20 Best Places to Shop in Dominican Republic

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We've compiled the best of the best in Dominican Republic - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Galerias at Puntacana Village

Fodor's Choice

The Galerias at Puntacana Village lie within a still-blossoming shopping, dining, and residential complex built on the road to the Punta Cana International Airport. Originally the village was built to house employees of the Puntacana Group, but now the shops and restaurants are also a tourist draw. The village is comprised of churches, an international school, and this commercial area with its restaurants, shops, a supermarket, banks (with ATMs), a beauty salon, pharmacy, and doctors' offices. Family-oriented, it has an ice-cream parlor, a playground, and a children's clothing boutique as well as those for adults.

Palma Real Shopping Village

Fodor's Choice

A standout among the region's shopping centers, Palma Real Shopping Village is a swanky, partially enclosed mall (similar to something you would see in Southern California), that is also overall the most expensive. Fountains and tropical plants infuse life into the bright and airy interiors beneath the blue-tile roof. Music pipes through the stone-floor plaza in the center, where seating is available and security is tight. Upscale retail shops, which sell beachwear, clothing, skin-care products, and jewelry, line the walls. Several restaurants give visitors welcome dining alternatives beyond the gates of their resorts, and the shopping center holds Punta Cana's first movie theater. There are two banks, ATMs, and a money exchange outlet. Stores are open 10–10, but the restaurants stay open later. It has the best pharmacy in the area. Shuttle buses run to and from many of the hotels, with pickups every two hours.

Altos de Chavón

Altos de Chavón is a re-creation of a 16th-century Mediterranean village on the grounds of the Casa de Campo resort, where you can find a church, art galleries, boutiques, restaurants, nightspots, and souvenir shops, and a 5,000-seat amphitheater for concerts grouped around a cobbled square. At the Altos de Chavón Art Studios you can find ceramics, weaving, and screen prints made by local and resident artists. Extra special is the Jenny Polanco Project. The late Dominican fashion designer made an outlet for Dominican, Haitian, and Caribbean craftsmen to sell their wares, from Carnival masks to baskets and carved plates. Tienda Batey sells fine linens handcrafted by women from the sugar plantation bateys (poor villages). You'll also find Everett Designs (jewelry), El Mercadito (a minimarket), Luna Taína (a craft shop), and Cabinet Tobacco Boutique (fine Dominican cigars).

Recommended Fodor's Video

Beach Box Boutique

The sister shop to Fred Joyas, Beach Box Boutique has new furnishings—hippie chic. With beach style it has a new collection of colorful and utilitarian beach bags, pareos, organdy sun hats, shell jewelry, and wide silver bracelets. Like Fred Joyas, this location accepts cash and credit cards.

Paseo Don Chiche 5, Cabarete, 57000, Dominican Republic
809-399--7628

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BlueMall Santo Domingo

As one of the most upscale and comprehensive shopping destinations in the Dominican Republic, BlueMall is home to international brands like Cartier, Louis Vuitton, and Rolex. It also has a host of Dominican retailers, banking services, a spacious dining area, a movie theater, and more.

Av. Winston Churchill 95, Dominican Republic
809-955--3000

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Calle Beller

In Puerto Plata you can find enough interesting stores to both quell your shopping urge and pick up a few funky gifts, like mamajuana, the Dominican herbal liqueur. A popular shopping street for costume jewelry and souvenirs is Calle Beller.

Calle Beller, Puerto Plata, 57000, Dominican Republic

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Casa de Campo Marina

Casa de Campo's top-ranked marina is home to shops and international boutiques, galleries, and jewelers scattered amid restaurants, banks, and other services. The chic shopping scene includes Kiwi St. Tropez (French swimwear), Poupette St. Barth (swimwear and accessories for women), Vilebrequin (French swimwear), Melissa Odabash (casual clothing for women), The supermercado Nacional has not only groceries but sundries, postcards, and snacks. And there's a pharmacy, among other miscellaneous stores.

Casa Virginia

Located in Agora Mall, one of the Dominican Republic's leading department stores, Casa Virginia was founded in 1945. The store is stocked mostly with high-end designer clothing (including a Jenny Polanco department) and fashion finds, but also has avant Italian jewelry, some moderately priced gift items, and a line of high-end men's watches.

Av. John F. Kennedy esq. Av. Abraham Lincoln, 10129, Dominican Republic
809-566–4000

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Fred Joyas

Joyas is Spanish for jewelry. Here it's silver jewelry coupled with the island's semiprecious stones—larimar, amber, and black onyx—as well as shells and beads. Fred is the proprietress, a savvy Frenchwoman with great taste. This location also accepts credit cards. 

Paseo Don Chiche 3, Cabarete, 57000, Dominican Republic
809-3997628

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Galería de Arte Nader

Top Dominican artists in various mediums are on display here. The gallery staff is well-known in Miami and New York, and works with Sotheby's.

Calle Pablo Neruda casi Calle Rafael Augusto Sánchez 22, 10148, Dominican Republic
809-541--2404

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L'ile Au Tresor

The owner, Patrick Le Clercq, has some of the most attractive and creative designer pieces in native larimar and amber. If you have never bought any of these lovely stones because of cheesy settings or high prices, take a look here. His innovative custom work, in sterling or gold, can be done in 48 hours. Some staff do not speak English but can call Patrick if he’s not there.

Calle Isabela la Católica 17, 10210, Dominican Republic
829-915--1413

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La Leyenda del Cigarro, S.R.L.

This shop along El Conde in the Zona Colonial makes and sells its own branded premium cigars to clients worldwide and anyone who happens to walk into the cozy store. Enjoy the leather couch in the seating area, and let owner Julio Vilchez Rosso or a member of his personable staff regale you with the history of cigar making in the Dominican Republic and learn what makes a good cigar a good cigar. This store is perfect for the experienced connoisseur or those who'd like to become one.

Calle El Conde 161, 10129, Dominican Republic
809-682--9932

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Lyle O. Reitzel Arte Contemporaneo

This edgy gallery showcases mainly Latin artists from Mexico, South America, and Spain, and some of the most controversial Dominican visionaries. Specializing in contemporary art, it's been in business since 1995. Their rotating collection can include the new, the strange, and the daring.

Gustavo Mejia Ricart, 10148, Dominican Republic
809-227–8361

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Patrick's Silversmithy

If you need to know anything about anything in Sosúa, stop by and meet Patrick. Here for five decades, he is kind about aiding gringos and has a sense of humor. He also makes tasteful silver jewelry if you are looking for a souvenir of your time here.

Calle Pedro Clisante 3, El Batey, 57000, Dominican Republic
809-571–2121

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Playa Dorada Mall

Playa Dorada

Stores at this shopping center (in the American tradition) sell everything from cigars, rum, coffee, snacks, and herbal remedies to ceramics, trinkets, flip-flops and suntan lotion, fine jewelry, American clothing brands, Oscar de la Renta tops, and Gottex bathing suits. There are banks and ATM machines; everyday items are expensive.

Calle Principal Playa Dorada, Puerto Plata, 57000, Dominican Republic

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Plaza Higüeyana

On the outskirts of Higüey, as you head into town along Carretera Higüey–La Otra Banda, you can find this artisan market on the right-hand side of the road that draws busloads of tourists. Here you can browse through racks and shelves full of souvenirs, such as the herbal mamajuana liqueur, rum, cigars, T-shirts, amber and larimar jewelry in cheap settings, crafts, and ceramics.

Carretera Higüey–La Otra Banda,, Salvaleón de Higüey, Dominican Republic

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Plaza Uvero Alto

You won't find brand-name shops at Plaza Uvero Alto, but it's a convenient 24-hour shopping center for the hotels in the remote Uvero Alto area of Punta Cana. Especially useful are a bank, outdoor ATM, and a money exchange, followed by a small pharmacy, gift shops, and two minimarkets (one in the front, the other in the back row of booths).

Carretera Uvero Alto, Uvero Alto, Dominican Republic

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Bi2JH2O Artisanal Shopping Plaza

The colorful, bazaarlike atmosphere at Bi2JH2O Artisanal Shopping Plaza (pronounced like bibijagua), makes it fun to browse the shopping stalls laid out in the sand on Bávaro Beach. You can find handicrafts, cigars, mamajuana, handmade musical instruments, paintings, sculptures, wood carvings, and ambar, larimar, and coral jewelry, but in cheap settings. And they might not be the real deal, particularly the amber and coral. Expect the spirited shopkeepers to beckon you into their kiosks; you might find a few pearls in their sea of trinkets. Bargain, but don't ask prices if you aren't serious about buying; you'll be hounded. A snack bar with Dominican munchies and restrooms are nearby.

Bávaro, Dominican Republic

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Harrison's Fine Jewelry

It's hard to walk by the windows of Harrison's Fine Jewelry without stepping in to admire the collection of jewelry, including a large selection of larimar and amber pieces in striking settings, as well as diamonds and other classic gems. Outlets of this renowned chain are also in several resorts of Punta Cana, like the Palma Real Shopping Village itself.

Plaza Bávaro Shopping Center

The sprawling Plaza Bávaro Shopping Center has dozens of shops spanning two sides of the main street that cuts through its center. It is a Dominican hodgepodge—like a neighborhood without any zoning restrictions. On the side closest to the beach you can find clothing stores, jewelry, cigars, and crafts, as well as money-exchanges, a DHL shipping station, and a pharmacy, all laid out in a square; in the middle is a bar where you can take a beverage break. Across the street, most of the booths sell artwork and handicrafts. Ladies will likely be approached by women offering to braid your hair.

Bávaro, Dominican Republic

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