Key Takeaways
- Punta Cana leads the country. Punta Cana International (PUJ) serves around 79 regularly-served nonstop destinations — the most of any airport in the Dominican Republic and one of the busiest in the entire Caribbean. It is privately built and run by Grupo Puntacana as the gateway to the country’s all-inclusive resort coast.
- Santo Domingo has two airports. The capital is served by Las Américas (SDQ), the main international gateway, and the smaller in-city La Isabela / Dr. Joaquín Balaguer (JBQ), which handles domestic, regional Caribbean and general-aviation flights.
- A big US market with many gateways. Five Dominican airports fly nonstop to the United States — Punta Cana, Santo Domingo, Santiago, Puerto Plata and La Romana — driven by mass tourism and a large Dominican diaspora in New York, New Jersey, Florida and New England.
- Arajet, the new Dominican low-cost carrier. Founded in 2021 and flying since 2022 from Santo Domingo and Punta Cana, Arajet operates an all-Boeing 737 MAX fleet and is building a pan-American low-cost network that increasingly includes the US.
- Tourism shapes the whole map. Beyond the capital, the airports are leisure gateways: Puerto Plata on the north coast, Samaná on its peninsula, and La Romana for the Casa de Campo resort. Santiago’s Cibao airport mainly serves the diaspora-heavy second city.
The Dominican Republic is the most-visited destination in the Caribbean, drawing well over ten million air travellers a year to a country of about 11 million people. That tourism — plus one of the largest diasporas of any Caribbean nation — shapes an airport map built far more around sun, sand and family visits than around a single mega-hub.
Seven airports carry scheduled passenger service, spread around the coast and the interior. Punta Cana in the east leads the country and the region; the capital, Santo Domingo, has two airports of its own; and the north coast, the Samaná peninsula and the La Romana resort area each have their own leisure gateways. The map and table below rank them by the number of destinations they serve with regular flights, drawing on live AirportRoutes route data.

Which Dominican airports have direct flights to the US?
Unusually for a Caribbean country, the answer is several. The Dominican Republic is one of the region’s biggest markets for US flights — a combination of mass beach tourism and a Dominican-American community concentrated in the north-east and Florida.
Punta Cana (PUJ) has by far the widest US network, with roughly 15 mainland gateways including New York, Miami, Atlanta, Charlotte, Washington, Boston, Orlando, Tampa, Philadelphia, Newark, Chicago and Dallas-Fort Worth. Santo Domingo (SDQ) adds around nine US cities, Santiago (STI) about seven — heavily diaspora-driven from New York, Newark and Boston — and both Puerto Plata (POP) and La Romana (LRM) have their own nonstop US links. The flying is shared among JetBlue, American, Delta, United, Frontier and Spirit, plus the home-grown low-cost carrier Arajet.
RANKED BY DESTINATIONS
The Dominican Republic’s airports with scheduled service
By regularly-served nonstop destinations (live AirportRoutes data). Punta Cana leads, the capital Santo Domingo has two airports, and the rest are tourism and diaspora gateways.
| Airport | IATA | Serves | City / region |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Punta Cana Intl | PUJ | 79 | Punta Cana / East coast |
| 2. Santo Domingo (Las Américas) | SDQ | 40 | Santo Domingo |
| 3. La Romana (Casa de Campo) | LRM | 17 | La Romana / South-east |
| 4. Puerto Plata (Gregorio Luperón) | POP | 17 | Puerto Plata / North coast |
| 5. Santiago (Cibao) | STI | 11 | Santiago de los Caballeros |
| 6. Santo Domingo (La Isabela) | JBQ | 9 | Santo Domingo |
| 7. Samaná (El Catey) | AZS | 5 | Samaná peninsula |
A closer look at the Dominican Republic’s airports
✈️ Punta Cana International (PUJ)

Punta Cana International sits on the eastern tip of the country, minutes from the Bávaro–Punta Cana resort strip. It is privately owned and operated by Grupo Puntacana, which built it in 1984 and gave it the famous open-air, thatched-roof terminals — and it has grown into the busiest airport in the Dominican Republic and one of the busiest in the whole Caribbean.
PUJ reaches around 79 regularly-served nonstop destinations, including roughly 38 international and long-haul routes — the widest network in the country. It is overwhelmingly a leisure airport, with scheduled and charter flights pouring in from the US, Canada, Europe and Latin America to fill the surrounding all-inclusive resorts.
Main airlines: Arajet, JetBlue, American Airlines, Frontier, WestJet and Air Transat, alongside a long list of seasonal and charter operators. See PUJ’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ Las Américas International (SDQ)

Las Américas International, about 20 km east of central Santo Domingo, is the capital’s main international gateway and the traditional flagship airport of the Dominican Republic. It anchors the country’s links to North America, Latin America and Europe (including Madrid).
SDQ serves around 40 regularly-served nonstop destinations and is the home base of Arajet, the Dominican low-cost carrier that has turned Santo Domingo into a growing connecting point between North, Central and South America. Beyond the resorts of the east, this is the airport most used by Dominicans themselves.
Main airlines: Arajet, Sky High, JetBlue, Frontier, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines. See SDQ’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ Casa de Campo International (LRM)

Casa de Campo International serves La Romana and the Bayahíbe coast in the south-east, named after the luxury Casa de Campo resort it was built to serve. It is a smaller, leisure-focused airport close to one of the country’s busy cruise ports.
LRM serves around 17 regularly-served nonstop destinations and has an unusually European flavour for a Caribbean airport its size, with seasonal long-haul charters from Italy and Germany alongside its US links to Florida and the New York area.
Main airlines: Neos, Condor, American Airlines, Discover Airlines and WestJet. See LRM’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ Gregorio Luperón International (POP)

Gregorio Luperón International sits on the north coast, just east of Puerto Plata, serving the Amber Coast resorts of Playa Dorada, Sosúa and Cabarete. It was the Dominican Republic’s original mass-tourism gateway in the 1980s, before Punta Cana overtook it.
POP serves around 17 regularly-served nonstop destinations, with a distinctly Canadian tilt — Montreal, Toronto and other cities feed the winter-sun trade — alongside US links to Miami, New York, Atlanta, Newark, Charlotte and Boston.
Main airlines: WestJet, Air Transat, American Airlines, JetBlue and Air Canada. See POP’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ Cibao International (STI)

Cibao International serves Santiago de los Caballeros, the Dominican Republic’s second city, in the fertile Cibao valley of the interior. Although it is well inland, its route map is shaped almost entirely by the large Dominican community in the US north-east.
STI serves around 11 regularly-served nonstop destinations, dominated by diaspora routes to New York, Newark, Boston, Miami, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale and Philadelphia. For hundreds of thousands of Dominican-Americans, this — not the capital — is the home airport.
Main airlines: JetBlue, Delta Air Lines, United, American Airlines and Spirit. See STI’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ La Isabela / Dr. Joaquín Balaguer (JBQ)

La Isabela, officially Dr. Joaquín Balaguer International, is Santo Domingo’s second airport, just north of the city. It is a compact, in-town field that handles domestic flights, short regional Caribbean hops and general aviation rather than mainline international traffic.
JBQ records about 9 regularly-served nonstop destinations. Although its raw route count looks high, most of its flying is thin, small-aircraft service — which is why it ranks below Santiago once one-off observations are filtered out. It is the base of Air Century, which links it to Cuba, Aruba, Curaçao, Bonaire, St Maarten and Puerto Rico.
Main airline: Air Century. See JBQ’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
✈️ Samaná El Catey International (AZS)

Samaná El Catey International serves the Samaná peninsula in the north-east — the laid-back beaches of Las Terrenas and Las Galeras and the bay famous for its winter humpback-whale season. It is the smallest of the country’s scheduled airports.
AZS serves around 5 regularly-served nonstop destinations, almost all of them seasonal Canadian charters from Montreal, Toronto and Quebec City, plus the occasional French-Caribbean and US link. Traffic is highly seasonal, peaking in the northern winter.
Main airlines: Air Transat, Air Canada, WestJet and Air Caraïbes. See AZS’s full route map on AirportRoutes →
Airport rankings, nonstop-destination counts, served cities, airline lists and US connections are drawn from live AirportRoutes route data (observed AeroAPI flight data — a sample, not a complete published schedule; we use the regularly-served figure, which filters one-off observations). Airport history and notable facts are cross-checked against the cited references. The maps are Mappr originals.
Primary Data Source:
- AirportRoutes — Major airports & routes, Dominican Republic – Live route data: per-airport nonstop destinations, served cities, airlines and US connections.
References:
- Punta Cana International Airport (Grupo Puntacana) – Operator of PUJ, the country’s busiest airport.
- Aeropuertos Dominicanos Siglo XXI (Aerodom) – Operator of Las Américas (SDQ), La Isabela (JBQ), Puerto Plata (POP), Samaná (AZS) and other Dominican airports.
- Arajet – Dominican low-cost carrier based in Santo Domingo and Punta Cana.
- Wikipedia — Dominican Republic airports – Airport background, passenger figures and operational history.
- Google Static Maps – Base maps for the per-airport locator images.
🌍 More maps & data for the Dominican Republic
Browse more: All airports by country