Agenda Toolkit Asistente

Tourism · Fiscal incentives

CONFOTUR Regime and Tourism Promotion

Tourism Development Promotion Law 158-01 (CONFOTUR): eligible project types, exemptions, application process and current debates on territorial extension and validity.

Resumen ejecutivo

Tourism is a structural pillar of the Dominican economy and operates under its own fiscal incentive regime, established by Law No. 158-01 on Tourism Development Promotion (modified multiple times, notably by Law 195-13 which expanded its territorial scope). The regime is administered by the Tourism Promotion Council (CONFOTUR), an inter-institutional body headed by the Ministry of Tourism.

The benefits package covers tourism projects in qualified zones and grants up to fifteen years of exemptions on income tax, VAT on equipment imports, real-estate transfer tax and other relevant taxes. For investors, compliance with the process —submission, qualification, execution per schedule, reporting— is the condition for maintaining the incentives.

This reference organizes the regime for project due diligence and structuring: what is eligible, how to qualify, what binds the holder, and what is currently debated.

Datos clave

158-01
Tourism Development Promotion Law
National Congress, DR
195-13
Amendment extending territorial scope
National Congress, DR
15
Maximum years of tax exemption
Ley 158-01
CONFOTUR
Body that qualifies projects under the regime
Ministry of Tourism

Autoridades regulatorias

Tourism Promotion Council (CONFOTUR)
Collegiate body that evaluates and qualifies projects under the regime. Integrates Ministry of Tourism, DGII, MEPyD and others.
Ministry of Tourism (MITUR)
Head of the sector. Tourism policy, international promotion, sector-specific regulation and CONFOTUR's technical secretariat.
Internal Revenue Office (DGII)
Administers effective application of exemptions and oversees tax compliance of qualified projects.
Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources
Grants environmental licenses required for construction and operation of tourism projects.
Relevant municipal governments
Grant land use, construction and operation permits, and administer applicable municipal taxes.

Marco legal aplicable

Ley No. 158-01
Tourism Development Promotion Law. Defines eligible projects, zones, benefits and CONFOTUR.
2001
Ley No. 184-02
Amendment that expanded zones and clarified procedures.
2002
Ley No. 195-13
Territorial and time-frame extension; adjustments to project typologies.
2013
Ley No. 541 (Orgánica de Turismo)
Organic tourism statute and MITUR powers.
1969
Reglamento de aplicación de la 158-01
Procedural development: application, evaluation, monitoring and revocation of incentives.
Decretos sucesivos

Análisis profundo

1. What counts as an eligible tourism project?

Law 158-01, as amended, defines a broad menu of eligible project types: hotels and resorts, eco-tourism, theme parks, tourism port infrastructure (marinas), small and medium tourism enterprises, restaurants in qualified zones, hospital infrastructure oriented to medical tourism and, in general, investments that expand the country's tourism offer. Qualification distinguishes new projects from extensions of existing ones.

2. Zones of application

The regime originally applied to pre-defined poles. Law 195-13 significantly expanded territorial coverage, including most of the country under specific conditions. Application to a specific site requires verifying zone qualification and, for coastal or protected areas, coordinating with environmental rules.

3. Benefits package

For a qualified project, typical benefits include:

  • Income tax: exemption for the benefit period (up to fifteen years) on revenues attributable to the qualified operation.
  • VAT and tariffs: exemption on equipment imports, construction materials, furniture and machinery required to build, equip and start up.
  • Real-estate transfer: exemption on the first transfer of property destined to the project.
  • Municipal taxes: favorable treatment as negotiated with the relevant municipality within the general framework.

Benefits apply only to the qualified activity and the approved period. Operations outside the project are taxed ordinarily.

4. Application process

The typical procedure involves:

  1. Submission to CONFOTUR with technical, financial and environmental documentation.
  2. Evaluation by CONFOTUR's technical secretariat (Ministry of Tourism), with input from complementary institutions where applicable.
  3. CONFOTUR resolution granting, conditioning or denying qualification.
  4. Project registration and effective application of exemptions through DGII and Customs.
  5. Compliance with execution schedule and periodic reports during benefit term.

5. Practical application cases

The regime is widely used in hotel and coastal lifestyle projects. Key items requiring care: (a) clear delimitation of the qualified project versus non-qualified related activities, (b) traceability of exempted imports through to project incorporation, (c) articulation with environmental licensing and municipal permits, and (d) schedule compliance — the leading cause of revocation in practice.

6. Upcoming reforms and debates

Recurring public discussions cover additional extensions, differentiations by tourism type (sustainable, community, medical), articulation with a potential new general fiscal framework, and tightening of environmental requirements. For investment decisions beyond five years, assume that the general regime continues but that ancillary requirements (environmental, ESG, labor) will tighten.

Debates actuales

Territorial extension vs. concentration
Law 195-13 expanded eligible zones beyond traditional poles (Punta Cana, Bayahibe, Puerto Plata, Samaná). Debate on further extensions —especially in less-developed tourism areas— recurs, weighing inclusive development against incentive dispersion.
Sustainability and environmental load
Tourism growth pressures water, coastal and protected resources. Environmental impact assessment and ESG compliance are increasingly relevant for investors and lenders.
Offer diversification
The regime historically favored large all-inclusive resorts. Recent discussions focus on differentiated incentives for nature, cultural, medical and community tourism.
Compliance and benefit retention
The duty to execute on the CONFOTUR-approved schedule is the usual ground for revocation. Benefit stability depends on orderly tracking and timely updates upon material changes.

Glosario

CONFOTUR
Tourism Promotion Council. Collegiate body that qualifies projects under Law 158-01.
Qualified project
Tourism project to which CONFOTUR has granted regime benefits.
Tourism pole
Geographic area originally defined as scope of the regime (Punta Cana-Bávaro, Bayahibe, Puerto Plata, Samaná, etc.).
Execution schedule
Milestone calendar committed by the project holder at qualification.
Revocation
Loss of the fiscal benefit due to schedule or obligation non-compliance.
Import VAT exemption
Benefit avoiding the goods-and-services transfer tax on qualified project imports.

Fuentes y lecturas adicionales

  • Ley No. 158-01 de Fomento al Desarrollo Turístico Statute · Congreso Nacional, RD
  • Ley No. 195-13 Amending statute · Congreso Nacional, RD
  • Sitio oficial del Ministerio de Turismo (MITUR) Official resource · mitur.gob.do
  • Sitio oficial de la DGII — sección de incentivos Official resource · dgii.gov.do

Notice: This is academic and informational reference material, not legal advice. Dominican regulation evolves and application to specific cases requires specific analysis. For specific matters, consult an attorney admitted in the relevant jurisdiction.

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