Distrito Nacional
Santo Domingo
The walled Zona Colonial is the whole reason to come: a two-night culture stop, not a beach base, where you walk Calle Las Damas by day and treat the modern city as taxi-only.
Best length
2 nights (a culture add-on, not a beach week)
Airport
Las Americas (SDQ), ~30km east of the centre
Airport to centre
Pre-booked transfer ~35-45 min on Las Americas highway
Best base
Zona Colonial for everything on foot
In short
Santo Domingo at a glance
Santo Domingo is a two-night culture stop, not a beach holiday: base yourself inside the walled Zona Colonial, walk the Calle Las Damas and Catedral Primada by day, eat dinner around Plaza de Espana, and treat the modern city beyond the colonial walls as taxi-only given the high crime rate. Almost every UK visitor reaches it as a day trip or add-on rather than a flagship destination, because there is no nonstop flight from the UK.
The short version
- Stay inside the Zona Colonial so the cathedral, fortress and museums are all on foot; the rest of the city is taxi-by-day, not walk-at-night.
- The draw is the oldest European city in the Americas: the Catedral Primada (1540), Alcazar de Colon and Calle Las Damas, the first paved street in the Americas.
- There is no UK nonstop to SDQ, so you connect via Madrid, a US hub or another Caribbean island, or arrive overland from a Punta Cana resort week.
- Two full days covers the Colonial Zone properly; a single rushed day trip from Punta Cana wastes 5-6 hours on the road.
- Use booked taxis or apps rather than street cabs after dark, and keep phones and bags out of sight on the move (GOV.UK).
Santo Domingo trips go wrong when people expect a beach holiday and get a working Caribbean capital instead. The reason to come is small and specific: a few square blocks of the Zona Colonial that hold the oldest European city in the Americas โ the first cathedral, the first paved street, Diego Columbusโs palace โ and almost everything worth your time is inside those walls. The mistake first-timers make is squeezing it into a rushed day trip from a Punta Cana resort, losing five or six hours on the road for a couple of sweaty hours among the stones. Give it two nights and a Colonial Zone hotel and it becomes a proper city break; treat it as a sightseeing pit stop and it never lands.
The other adjustment is mental. This is not the resort bubble, so the calm of an all-inclusive doesnโt apply: walk the old town freely by day, but use booked taxis or an app after dark and beyond the walls, and donโt wander with your phone out. Below, the structured planning โ where to stay, whatโs worth a ticket, how to get in from Las Americas, and a realistic budget in pounds โ picks up from here.
Plan your Santo Domingo trip
Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.
Top things to do in Santo Domingo
Alcรกzar de Colรณn
Unlike Europe's blockbuster palaces, the Alcรกzar de Colรณn doesn't sell out โ you can walk up and buy a ticket at the door, so the real planning question is timing, not booking. Go for the museum, not the courtyard: the restored early-1500s rooms with their period furnishings are the point, and the audio guide (included) carries the story of Diego Columbus's household. Allow an hour to ninety minutes, and arrive at opening or in the last 90 minutes to dodge both the midday heat and the cruise-ship tour groups that flood Plaza de Espaรฑa late morning.
Colonial Zone (Zona Colonial)
The Zona Colonial itself is free to walk โ the cobbled lanes, Calle Las Damas and the Parque Colรณn cost nothing โ so the real spend is the handful of paid interiors and, more usefully, a guided walk that ties the history together. Book a morning guided tour or buy your Alcรกzar de Colรณn and Fortaleza Ozama entries online before you go: a peso or two saved matters less than starting before the midday heat. Allow a half-day, take only what you'll carry on the move, and treat anywhere beyond the walls as taxi-by-day per GOV.UK's high-crime advice.
Where to stay first
The areas that make a first visit easier โ not an exhaustive directory.
Zona Colonial
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe only sensible first-timer base: the walled UNESCO old town where the cathedral, Alcazar, Calle Las Damas and Plaza de Espana dinners are all on foot, and where the boutique hotels sit in restored colonial buildings. Streets are busy and policed by day; still take a booked taxi rather than walk unfamiliar lanes late.
Best for: First-timers, culture stops, couples
Gazcue
ยฃ valueA leafy early-20th-century residential district between the Colonial Zone and the Malecon, with tree-lined streets, the National Theatre and the Plaza de la Cultura museums. Quieter and cheaper than the old town, but you will taxi in for the colonial sights.
Best for: Quieter stays, museum days, value
Piantini / Naco
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe modern uptown business and dining district, with international chain hotels, malls and the city's smartest restaurants. Good for a comfortable, safe-feeling base, but it is a taxi to everything historic and lacks any old-town atmosphere.
Best for: Business stays, modern comfort, dining
Airport to city centre
| Option | Time | Cost | Book ahead? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-booked private transfer to Zona Colonial | ~35-45 min | about US$35-45 (~ยฃ28-36) | Best for arrivals; arrange before you fly |
| Airport taxi (fixed-rate desk) | ~35-45 min | about US$40 (~ยฃ32) fixed | Use the official desk, not touts outside |
| Uber / app from SDQ | ~35-45 min | about RD$1,500-2,200 (~ยฃ19-28) | Often cheapest; confirm pickup point |
When to go
Sweet spot: December to April is the prime window: drier, less humid and outside the hurricane season, which makes the long Colonial Zone walks comfortable rather than sweltering. May and late November are the quieter, cheaper shoulders with usually good weather.
High summer is hot and very humid in the city, harder work for all-day walking than on a breezy beach; June to November is hurricane season, peaking August-September, when the cheapest hotel rates appear. The Colonial Zone is busiest and liveliest in the December-April dry season and around the late-February Carnival, when street parades fill the old town.
What it costs
There is no UK nonstop to Santo Domingo (SDQ), so return fares with a connection via Madrid, a US hub or another Caribbean island typically run ยฃ550-ยฃ900 depending on season and routing. Many UK visitors instead fly nonstop to Punta Cana for a resort week and reach Santo Domingo overland, treating it as an add-on rather than a separate trip.
Daily budget per person
Peso figures use ยฃ1 โ 80 DOP and US$1 โ ยฃ0.79 (June 2026). The US dollar is the practical tourist currency for hotels, transfers and tours; carry small dollar bills for tips and pesos for street comedores and Metro rides.
Book the essentials
Where to stay
Tours & tickets
Airport transfers
Stay connected
Also in Dominican Republic
Santo Domingo FAQs
How many days do you need in Santo Domingo?
Where should first-timers stay in Santo Domingo?
Is Santo Domingo a beach destination?
Ready to book?
Find hotels in Santo Domingo