Gregorio Luperón International Airport (POP) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Puerto Plata is the Dominican Republic’s northern Atlantic gateway — the Amber Coast (Costa del Ámbar) where Sosúa all-inclusive resorts sit alongside Cabarete kitesurfing schools. POP runs Dominican Peso plus universal USD acceptance, connects you to the unique Mount Isabel de Torres cable car, and absorbs the post-Spirit Frontier and Sun Country charter market. This guide covers entry, transport, lounges, and the 2026 reality of one of the most charter-heavy Caribbean airports.
Quick Reference
Gregorio Luperón International Airport (named for the 19th-century Dominican military leader and politician who led the restoration of Dominican independence from Spain in 1865) is the second-busiest tourism airport in the Dominican Republic, after Punta Cana’s PUJ. The airport sits 18 km west of Puerto Plata city, 22 km from the Sosúa resort cluster, and 32 km from Cabarete (the kitesurfing capital of the Caribbean). Direct service is heavy: JetBlue from NYC and BOS, American from MIA and CLT, Delta from JFK and ATL, Frontier from MCO and PHL (post-Spirit absorption), Air Canada from YYZ, plus a substantial Sun Country and Sunwing charter market.
Table of Contents
🏢 1. Terminals & the Charter-Heavy Reality
The current POP terminal opened in 2008 (replacing a 1970s building) and was renovated 2018–2020 as part of the Aerodom (the DR airport operator) modernization push. The terminal handles around 1.4 million passengers per year through 8 jet bridges and 4 hardstand positions. The charter-market dominance — Frontier, Sun Country, Sunwing, Sunwing-equivalent operators — produces a distinctive operating rhythm: peak pushes 11:00–14:00 (charter arrivals) and 17:00–20:00 (charter departures).
Concourse and gate layout
Eight jet bridges plus four hardstand positions handle the charter and scheduled traffic mix. Gates 1–4 typically handle US scheduled (JetBlue, American, Delta, United). Gates 5–8 handle Canadian charter (Sunwing, WestJet, Air Canada Rouge) and US charter (Sun Country, Allegiant, Frontier). Hardstand positions 9–12 absorb regional and seasonal overflow.
Arrivals — passport, baggage, customs, the Tourist Card
Two passport-control zones: Dominican lane and visitor lane. Visitor lane runs 6 manned counters plus 4 e-gates (added 2023). Three baggage carousels handle widebody and narrowbody arrivals. Customs runs the green/red split. The Tourist Card (USD 10) is bundled into airline tickets since 2018 — nothing additional to pay on arrival. Note: as of 2024, the DR uses an online E-Ticket system — fill at eticket.migracion.gob.do within 72 hours of arrival.
Departures — check-in, security, the volume reality
Twenty-eight check-in counters split: JetBlue + Delta (1–6), American + United (7–12), Frontier (13–15), Air Canada + Sunwing + WestJet (16–20), Sun Country + charter overflow (21–28). Bag-tag-it kiosks at all major airlines. Security has three lanes — standard, family, and priority. Both ICAO 100ml liquid rules.
Family services, accessibility, the volume management
Three family rooms (one airside, two landside). Children’s soft-play area in the duty-free zone. Wheelchair assistance via airline 48 hours pre-flight. Walk-in lift assistance at the 11:00–14:00 charter push has 30–60 minute wait. Lost-luggage office (BD-Air) on arrivals level; English-language service throughout typical operating hours, Spanish-only off-peak.
Editor’s note — POP is the Dominican Republic’s second-busiest tourism airport (after PUJ). The 2008 terminal plus 2018–2020 modernization gave it modern infrastructure. The trade-off is the dominant charter-market rhythm — if you arrive during a charter push (11:00–14:00), expect higher waits; off-peak windows are quiet. Plan 3 hours pre-flight for any charter departure.
🛂 2. Visa, Currency & the E-Ticket System
The Dominican Republic uses a Tourist Card system for most visa-free entries plus the online E-Ticket system (mandatory since 2024) for arrivals tracking. The Dominican Peso is the local currency but USD is widely accepted at resorts and tourist services. The DR is a CARICOM observer state but not full member; entry rules are simpler than CARICOM but visa requirements vary by passport.
Tourist Card — the visa equivalent
Most nationalities (USA, Canada, UK, EU/EEA, Switzerland, Australia, NZ, Japan, etc.) enter on a Tourist Card — USD 10 fee bundled into airline ticket since 2018, valid 30 days, extendable by USD 30 per additional 30 days. Required: passport valid 6 months past entry, return ticket. Tourist Card is checked at immigration and stamped; keep it with your passport.
E-Ticket — mandatory online arrival form
Since 2024, every traveler to the Dominican Republic must complete the online E-Ticket at eticket.migracion.gob.do within 72 hours of arrival. Free, no health-questionnaire (the COVID-era version was retired in 2022). You receive a QR code by email; show at passport control on arrival. Without the E-Ticket you fill a paper form on arrival and add 30–45 minutes to your immigration wait.
Currency — DOP and USD coexistence
Local currency is the Dominican Peso (DOP), trading around 58–62 to USD. USD is widely accepted at hotels, resorts, restaurants, taxis. Most resort menus quote in USD; many casual restaurants quote in DOP with USD acceptance at conversion. ATMs dispense DOP by default; some allow USD selection. Tipping: 10% standard at restaurants. All-inclusive resorts (Iberostar AMBAR cluster, Casa de Campo at the south, Senator) include service in the rate.
Departure — the Tourist Card return and duty-free
The Tourist Card return form (a separate paper) was eliminated in 2022 along with the COVID-era forms. Departure is now the standard customs declaration form. Duty-free outbound: Brugal rum (DR’s flagship distillery, 5-Year, 8-Year, 1888 Reserve), Cuban-style cigars (often Dominican-made under Habanos licensing), Mama Juana (the local rum-and-herb infusion). Cigarettes and tobacco have generous allowances back to most home countries.
2026 anchor — The DR E-Ticket system has been operational since 2024 and continues mandatory. The Tourist Card remains USD 10 bundled in tickets. The 30-day stay is routine; longer stays via extension. The post-Spirit Frontier and Sun Country expansion has marginally tightened the post-July 2024 charter-market quotas at POP.
🚚 3. Transport — POP to Sosúa, Cabarete & Iberostar Cluster
POP sits 18 km west of Puerto Plata city, 22 km from the Sosúa all-inclusive cluster, 32 km from Cabarete (kitesurfing capital), and 14 km from the Iberostar AMBAR resort cluster (between airport and Puerto Plata). The road network is well-paved and the drive times are predictable. Most package arrivals get included transfers; independent travelers face taxi, rental car, or limited public transport.
Charter package transfer — the default for most
Sun Country, Sunwing, Frontier, JetBlue Vacations, Apple Vacations — all bundle resort transfers in package bookings. Coach buses run from POP terminal directly to the major resort clusters (Iberostar AMBAR, Casa Marina, Senator Puerto Plata, Lifestyle Tropical Beach Resort). Transfer time: 25–45 minutes depending on which end of the resort belt your hotel sits.
Taxi — regulated rates from POP
Government-regulated rates: POP to Puerto Plata city 18–25 USD; POP to Sosúa 22–30 USD; POP to Cabarete 30–40 USD; POP to Iberostar AMBAR 18–28 USD; POP to Casa Marina 22–28 USD; POP to Maimón 18–25 USD; POP to Santiago (interior city) 75–90 USD. Drivers accept USD readily; many accept card via Sumup terminals. Surcharge after 22:00 is +25%.
Rental car — possible, well-paved highway
All major chains (Hertz, Avis, Budget, Sixt) on-site at POP plus local outfits (Carwiz, Reliable). Economy from 35 USD/day, mid-size SUV 50–70 USD. Driving on the right (American convention), all signage in Spanish (some English near tourist areas), fuel ~1.40 USD/litre. Insurance: bring credit-card CDW or buy at counter (10–15 USD/day extra). The Northern Coastal Highway (Autopista del Atlántico) connects POP to Cabarete in 35 minutes.
Bus, gua-gua, and inter-city options
Caribe Tours and Metro Tours run scheduled inter-city buses from Puerto Plata to Santo Domingo (5 hours, USD 15–20), to Santiago (90 minutes, USD 8), and to Punta Cana (8 hours, USD 25). Local gua-gua minibuses run shorter routes to Sosúa, Cabarete, and Maimón at USD 1–2 per leg. Slow but cheap and authentic.
Practical — A typical POP trip is package charter where transfer is included — you don’t need to think about transport beyond confirming your transfer is on the manifest. Independent travelers should default to taxi for short hops and rental car for multi-day exploring. The Cabarete kitesurfing scene is the unique POP draw — book accommodation in Cabarete itself rather than commuting from Sosúa if kitesurfing is your focus.
🛍️ 4. Lounges — Plaza Premium & the Aerodom Reality
POP has one main pay/membership lounge (Plaza Premium) plus an American Admirals Club voucher area for the daily American Miami push. The Aerodom (DR airport operator) modernization in 2018–2020 included the Plaza Premium upgrade, making the lounge competitive with PUJ’s. By Caribbean standards this is solid — PUJ has seven lounges, but for POP’s smaller volume two is appropriate.
Plaza Premium Lounge — main option
Located airside on the upper concourse, near gate 4. Open 06:00–22:00 daily. Walk-in 35 USD for three hours; Priority Pass accepted (free for Pass holders); LoungeKey accepted; American Express Platinum and Centurion via Priority Pass enrollment. Capacity ~70. Hot breakfast 06:00–10:30, cold buffet rest of day, full bar with Brugal rum on tap, espresso machine, free Wi-Fi 50 Mbps, 5 showers.
American Admirals Club — voucher-only
American-operated lounge near gate 1. Access exclusive to American Flagship First/Business passengers, American Executive Platinum and Platinum Pro on same-day American international, and Citi/AAdvantage Executive credit card holders flying American same-day. Capacity ~30. Cold buffet, hot rotating dish, full bar, espresso. Two showers. Open during American operating windows (typically 11:00–15:00).
JetBlue, Delta, United — Plaza Premium voucher
None of the US carriers other than American operate dedicated lounges at POP. JetBlue Mint, Delta One, United Polaris — all premium-cabin passengers get vouchers for Plaza Premium with airline-paid access.
Showers, prayer rooms, smoking
Plaza Premium has 5 showers (free for users, 12 USD walk-in for non-users). One single-stall multi-faith prayer room landside near departures. Strict no-smoking inside the terminal; designated outdoor smoking areas outside arrivals doors. Vaping rules same as cigarettes — outside only.
Lounge math — Priority Pass via credit card (Chase Sapphire Reserve, Amex Platinum, Capital One Venture X) is the easiest no-airline route to Plaza Premium POP. The 2018–2020 refurbishment makes this one of the better-equipped Plaza Premiums in the DR.
🥩 5. Food, Duty-Free & the Brugal Question
Airport food at POP is functional rather than memorable — you’ll eat better at any Sosúa beachfront restaurant or any Cabarete waterfront cafe. But duty-free has two genuinely good buys: Brugal rum (the DR’s flagship distillery, established 1888) and Mama Juana (the rum-red-wine-herb infusion that’s a heritage Caribbean elixir).
Quisqueya Cafe — the airside Caribbean kitchen
Located airside near gate 4. Local plates: la bandera (DR national dish — rice, red beans, stewed chicken or beef, 14 USD), mangú (mashed green plantain breakfast, 10 USD), sancocho (Dominican stew, 16 USD), cassava-encrusted fish (12 USD), Caribbean burger (12 USD). Service efficient, plates substantial, kitchen open 06:00–21:00.
The Bar — Brugal and Presidente
Located airside near the duty-free zone. Cocktails: rum punch (8 USD), Cuba Libre (7 USD), classic mojito (8 USD), Mama Juana shot (10 USD — the local rum-red-wine-herb infusion). Bottled beer: Presidente (the local flagship, 4 USD), Heineken, Quilmes (8 USD). Bartender uses Brugal Añejo for cocktails.
Local plates worth flying for — if you have time
La bandera (the ‘flag’): rice, red beans, stewed chicken or beef, salad — the Dominican national plate. Mangú: mashed green plantain, often with eggs and salami for breakfast. Sancocho: hearty stew with seven meats and starchy vegetables. Pollo guisado: braised chicken in tomato-pepper sauce. Available at Quisqueya but better at any Sosúa paladar (Restaurante La Pegamora, El Pulpo). 12–22 USD per plate.
Duty-free — Brugal, Mama Juana, cigars
Three serious duty-free buys: (1) Brugal rum — Brugal Añejo USD 18, Brugal Extra Viejo USD 25, Brugal 1888 Reserve USD 28–38; (2) Mama Juana bottle (rum-red-wine-herb infusion in colorful bottle) — USD 18–25; (3) Dominican cigars — Romeo y Julieta, Montecristo, Cohiba (Dominican branch, not Cuban) at 8–25 USD per stick. The Brugal 1888 Reserve is the standout buy.
Eat-and-fly — Don’t leave POP without one Presidente lager, one plate of la bandera, and one bottle of Brugal 1888 Reserve. The lager and the bandera are your last DR tastes; the rum is the heritage spirit.
💡 6. Insider Tips — Cabarete, 27 Charcos & the Iberostar Cluster
Most first-time visitors stay at one of the Sosúa or Maimón all-inclusive resorts (Iberostar AMBAR cluster, Senator Puerto Plata, Be Live Marien, Casa Marina). That’s the standard charter-package play. The other Puerto Plata — Cabarete kitesurfing, the 27 Charcos waterfalls (Damajagua), the Mount Isabel de Torres cable car — sits 25–45 minutes from POP and is what makes the Amber Coast distinctive. Here’s what locals plan around.
Hurricane risk — the Atlantic-coast reality
Puerto Plata is on the northern Atlantic coast of the DR at 19.7°N. Recent hurricane events: Hurricane Maria 2017 (passed south of DR, no direct hit), Hurricane Idalia 2023 (passed north), Hurricane Beryl 2024 (passed south). Peak risk September-November. Trip insurance for hurricane-season DR travel runs 6–9% of trip cost. The DR is statistically less hurricane-prone than the Eastern Caribbean (Dominica, Antigua, St Kitts) but more than the Western Caribbean (Aruba, Curaçao, Bonaire).
Spirit Airlines collapsed — route absorption
Spirit’s shutdown in May 2026 removed Fort Lauderdale-POP, Orlando-POP, and Newark-POP from the schedule. Frontier picked up MCO-POP and PHL-POP (3x weekly each); JetBlue picked up FLL-POP (4x weekly); American expanded MIA-POP to twice-daily on weekends. Sun Country added charter rotations to compensate. Net result: POP has marginally more US-direct frequency in 2026 than in 2025.
Cabarete kitesurfing — the unique Caribbean draw
Cabarete is the kitesurfing capital of the Caribbean — consistent trade winds, broad shallow bay, multiple kite schools. Best season December-March (high wind), good wind year-round. Kite school packages: half-day intro USD 90–120; full-day USD 150–180; multi-day starter packages USD 350–450. Operators: Kitebeach Hotel, GoKite, Vela Cabarete. Cabarete is also home to Ren-Yan-Cha (a famous wave-windsurfing spot during certain seasons).
27 Charcos and Mount Isabel de Torres — the half-day classics
27 Charcos (the Damajagua Waterfalls, 28 km southeast of POP) is a series of 27 cascading waterfalls and pools. Visitors swim, slide, and jump from cascade to cascade. Tour operators (Iguana Mama, Caribbean Bike Tours) run half-day trips USD 65–95. Mount Isabel de Torres (cable car, 30 minutes drive from POP) is a Christ-the-Redeemer-style monument with panoramic views. Cable car USD 12 round-trip; mountain summit access included.
The honest comparison — Puerto Plata versus Punta Cana versus Santo Domingo: Puerto Plata wins on uniqueness (Cabarete kitesurfing is genuinely the best Caribbean kite spot), wins on cooler-trade-wind summers, and wins on Iberostar value-tier. Punta Cana wins on resort variety and quieter beaches. Santo Domingo wins on cosmopolitan culture and historic Zona Colonial. For a kitesurfing-or-active Caribbean trip, Puerto Plata is the answer.
FAQ — Frequently Asked Questions
Eight questions Puerto Plata first-timers ask most often, with current 2026 information.
Do I need a visa to visit the Dominican Republic?
Most nationalities (USA, Canada, UK, EU/EEA, Switzerland, Australia, NZ, Japan, etc.) enter on a Tourist Card — USD 10 fee bundled into airline ticket since 2018, valid 30 days, extendable by USD 30 per additional 30 days. Required: passport valid 6 months past entry, return ticket. Plus the online E-Ticket (mandatory since 2024) at eticket.migracion.gob.do within 72 hours of arrival.
What currency does the DR use?
Dominican Peso (DOP), trading around 58–62 to USD. USD is widely accepted at hotels, resorts, restaurants, taxis. Most resort menus quote in USD. ATMs dispense DOP by default; some allow USD selection. Tipping: 10% standard. All-inclusive resorts (Iberostar, Senator, Be Live, Casa Marina) include service in the rate.
Is the DR safe in hurricane season (June-November)?
Hurricanes are a real risk. Recent significant events: Hurricane Maria 2017 (passed south), Beryl 2024 (passed south, no direct hit). Peak risk September-November. Trip insurance for hurricane-season travel runs 6–9% of trip cost. The DR is statistically less hurricane-prone than the Eastern Caribbean (Dominica, Antigua, St Kitts) but more than the Western Caribbean.
How do I get from POP airport to Sosúa or Cabarete?
Three options: (1) Charter package transfer (default for ~80% of arrivals) — Sun Country, Sunwing, Frontier, JetBlue Vacations, Apple Vacations all bundle resort transfer in package bookings; (2) Taxi from the airport rank — regulated rates 22–40 USD; (3) Pre-booked private transfer — USD 30–55 per person for Sosúa or Cabarete. Most package bookings include transfer; verify before paying separately.
Are Uber and Lyft available in Puerto Plata?
No, not at airport pickup. Rideshare apps do not operate at POP for airport transfers (regulated taxi monopoly). Use the regulated taxi system, pre-booked private transfer, or charter package. Once in Cabarete or Sosúa, Uber operates intermittently for shorter local trips.
What is Cabarete and is it worth visiting?
Cabarete is the kitesurfing capital of the Caribbean — 32 km east of Puerto Plata, a small beach town with consistent trade winds, broad shallow bay, multiple kite schools. Best season December-March. Half-day kitesurfing intro: USD 90–120. Full-day: USD 150–180. Multi-day starter package: USD 350–450. If kitesurfing or windsurfing interests you, this is genuinely the best Caribbean spot. Otherwise, Sosúa (the all-inclusive cluster) is closer to POP.
Will Spirit Airlines come back?
No. Spirit’s shutdown in May 2026 was final. Frontier and JetBlue have absorbed most of Spirit’s Caribbean leisure routes. POP-specific changes: Frontier picked up MCO-POP and PHL-POP (3x weekly each), JetBlue picked up FLL-POP (4x weekly), American expanded MIA-POP to twice-daily on weekends, Sun Country added charter rotations. Net result: POP has marginally more US-direct frequency in 2026 than in 2025.
How is Puerto Plata different from Punta Cana?
Puerto Plata (POP, ~1.4M passengers/year): northern Atlantic coast, Iberostar AMBAR cluster, Cabarete kitesurfing, cooler trade winds in summer. Punta Cana (PUJ, ~9M passengers/year): eastern coast, much larger resort cluster, world’s busiest all-inclusive arrival airport. POP is smaller, charter-heavier, more value-tier; PUJ is larger, mass-market, more luxury options. For kitesurfing: POP. For sheer resort variety: PUJ. For all-inclusive bargain: similar but PUJ usually cheaper per dollar.
2026 Summary Data Table
The full 2026 reference table for Gregorio Luperón International Airport at a glance.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | POP / MDPP |
| Country | Dominican Republic |
| Capital city of region | Puerto Plata — 18 km from airport |
| Airport name | Named for Gregorio Luperón, 19th-century Dominican military leader |
| Annual passengers (2024) | ~1.4 million |
| Single runway | 08/26 — 3,082 m (10,112 ft) |
| Major airlines (2026) | JetBlue, Delta, American, Frontier (post-Spirit), Air Canada, Sunwing, Sun Country |
| Currency | Dominican Peso (DOP) at ~58/USD — USD widely accepted |
| Languages | Spanish (official), limited English |
| Visa-free entry | Tourist Card USD 10 (in ticket) + E-Ticket online — 30 days |
| E-Ticket online (2024) | Mandatory at eticket.migracion.gob.do within 72 hours of arrival |
| US preclearance | No |
| Hurricane risk | Significant — September-November peak |
| Plaza Premium lounge | Yes — Priority Pass accepted, walk-in 35 USD |
| American Admirals Club | Yes — voucher-only access |
| Driving side | RIGHT (American convention) |
| Notable beach areas | Sosúa (resort cluster), Cabarete (kitesurfing), Maimón (Iberostar) |
| Notable attraction | 27 Charcos waterfalls; Mount Isabel de Torres cable car |
This guide is current as of May 2026 and reflects the post-Spirit-collapse North American route map (Frontier picked up MCO-POP and PHL-POP, JetBlue absorbed FLL-POP, American expanded MIA-POP to twice-daily on weekends). For weekly route updates and Puerto Plata flight deals, follow our aifly.one main feed.



