CROSS-STANDARD public interest · Wireless / IoT device

China-to-Dominican Republic Wireless / IoT Device Compliance Gap Matrix (INDOTEL / DIGENOR)

AI-compiled from official public sources — cross-checked by multiple AI models, not human-verified. Informational only; see disclaimer. Public-interest, source-linked comparison of common China Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and IoT device documentation against Dominican Republic INDOTEL mandatory homologación (type approval for radio and telecom terminal equipment under Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98 and INDOTEL resolutions), DIGENOR NORDOM electrical safety and EMC standards (harmonised with IEC/ISO/COPANT), the Dominican authorized importer requirement (RNC/DGII registration), and the advisory cybersecurity framework under Ley 53-07 and CNCS. The Dominican Republic uses 110–120 V / 60 Hz with Type A/B (US-style) plugs — consistent with North American electrical standards and aligned with CAFTA-DR trade partners. INDOTEL homologación is mandatory before import or sale of radio and telecom terminal equipment; CCC is not recognised, though FCC and CE test reports may be accepted as supporting basis for the INDOTEL technical dossier. An authorized Dominican importer with RNC registration through DGII is required. Spanish labelling is required. Diplomatic relations between China and the Dominican Republic were established in 2018, and Chinese electronics trade through Port of Haina and Santo Domingo is growing rapidly.

Dataset 2026-06-11 Last verified 2026-06-17 6 rows

Compliance Gap Matrix

Gap matrix
Compliance item Common China baseline Dominican Republic (INDOTEL / DIGENOR) Gap / action Source + verification date
Cybersecurity — Ley 53-07 (Dominican Cybercrime Law) and CNCS Advisory Framework China has a comprehensive mandatory cybersecurity framework for network-connected and IoT devices, including the Cybersecurity Law of 2017 (CSL), the Data Security Law of 2021 (DSL), the Personal Information Protection Law of 2021 (PIPL), and MIIT mandatory IoT security standards. Network-connected devices require security vulnerability assessments and must comply with GB/T security standards under the MIIT framework. Multi-Level Protection Scheme (MLPS 2.0, GB/T 22239-2019) applies to network infrastructure. China's mandatory cybersecurity certification and compliance requirements are substantially more developed than the Dominican Republic's current advisory-only framework; however, Chinese cybersecurity approvals carry no weight with INDOTEL or CNCS.Cybersecurity Law of the PRC 2017 (CSL) — Chinese mandatory cybersecurity framework for network operators and connected devices
Data Security Law 2021 (DSL) — Chinese data security obligations
Personal Information Protection Law 2021 (PIPL) — Chinese personal data protection requirements
MLPS 2.0 (GB/T 22239-2019) — Chinese Multi-Level Protection Scheme for network and information security
MIIT IoT security standards — mandatory security baseline requirements for IoT devices sold in China
The Dominican Republic's primary cybersecurity legislation is Ley 53-07 (Ley sobre Crímenes y Delitos de Alta Tecnología), enacted in 2007, which criminalises unauthorised computer access, data interception, and related cybercrime offences. The CNCS (Comisión Nacional de Ciberseguridad — National Cybersecurity Commission) serves as the national advisory and coordination body for cybersecurity policy. As of the current assessment period, the Dominican Republic does not impose mandatory product-level cybersecurity certification requirements on imported wireless or IoT devices comparable to the EU Cyber Resilience Act or similar frameworks — cybersecurity obligations under Ley 53-07 are primarily criminal law provisions rather than pre-market product certification requirements. The CNCS publishes cybersecurity guidelines and awareness materials but has not yet established a mandatory IoT device security baseline certification scheme. INDOTEL may include basic security considerations within its homologación technical dossier requirements for certain device categories, and this area is subject to regulatory development. Exporters should monitor INDOTEL and CNCS publications for emerging mandatory requirements.Ley 53-07 (Ley sobre Crímenes y Delitos de Alta Tecnología) — Dominican Republic high-technology crimes law enacted 2007; primary cybercrime legislation; criminal law provisions, not product certification requirements
CNCS (Comisión Nacional de Ciberseguridad) — National Cybersecurity Commission; advisory and policy coordination body; publishes cybersecurity guidelines
INDOTEL resolutions — INDOTEL may include basic security considerations in homologación technical dossier requirements for certain wireless device categories
The Dominican Republic's cybersecurity framework (Ley 53-07 / CNCS) is currently advisory at the product level and does not impose mandatory pre-market cybersecurity certification requirements on imported wireless or IoT devices comparable to China's CSL/PIPL or the EU Cyber Resilience Act. This is a lower compliance burden for Chinese exporters in the short term. However, this regulatory area is developing — INDOTEL may introduce security requirements within homologación dossiers for certain device categories, and CNCS may issue binding cybersecurity guidelines in future. Chinese mandatory cybersecurity approvals (CSL, MIIT IoT security) carry no direct recognition in the Dominican Republic. Exporters are advised to monitor INDOTEL and CNCS publications for emerging requirements, and to ensure that devices shipped to the Dominican Republic are free of documented security vulnerabilities consistent with good industry practice.[INFORMATIONAL] The Dominican Republic does not currently impose mandatory product-level cybersecurity certification on imported wireless or IoT devices. Ley 53-07 is a criminal law, not a product approval requirement, and CNCS guidance is advisory. Chinese CSL and MIIT IoT security approvals carry no recognition with INDOTEL or CNCS. Exporters should monitor INDOTEL homologación dossier requirements and CNCS publications for emerging mandatory cybersecurity product requirements, and ensure devices are free of documented vulnerabilities consistent with good industry practice before market entry. CNCS — Comisión Nacional de Ciberseguridad (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference
Electrical Safety and Voltage Compatibility — 110–120 V / 60 Hz / Type A-B Plugs (NORDOM / IEC 60950 / IEC 62368 Series) China's standard electrical supply is 220 V AC / 50 Hz with Type I (Australian-style, AS/NZS 3112) plugs, which differs from the Dominican Republic's 110–120 V / 60 Hz / Type A-B system. Chinese consumer electronics and wireless devices are typically designed for 220 V / 50 Hz operation and fitted with Type I (or Type A in some export models) plugs. Electrical safety in China is certified through the mandatory CCC process (GB 4943.1 series, harmonised with IEC 60950-1 / 62368-1) administered by CNCA-designated laboratories. Chinese CCC electrical safety certificates are not recognised by DIGENOR or INDOTEL, and the voltage/frequency/plug standard differs fundamentally from the Dominican market.GB 4943.1 — Chinese information technology equipment electrical safety standard (harmonised with IEC 60950-1/62368-1); required for CCC certification
CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — includes electrical safety testing for consumer electronics under CNCA
China grid standard: 220 V AC / 50 Hz; Type I plugs (AS/NZS 3112 style) dominant; some Type A used in export-oriented designs
The Dominican Republic uses 110–120 V AC / 60 Hz electricity with Type A (two flat parallel pins) and Type B (two flat parallel pins plus a grounding pin) plugs — the same standard as the United States and Canada. This is consistent with CAFTA-DR trade partner alignment. All wireless and IoT devices sold in the Dominican Republic must be designed for 110–120 V / 60 Hz operation and must use or be compatible with Type A/B plugs; Chinese devices designed for 220 V / 50 Hz with Type I or European plugs will require electrical adaptation or redesign. Electrical safety requirements are governed by NORDOM standards harmonised with IEC 60950-1 (legacy) and IEC 62368-1 (current) for audio/video and IT equipment. Accredited laboratory electrical safety test reports compliant with applicable IEC/NORDOM standards must be included in the INDOTEL homologación technical dossier. Power adapters shipped with Chinese devices must also comply with the 110–120 V / 60 Hz / Type A-B electrical standard.NORDOM electrical safety standards — Dominican national electrical safety standards harmonised with IEC 60950-1 / IEC 62368-1 for IT and audio/video equipment
IEC 62368-1 — current international standard for audio/video, information and communications technology equipment safety (supersedes IEC 60950-1)
IEC 60950-1 — legacy international information technology equipment safety standard (still referenced in some NORDOM contexts)
Dominican Republic grid standard: 110–120 V AC / 60 Hz; Type A (NEMA 1-15) and Type B (NEMA 5-15) plugs
The Dominican Republic's 110–120 V / 60 Hz / Type A-B electrical standard differs fundamentally from China's 220 V / 50 Hz / Type I system. Chinese devices must be verified — and if necessary, redesigned or adapted — to operate safely and correctly on 110–120 V / 60 Hz power, and must use or be compatible with Type A/B plugs. Power adapters supplied with Chinese devices must also meet the 110–120 V / Type A-B standard. Chinese CCC electrical safety test reports (issued for 220 V / 50 Hz conditions) do not satisfy NORDOM/INDOTEL requirements for the Dominican market; new IEC 62368-1-compliant electrical safety testing at 110–120 V / 60 Hz conditions from an internationally accredited laboratory is required for the INDOTEL homologación dossier. IEC 62368-1-based CE electrical safety reports, if tested under conditions applicable to the Dominican voltage range, may assist as supporting documentation subject to INDOTEL acceptance.[INFORMATIONAL] The Dominican Republic uses 110–120 V / 60 Hz / Type A-B plugs — fundamentally different from China's 220 V / 50 Hz / Type I system. Chinese devices designed for 220 V / 50 Hz require verification or adaptation, and new IEC 62368-1-compliant electrical safety testing at the correct voltage and frequency from an internationally accredited laboratory is required for the INDOTEL homologación dossier. CCC electrical safety certificates issued for 220 V conditions are not accepted. Verify current NORDOM electrical safety standards, INDOTEL dossier requirements, and plug/voltage specifications with a qualified Dominican regulatory professional before market entry. DIGENOR — Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference
EMC Requirements — DIGENOR NORDOM Standards (Harmonised with CISPR / IEC) In China, EMC compliance for wireless and electronic devices is governed by GB standards (GB/T 9254 series for information technology equipment emissions, GB/T 17618 for immunity) which are harmonised with CISPR and IEC standards. EMC compliance is verified as part of the mandatory CCC (China Compulsory Certification) process administered by CNCA-designated laboratories. Chinese GB EMC standards and CCC EMC test reports are not directly recognised by DIGENOR or INDOTEL, but the underlying IEC/CISPR technical basis is shared, potentially allowing some test data to be presented as supporting documentation within the INDOTEL homologación dossier subject to INDOTEL acceptance.GB/T 9254 series — Chinese information technology equipment EMC emissions standard (harmonised with CISPR 22/32)
GB/T 17618 — Chinese information technology equipment EMC immunity standard (harmonised with CISPR 24/35)
CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — includes EMC testing for consumer electronics under CNCA-designated laboratories
The Dominican Republic's national standards body DIGENOR (Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad) publishes NORDOM standards for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) that are largely harmonised with IEC/CISPR international standards and COPANT (Pan American Standards Commission) regional norms. Wireless and electronic devices sold in the Dominican Republic must comply with applicable NORDOM EMC standards covering radiated and conducted emissions, as well as immunity requirements, consistent with the CISPR 32 / IEC 55032 series (emissions) and CISPR 35 / IEC 55035 series (immunity) for multimedia equipment. EMC compliance is closely linked to the INDOTEL homologación process — accredited laboratory test reports demonstrating NORDOM or equivalent IEC/CISPR compliance are required as part of the INDOTEL technical dossier. The Dominican Republic's participation in CAFTA-DR and COPANT means that NORDOM standards align substantially with both North American (ANSI/FCC) and IEC frameworks, easing documentation pathways for exporters who already hold FCC or CE EMC authorisations.DIGENOR (Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad) — Dominican Republic national standards body; publishes NORDOM standards harmonised with IEC/CISPR/COPANT
NORDOM EMC standards — Dominican national EMC standards harmonised with CISPR 32 / IEC 55032 (multimedia emissions) and CISPR 35 / IEC 55035 (multimedia immunity)
COPANT (Comisión Panamericana de Normas Técnicas) — Pan American Standards Commission; regional standards harmonisation body whose norms inform NORDOM
Ley 602-77 — Dominican Republic law establishing DIGENOR and the national standards system
Chinese GB EMC standards and CCC EMC test reports are not directly recognised by DIGENOR or INDOTEL. However, because NORDOM EMC standards are harmonised with IEC/CISPR, exporters who already hold FCC or IEC/CISPR-based CE EMC test reports may present those as supporting documentation within the INDOTEL homologación dossier — subject to INDOTEL acceptance on a case-by-case basis. CCC-based EMC test reports may also be presented if issued by an ILAC-accredited laboratory and reference the underlying IEC/CISPR test methods, but INDOTEL acceptance is not guaranteed. Dedicated NORDOM-compliant or IEC/CISPR-compliant EMC testing from an internationally accredited laboratory is the most reliable path. The CAFTA-DR alignment provides general familiarity with North American FCC EMC frameworks among Dominican regulators.[INFORMATIONAL] NORDOM EMC standards harmonised with CISPR/IEC apply to wireless and electronic devices in the Dominican Republic; EMC test reports from internationally accredited laboratories are required within the INDOTEL homologación dossier. Chinese GB/CCC EMC reports are not directly recognised. FCC or CE EMC test data from ILAC-accredited laboratories may assist as supporting documentation subject to INDOTEL case-by-case acceptance. Verify current NORDOM standards, INDOTEL dossier requirements, and accepted laboratory accreditations with a qualified Dominican regulatory professional before market entry. DIGENOR — Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference
DIGENOR NORDOM Product Standards and Conformity Assessment — Electrical and Electronic Equipment In China, product standards for electrical and electronic equipment are published by SAC (Standardization Administration of China) as GB (Guobiao) national standards, covering safety, performance, and quality. GB standards for consumer electronics and wireless devices are administered by MIIT and CNCA; compliance is verified through the CCC certification process. China's GB standards are developed within ISO/IEC frameworks and SRRC/MIIT supplementary requirements. Chinese GB product standards are not recognised as NORDOM equivalents by DIGENOR, and CCC conformity marks carry no weight in Dominican customs or product approval processes.SAC (Standardization Administration of China) — publishes GB national standards for electrical and electronic products
CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — mandatory conformity mark for consumer electronics and wireless devices in China under CNCA
GB standards series — Chinese national product standards for electrical/electronic equipment, aligned with IEC/ISO frameworks
Beyond EMC, DIGENOR publishes NORDOM product standards covering performance, safety, and quality requirements for electrical and electronic equipment sold in the Dominican Republic, including wireless and IoT devices. NORDOM standards are developed in alignment with IEC, ISO, and COPANT regional norms, and the Dominican Republic participates in COPANT standard harmonisation across the Americas. While the NORDOM certification mark is not always a statutory prerequisite at the product level for every wireless device category (unlike INDOTEL homologación for radio/telecom equipment), manufacturers and importers may be required to demonstrate conformity with applicable NORDOM standards as part of Dominican customs procedures or as referenced within INDOTEL technical dossier requirements. Spanish-language labelling referencing applicable standards or certifications is required. DIGENOR coordinates with INDOTEL on product conformity across the telecommunications and electronics sectors.DIGENOR (Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad) — Dominican Republic national standards and quality system authority; publishes and administers NORDOM standards
NORDOM product standards — Dominican national product standards for electrical and electronic equipment, harmonised with IEC/ISO/COPANT
COPANT (Comisión Panamericana de Normas Técnicas) — Pan American Standards Commission; regional harmonisation of technical standards across Latin America and Caribbean
Ley 602-77 — establishes DIGENOR mandate and Dominican national standardisation framework
Chinese GB product standards and the CCC conformity mark are not recognised by DIGENOR as NORDOM equivalents. Importers must be prepared to demonstrate compliance with applicable NORDOM standards — or reference IEC/ISO standards upon which NORDOM is based — as part of Dominican customs declarations or INDOTEL technical dossiers. Because NORDOM is closely aligned with IEC/ISO, exporters with IEC/ISO or CE certifications may present those as supporting documentation, but formal NORDOM conformity assessment or DIGENOR recognition is recommended for high-volume imports. Spanish labelling referencing applicable standards is required. The CAFTA-DR trade framework facilitates customs procedures but does not automatically waive product standards compliance.[INFORMATIONAL] DIGENOR NORDOM product standards — harmonised with IEC/ISO/COPANT — apply to electrical and electronic equipment in the Dominican Republic. Chinese GB product standards and CCC marks are not recognised. IEC/ISO or CE certification may assist as supporting documentation given the IEC/ISO basis of NORDOM, but formal NORDOM conformity assessment is recommended for high-volume imports. Spanish labelling referencing applicable standards is required. Verify current NORDOM requirements for your specific wireless device category with DIGENOR and a qualified Dominican regulatory professional before market entry. DIGENOR — Dirección General de Normas y Sistemas de Calidad (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference
Authorized Dominican Importer — RNC / DGII Registration and Local Representative Requirement In China, foreign exporters of electronic goods do not require a local Chinese importer in the same regulatory sense — Chinese domestic distributors and importers operate under standard commercial arrangements. The MIIT NAL (Network Access Licence) for telecom terminal equipment requires a Chinese licence holder but does not impose the same authorized representative model as the Dominican Republic's INDOTEL homologación system. Chinese customs (GACC — General Administration of Customs of China) administers export clearance with standard commercial documentation. There is no direct Chinese equivalent to the Dominican RNC/DGII authorized importer registration requirement.GACC (General Administration of Customs of China) — Chinese export customs authority; administers standard export clearance documentation
MIIT NAL (Network Access Licence) — requires Chinese domestic licence holder for telecom terminal equipment sold in China; no direct equivalent to Dominican authorized importer requirement
Chinese exporters of wireless and IoT devices to the Dominican Republic must engage an authorized Dominican importer or local representative registered with the DGII (Dirección General de Impuestos Internos — Dominican Internal Revenue Directorate) through the RNC (Registro Nacional de Contribuyentes — National Taxpayer Registry). The authorized importer is a named party in the INDOTEL homologación application and bears legal responsibility for ensuring imported products comply with INDOTEL type approval, NORDOM standards, and Dominican customs requirements. Dominican customs (DGA — Dirección General de Aduanas) requires commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin, and — for radio and telecom terminal equipment — the INDOTEL homologación certificate as a condition of clearance. The Dominican Republic is a member of CAFTA-DR (Central America–Dominican Republic–United States Free Trade Agreement), which provides preferential tariff treatment for qualifying goods from the US but does not eliminate regulatory compliance obligations for Chinese exporters. Spanish-language product labelling referencing the authorized Dominican importer's name and address, the INDOTEL homologación number, applicable voltage and frequency, and safety certifications is required.DGII (Dirección General de Impuestos Internos) — Dominican Internal Revenue Directorate; administers RNC (National Taxpayer Registry) for all Dominican business entities including importers
RNC (Registro Nacional de Contribuyentes) — Dominican national taxpayer identification number required for all businesses operating as importers in the Dominican Republic
DGA (Dirección General de Aduanas) — Dominican customs authority; requires INDOTEL homologación certificate for clearance of radio and telecom terminal equipment
CAFTA-DR (Dominican Republic–Central America–United States Free Trade Agreement) — trade framework affecting tariff rates and customs procedures for goods from CAFTA-DR member states
Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98 — establishes requirement for authorized Dominican representative in INDOTEL homologación applications
Chinese exporters have no direct equivalent to the Dominican RNC/DGII authorized importer system and must engage a locally registered Dominican company with a valid RNC number to serve as the named importer and INDOTEL homologación applicant. This entity takes on legal responsibility for regulatory compliance in the Dominican Republic. INDOTEL homologación applications must name the authorized Dominican importer; the certificate is typically issued in the importer's or manufacturer's name. Dominican customs (DGA) requires the INDOTEL homologación certificate for clearance of radio and telecom terminal equipment; shipments lacking the certificate risk detention and return. Spanish-language product labels must include the authorized importer's name and address, the INDOTEL homologación number, and applicable electrical ratings. CAFTA-DR membership does not create preferential treatment for Chinese goods specifically — Chinese exports are subject to standard MFN tariff rates through Santo Domingo or Port of Haina.[INFORMATIONAL] An authorized Dominican importer with valid RNC registration through DGII is required as the named applicant in INDOTEL homologación filings and as the responsible party for regulatory compliance. INDOTEL homologación certificate must be presented to DGA customs for clearance of radio and telecom terminal equipment. Spanish-language labels must include the importer's details, INDOTEL number, and electrical ratings. CAFTA-DR does not create preferential tariff treatment for Chinese goods. Verify current INDOTEL application requirements, DGA customs documentation, and RNC registration procedures with a qualified Dominican regulatory and customs professional before market entry. DGII — Dirección General de Impuestos Internos (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference
INDOTEL Mandatory Homologación — Radio and Telecom Terminal Equipment Type Approval (Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98, INDOTEL Resolutions) In China, wireless devices must comply with MIIT (Ministry of Industry and Information Technology) type-approval requirements under the Radio Regulations and SRRC (State Radio Regulation Commission) radio type approval. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth devices additionally require CCC (China Compulsory Certification) under the CNCA system for consumer electronics. MIIT SRRC approval covers radio frequency parameters; CCC covers safety and EMC. China also requires MIIT Network Access Licence (NAL) for certain telecommunications terminal equipment. GB standards (GB 15629, GB/T 29242, and related Wi-Fi/Bluetooth standards) form the technical basis. Chinese SRRC, CCC, and MIIT NAL are not recognised by INDOTEL and do not substitute for Dominican homologación.SRRC (State Radio Regulation Commission) radio type approval — mandatory radio frequency parameter certification for wireless devices in China
CCC (China Compulsory Certification) — mandatory safety and EMC certification for consumer electronics in China under CNCA
MIIT NAL (Network Access Licence) — required for certain telecom terminal equipment sold in China
GB 15629 series — Chinese radio (Wi-Fi/802.11) technical standards
GB/T 29242 — Chinese Bluetooth standards reference
All radio and telecom terminal equipment — including Wi-Fi routers, Bluetooth devices, IoT hubs, smart speakers, and any device incorporating wireless radio technology — must obtain a mandatory INDOTEL homologación (type approval) certificate issued by the Instituto Dominicano de las Telecomunicaciones (INDOTEL) before import or sale in the Dominican Republic. The legal basis is Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98 and subsequent INDOTEL resolutions. The homologación process requires submission of a technical dossier including accredited laboratory test reports for radio (RF), EMC, and electrical safety; a product description and technical specifications; and a declaration by the authorized Dominican importer or representative. INDOTEL may accept test reports from internationally accredited laboratories (e.g., ILAC-accredited); FCC and CE test reports may be accepted as a supporting basis for some parameters, reducing retesting burden for exporters who already hold those authorisations — but the INDOTEL homologación certificate is a separate Dominican administrative act and is not replaced by FCC, CE, SRRC, or CCC approvals. CCC is specifically not recognised. The INDOTEL homologación certificate number must be displayed on the Spanish-language product label. The Dominican Republic established diplomatic relations with China in 2018 (switching from Taiwan); Chinese electronics exports are growing through Port of Haina and Port of Santo Domingo.Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98 — Dominican Republic telecommunications framework law; establishes mandatory homologación for radio and telecom terminal equipment
INDOTEL resolutions — INDOTEL-issued administrative resolutions specifying homologación procedures, technical requirements, and accepted laboratory accreditations
INDOTEL (Instituto Dominicano de las Telecomunicaciones) — Dominican telecom regulator; issues homologación certificates and sets radio equipment type-approval requirements
Chinese SRRC radio type approval, CCC, and MIIT NAL are not recognised by INDOTEL and do not substitute for Dominican homologación. A separate INDOTEL homologación application must be filed with a technical dossier. FCC and CE test reports may be accepted as supporting data within the INDOTEL dossier, potentially reducing retesting cost for exporters who already hold those authorisations — but the INDOTEL certificate is a separate administrative act and is always required. CCC is specifically not recognised. The INDOTEL homologación certificate number must appear on the Spanish-language product label. Failure to obtain homologación before import or sale is a regulatory violation subject to penalties and product withdrawal in the Dominican Republic. China established diplomatic relations with the Dominican Republic in 2018, creating a growing trade corridor, but regulatory recognition is not automatic.[INFORMATIONAL] INDOTEL homologación under Ley General de Telecomunicaciones 153-98 and INDOTEL resolutions is mandatory for all radio and telecom terminal equipment sold in the Dominican Republic. Chinese SRRC, CCC, and MIIT NAL approvals are not recognised. FCC and CE test reports may assist as supporting data within the INDOTEL dossier but do not replace the Dominican certificate. The homologación number must appear on the Spanish-language label. Verify current INDOTEL application procedures, accepted laboratory accreditations, fee schedules, and dossier requirements with a qualified Dominican regulatory professional before market entry. INDOTEL — Instituto Dominicano de las Telecomunicaciones (Dominican Republic)2026-06-17 · reference

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