Sending money usa to DR monthly, best way

Apr 10, 2014
170
6
18
Have always used Western Union. $4.00 fee to send in pesos and $8.00 fee to send in dollars. Money is available in minutes and have never had a problem.
 

ExDR

Member
Jul 31, 2014
421
0
16
I need to send about $1500 USD monthly from usa to a friend in santiago. He has a popular dollar and peso account.

What is the best way? Cheapest, easiest?

I have a PayPal in the USA and that is what I use in the states, but it appears it does not work in the DR.

The recipient in santiago is not computer literate and does not care too much about fees, more about convenience. He already pays a visit to western union in santiago monthly.

Thank you in advance.

You can use "Xoom" with a computer and they are a lot cheaper than Western Union. There are a lot of locations in the DR where the money can be picked up.
 

wuarhat

I am a out of touch hippie.
Nov 13, 2006
1,378
89
48
Is that supposed to be a good price to pay? The current rate of exchange here is 46.8 at Caribe Express.

No. If you pay the higher transaction fee for a dollar transfer of $19.99 per $1000 or $34.99 per $1500 then the conversion rate is whatever Caribe Express is paying that day. That is why I said the dollar transfer is more cost efficient. Caribe will also convert on the delivery if that is what you want. These prices were off their web site last night.
 
Last edited:

wuarhat

I am a out of touch hippie.
Nov 13, 2006
1,378
89
48
Xoom's fees for dollar transfers are on a sliding scale depending on the amount of the transfer, but the dollar transfer is always the better deal, at least under the current currency market conditions.
 

affald

New member
May 17, 2004
143
0
0
Come on you got 1500 to send to a puta and you are trying ti save a buck on sending it. Man people are destroying this place now she tells her frends and thy think all gringos can send that king of money.
Thanks to everyone for all the great answers. I have tons of information from this thread, except any nuisances about setting up a PayPal in a Dominican Popular dollar account.

If I can add any relevant formation I will report back.

To chef, I assume English is not your native language, but nonetheless, I don't appreciate your remarks. A little advice, be careful who you offend in a third world country, especially if your status is illegal.
 

wuarhat

I am a out of touch hippie.
Nov 13, 2006
1,378
89
48
Actually the cheapest way by far would be to open a checking account in the US and make out a bunch of checks to him. Send them to him and he can deposit them in a US Dollar account in the DR.



Cost is zero.
Agreed, but difficult to implement. Especially if sending money to a Dominican. I've yet to find one who understands the effect of transaction costs enough to raise a finger to avoid them. Nor have I met a Dominican (at least one who is trapped on the island) I would trust to hold a check until the prescribed time to cash it.
 

USA DOC

Bronze
Feb 20, 2016
3,333
862
113
Fraud risk premium

........You are very right......the DR is very near the top of W.U. fraud list.....If you send a amount over say $2k....you get the added pleasure of speaking to one of their fraud prevention staff... question like, do you know the person receiving the money? yes it is my wife......question....how well do you know her? answer.....yes she is great in bed, and a great cook to.....question........when did you see her last? answer......last week, we were cooking in bed..........ok sir your money transfer is complete.........Doc...........
 

JimW

Active member
May 21, 2014
83
93
28
RIAMoneyTransfer.com: Not quite there yet

I live in NY and my wife and I were trying to send money to the Dominican Republic which we already do monthly via Xoom.com but lately their fees (as well as USD to DOP exchange rate) are just not competitive. Like any company that's grown enough and captured ample marketshare, service and value go down. So we figured we'd give Riamoneytransfer.com a try. In short, you get what you pay for (or don't pay for in the case of these smaller players like Ria) and in our case we were never able to complete even our first transfer.

Here's a summary;

1. The whole signup, initial bank verification process took four days. Waaaayyy too long.
2. Once we had verified our bank account using Ria's verification process (two micro deposits to our bank account), our first transfer failed. We received an email from their security dept. asking we call them.
3. OK, we called and the young man in Ria's security department asked all the usual questions to identify us. Then started asking what we were going to use the money for and when was the last time we traveled etc. Another poster mentioned it seemed really invasive and personal and I agree. Especially, "What are you going to use the money for?" HELLO? Of course there's all the US anti-money laundering laws now in effect but with other transfer services it was always about verifying the sender and recipients are legitimate (e.g., the Identity of person, whether they were a US Citizen/legal resident, whether they were the owners of the bank accounts etc.), not what you were going to spend your money on. The conversation had the feel of the guy we were talking to making it up as he went along.
4. The representative wasn't even aware of their own bank verification process using the two micro deposits. I tried to explain that they already verified my bank account but it was no use, he just didn't get it. Maybe a trainee or someone new but if so, that alone is telling about their internal processes that they would let loose someone who wasn't fully versed on their own internal processed.
5. In the end, he said I could send him a copy of my photo ID, passport with stamp of the last time I traveled to the Dominican Republic (not sure how this verifies a bank account-especially for people who don't travel), picture of my first-born, a bunch of other stuff etc! At this point I had serious concerns about Ria from this conversation as well as from other reviews on the internet that essentially said the same thing. Alternately, he said I could try to find a Ria storefront and bring in cash. He said if I brought cash into one of their physical locations he said it wouldn't be a problem. While I think that's a nice convenience, I'm not going to travel to Washington Heights, NY NY to visit one of their storefronts and then go walking with a bunch of cash etc. so I declined and will probably just stay with Xoom.com for now.

***The takeaways....? **** While Ria may offer slightly lower rate than Xoom there's a reason for it. They're not on the same playing field yet. Service-wise and sophistication of their transfer process seems to lag the other players such as Xoom or Western Union by a considerable margin. Everything I experience indicated the transfer would take [at best], days. Xoom (and I assume, WU) does it in minutes. There's clearly a big difference in the infrastructure Ria has in place vs.the other guys which probably accounts for the lower rates (it makes sense, lower infrastructure/overhead costs = lower rates). In the end, I don't have enough trust in Ria from the experience to make the switch. They're still trying to find their footing and the whole experience made me feel like so many decisions are done ad hoc and the processes still manual. Once they get themselves established and their processes smoother, maybe, but not today. BTW, while I mentioned Western Union in this post, I can't really vouch for their service as I've never used them. Their rates are WAY higher however as they've been around forever I assume they've got things down too. Hope this review helps.