale is fantastic, but your company’s momentum is dead. You’re looking at over 20 public holidays a year—nearly a full month of lost productivity. Unless you're a trust fund-backed startup with no deadlines, you can't afford it.
One creates silos, the other kills your velocity. Neither is a real solution.
So, what actually works? A hybrid model built on floating holidays. This is the most balanced and equitable approach we’ve found.
Here's the framework: You establish a few core company-wide holidays everyone takes (think New Year's Day and Christmas). Then, you give every single employee a bank of "floating holidays" to use for their own regional, cultural, or personal days.
This is about more than just managing days off. It's about empowering your team with the autonomy to observe the days that are most meaningful to them, whether that's Dominican Independence Day or the Fourth of July.
This approach treats everyone like an adult and solves the equity problem. A Dominican team member uses their floaters for Semana Santa; a U.S. colleague uses theirs for Thanksgiving. Everyone feels respected, and the business doesn't grind to a halt every other week.
Yes, it requires clear communication and a good HR system for tracking. But the payoff is a unified culture where people feel valued. Our work-from-home policy example offers a solid blueprint you can adapt for this. It's the only sane way to do it.
Let's cut through the noise. After navigating fixed, movable, and religious holidays—plus the joys of payroll premiums—you probably still have a few "what if" questions. I get it.
Here are straight answers to the questions we get all the time from founders hiring in the DR. No fluff, just what you need to know.
Yes. Full stop. Don't fall into this trap. All employees, part-time or full-time, are legally entitled to be paid for public holidays that fall on a day they would normally work.
You have to pay them for the hours they would have been scheduled. Trying to prorate it or claim it's only for full-timers is a quick way to get a legal notice and a bad reputation.
This is a common point of confusion for U.S. managers. If a holiday falls on a weekend (a regular non-working day for your team), the Dominican Labor Code is clear: you don't owe them an extra day off.
The holiday is simply observed on its calendar date. There’s no "day in lieu" rule like in other countries. The only time this changes is when the government officially moves a weekend holiday to a Monday to create a puente, which we've already covered.
No. Absolutely not. You cannot substitute mandatory holidays in the Dominican Republic with U.S. holidays like Thanksgiving or the 4th of July. Dominican holidays are a legal requirement, not a negotiation point.
You must provide the paid day off for all official DR holidays. What you can do is offer U.S. holidays as an additional company-wide perk. This is a great move for building a unified culture, but it has to be on top of, not instead of, your legal obligations in the DR. Think of it as an added benefit, never a swap.