Dominica
Phone Code
+1
Capital
Roseau
Population
72,000
Native Name
Dominica
Region
Americas
Caribbean
Timezone
Atlantic Standard Time
UTC-04:00
On This Page
The Commonwealth of Dominica, often called the "Nature Island of the Caribbean," stands apart from typical Caribbean destinations with its pristine rainforests, dramatic volcanic landscapes, abundant waterfalls, and commitment to eco-tourism and sustainable development. Located between the French islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique in the Lesser Antilles, Dominica offers travelers an authentic Caribbean experience focused on natural beauty, adventure tourism, cultural heritage, and wellness. Unlike neighboring islands dominated by beach resorts, Dominica attracts nature enthusiasts, hikers, divers, birdwatchers, and travelers seeking unspoiled tropical environments, with UNESCO World Heritage-listed Morne Trois Pitons National Park, the Waitukubuli National Trail (the Caribbean's longest hiking trail), world-class diving sites including champagne reef and underwater hot springs, and opportunities to experience traditional Kalinago culture. The island's generous visa-free entry policy permits citizens of most countries to stay up to 6 months without a visa, making it accessible for extended visits, eco-tourism adventures, wellness retreats, and exploration of one of the Caribbean's most environmentally protected destinations.
Dominica Visa & Entry Requirements
Dominica maintains one of the most welcoming visa policies in the Caribbean, automatically granting most international visitors a 6-month stay upon arrival without requiring advance visa applications. Citizens of the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, European Union countries, and many other nations can enter visa-free for tourism, with entry granted at the airport upon presentation of a valid passport, proof of onward or return travel, and evidence of sufficient funds for the stay. This generous 6-month automatic authorization distinguishes Dominica from many Caribbean destinations that limit visa-free stays to 30 or 90 days, making the island particularly attractive for extended stays, eco-tourism expeditions, wellness retreats, and long-term visitors. Extensions beyond 6 months are available through the Dominica Immigration Division for those wishing to remain longer. Entry requirements are straightforward: a passport valid for at least 6 months beyond arrival date, proof of return or onward travel, and accommodation confirmation. A departure tax of EC$86 (approximately US$33) applies when leaving Dominica, typically included in airline ticket prices but payable separately for ferry travel. The island's focus on sustainable tourism, combined with accessible visa policies and pristine natural environment, attracts eco-conscious travelers, adventure seekers, divers, hikers, birdwatchers, wellness tourists, and those seeking authentic Caribbean experiences beyond traditional beach resort tourism.
Common Visa Types
Visa-Free Entry (Tourist)
Tourism, vacation, visiting Dominica's natural attractions including Morne Trois Pitons National Park, Boiling Lake, Trafalgar Falls, hiking the Waitukubuli National Trail, diving champagne reef, birdwatching, whale watching, exploring Kalinago Territory, wellness retreats, eco-lodges, and experiencing Dominica's pristine rainforest environment
Tourist Stay Extension
Extending stay beyond initial 6 months for continued tourism, long-term eco-tourism experiences, extended wellness programs, volunteer opportunities, or personal travel requiring additional time in Dominica
Business Entry
Business meetings, exploring investment opportunities in eco-tourism, sustainable development, renewable energy, Citizenship by Investment Programme consultations, attending conferences, meeting with Dominican business partners, and exploring Dominica's developing economy focused on eco-tourism, agriculture, and services
Work Permit
Employment in Dominica in sectors including tourism, hospitality, education, healthcare, renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, conservation, dive instruction, eco-lodge operations, and various professional services supporting Dominica's economy
Student Visa
Studying at Ross University School of Medicine (one of the Caribbean's leading medical schools attracting international students), other educational institutions, language programs, or participating in academic programs in Dominica
Residency & Citizenship by Investment
Dominica's Citizenship by Investment Programme offers second citizenship through qualifying investment in government-approved real estate projects, economic diversification fund contributions, or approved business ventures, providing visa-free access to over 140 countries including Schengen Area, UK, Singapore, and offering attractive second passport benefits
Important Travel Information
Travel Guide
Dominica is not the Dominican Republic — it is the Nature Island of the Caribbean, a volcanic spike of rainforest, hot springs and waterfalls wedged between the French islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique in the Lesser Antilles, and it is the most radical departure from the Caribbean beach-resort formula you will find anywhere in the region. There are no white-sand mega-resorts. The beaches are volcanic black or grey. The draw is everything behind them: nine volcanoes draped in primary rainforest so dense and wet that the island contains 365 rivers (one for every day of the year, locals will tell you), more waterfalls than anyone has counted, and the Boiling Lake — the second-largest thermally active lake in the world, reached by a six-hour trek through the Valley of Desolation where sulphur vents and fumaroles steam from bare rock. The Waitukubuli National Trail runs 185 kilometres from one end of the island to the other, making it the longest hiking trail in the Caribbean. Champagne Reef delivers the single most unusual dive and snorkel experience in the region: volcanic gases bubble up from the seabed through healthy coral, and you swim through a permanent stream of warm fizzing water. Dominica is one of the few places on earth with a year-round resident population of sperm whales — sightings on whale-watching trips from Roseau are near-guaranteed. The Kalinago Territory on the northeast coast is home to roughly three thousand descendants of the indigenous Carib people, the last such community in the Caribbean. And the visa policy matches the spirit of the island: most nationalities receive an automatic six-month stay on arrival, one of the most generous in the region.
Ways to Experience This Destination
The Boiling Lake in Morne Trois Pitons National Park (UNESCO) is the second-largest thermally active lake in the world — a cauldron of grey-blue water kept at near-boiling temperatures by volcanic vents beneath the surface, shrouded in sulphurous steam. The six-to-seven-hour return hike (mandatory guide) crosses the Valley of Desolation, where fumaroles, boiling mud pots and sulphur springs create an otherworldly landscape. The Waitukubuli National Trail (185 km, 14 segments) traverses the entire island from south to north through rainforest, villages, volcanic peaks and coast — the Caribbean's longest and most ambitious long-distance trail. Morne Diablotin (1,447 m) is the highest peak, home to the critically endangered sisserou parrot, Dominica's national bird.
Champagne Reef is Dominica's signature underwater experience: volcanic gases bubble continuously from the seabed through healthy coral formations and tropical fish, and you swim through streams of warm fizzing water — snorkelling from shore or diving. Scotts Head Pinnacle, at the point where the Caribbean Sea meets the Atlantic, drops vertically into deep blue with barrel sponges and passing pelagics. The volcanic underwater topography — hot springs, gas vents, encrusted walls — makes Dominica's diving unlike anywhere else in the Caribbean. Multiple dive operators in Roseau and Portsmouth.
Dominica is one of the few places on earth where sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) are resident year-round — the deep submarine canyon off the west coast drops to abyssal depths just minutes from shore, providing the deep-water habitat these whales need. Whale-watching trips from Roseau (three to four hours, roughly USD 80-120) offer near-guaranteed sightings. Spinner dolphins, spotted dolphins and, seasonally, humpback whales and pilot whales are also regularly seen. Dominica's western coast is a cetacean corridor of global importance.
The Kalinago Territory on the northeast coast is home to approximately three thousand descendants of the indigenous Carib (Kalinago) people who inhabited the Lesser Antilles before European colonisation. The Kalinago Barana Aute cultural centre offers demonstrations of dugout canoe building, basket weaving, traditional cassava (kassava) bread preparation and ceremonial dance. This is not a staged performance — the community lives and works on the territory, and a visit is a genuine window into a living culture with over three thousand years of continuous presence on these islands.
Dominica has more rivers per square kilometre than any other Caribbean island. Trafalgar Falls — twin waterfalls (the Father and the Mother) cascading into a rainforest gorge with both hot and cold natural pools at the base — is the most accessible. Middleham Falls drops sixty metres through primary forest. Emerald Pool is a jade-green natural swimming hole beneath a waterfall in the national park. The Wotten Waven hot springs offer volcanic thermal pools for post-hike soaking. The Indian River in Portsmouth winds through a mangrove tunnel used as a filming location for Pirates of the Caribbean.
Money & Currency
East Caribbean Dollar (EC$)
Currency code: XCD
Practical Money Tips
Eastern Caribbean Dollar (XCD) — Pegged to USD at 2.70
Dominica uses the Eastern Caribbean Dollar (XCD, EC$), shared with Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Anguilla, and Montserrat. The XCD is pegged to the US Dollar at a fixed rate of 2.70 XCD per USD — stable since 1976. USD is widely accepted alongside XCD in Dominica, particularly in hotels, restaurants, and tour operators in Roseau. EUR, GBP, and CAD can be exchanged at banks and the Roseau airport. Note: Dominica is not the Dominican Republic — it is a separate island nation in the Lesser Antilles known as the 'Nature Isle of the Caribbean.'
ATMs in Roseau — Limited Outside the Capital
Roseau has a handful of ATMs: National Bank of Dominica (NBD), CIBC FirstCaribbean, and Scotiabank. They accept international Visa and Mastercard. Outside Roseau, ATMs are rare — Portsmouth (second town) has some, but villages and eco-lodges in the interior have none. Bring sufficient XCD or USD cash for excursions to Boiling Lake, Morne Trois Pitons National Park, and Carib Territory (now Kalinago Territory). Douglas-Charles Airport (DOM) has limited banking facilities.
Cards at Hotels and Main Restaurants — Cash for Nature Activities
Visa and Mastercard are accepted at hotels, most restaurants in Roseau and Portsmouth, and some tour operators. Apple Pay and Google Pay have limited support — some modern NFC terminals in Roseau's larger establishments accept them, but coverage is inconsistent. Cash (XCD or USD) is essential for entrance fees to natural sites, local guides, village markets, and river tubing or waterfall hikes. Dominica is an eco-tourism destination, and many experiences operate cash-only.
Affordable Caribbean — Nature Over Luxury
Dominica is one of the more affordable Caribbean islands, attracting hikers and eco-travelers rather than luxury resort guests. Budget guesthouse: XCD 150–300/night (USD 55–110). Mid-range eco-lodge: XCD 300–600/night. Local creole meal at a 'cookshop': XCD 20–40 (USD 7–15). National park entrance fee (Boiling Lake hike): XCD 13 (approx. USD 5). Whale-watching tour: USD 80–120. Day trips with a licensed guide: USD 60–100. Tipping 10–15% is standard at restaurants.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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