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Casa de Campo Resort
La Romana, Dominican Republic

Casa de Campo Resort

About Casa de Campo Resort

Welcome to Casa de Campo La Romana

Sprawling across 7,000 lush acres along the southeastern coast of the Dominican Republic, Casa de Campo La Romana is the Caribbean's most storied luxury resort. Since opening in 1974, this self-contained paradise has hosted everyone from heads of state to Hollywood A-listers, and in 2026 it remains the benchmark against which every other Dominican resort is measured. Think rolling fairways tumbling toward turquoise sea cliffs, a Mediterranean-style marina lined with superyachts, and a 16th-century Tuscan village perched above the Chavón River. This isn't just a hotel — it's a private playground the size of a small town.

What Makes Casa de Campo Special

The scale alone sets Casa de Campo apart. Guests get around in personal golf carts (yours for the duration of your stay), zipping between three championship golf courses, an equestrian center, a shooting club, 13 tennis courts, a private beach, and Altos de Chavón — a meticulously crafted artisan village that looks like it was airlifted from 16th-century Italy. The vibe is country-club elegance rather than all-inclusive bustle. You'll see four generations of Dominican and international families who treat this place like a second home, and the staff often remember their names.

Teeth of the Dog Golf & Other Courses

If you play golf, Teeth of the Dog golf is the reason you're here. Pete Dye carved this 1971 masterpiece out of coral rock by hand, with seven holes literally hugging the Caribbean. Consistently ranked the #1 course in the Caribbean and among the top 50 in the world, it's a bucket-list round.

  • Teeth of the Dog — Greens fees in 2026 run roughly $395–$495 for resort guests, more for non-guests. Book tee times weeks ahead in high season.
  • Dye Fore — A jaw-dropping cliffside layout above the Chavón River with 27 holes.
  • The Links — A more forgiving inland course, great for warming up.

Even non-golfers should walk the first few holes of Teeth of the Dog at sunset; the views are extraordinary.

Altos de Chavón

A short cart ride uphill brings you to Altos de Chavón, a replica Mediterranean village built stone-by-stone in the 1970s by Dominican artisans. Cobblestone lanes wind past art galleries, a small archaeology museum, an excellent design school affiliated with Parsons, and the 5,000-seat Greek amphitheater inaugurated by Frank Sinatra in 1982. Concerts still light it up — check the calendar before your trip. Have dinner at La Piazzetta (refined Italian) or Chilango Taqueria for something casual, then linger on the terraces for the river-canyon views.

La Marina Casa de Campo

The resort's marina is a destination in itself, modeled on Italian Portofino with pastel townhouses, designer boutiques, and a yacht harbor that hosts the Caribbean's most impressive sportfishing fleet. Stroll the promenade in the evening, grab cocktails at SBG or fresh seafood at La Casita, and watch the megayachts pull in. Charter a half-day fishing trip for marlin and mahi, or hop a catamaran day-trip to nearby Catalina or Saona Island.

Polo, Horses & Other Pursuits

Casa de Campo is the heart of Dominican equestrian culture. The polo fields host matches from November through May, and you can watch for free or book a lesson at the polo school. Beyond polo:

  • Equestrian Center — Trail rides through the property, plus dressage and jumping lessons.
  • Shooting Center — 200+ stations for sporting clays, trap, and pigeon, designed by Michael Rose.
  • Minitas Beach — The resort's private crescent of soft sand with calm water, water sports, and a beach restaurant.
  • La Terraza Tennis Center — Home of the late tennis pro Charlie Pasarell; clinics available.
  • Catalina & Saona Island day trips — Pristine offshore cays reached in 30–60 minutes by boat.

Where to Eat

Dining is one of the resort's true strengths. Reserve Minitas Beach Club for grilled lobster with toes in the sand, La Caña by Il Circo for elevated Italian, and Lago for breakfast overlooking the first tee of Teeth of the Dog. At the marina, Causa does excellent Peruvian-Asian fusion, and Peperoni is a long-running favorite for wood-fired pizza and pasta.

Best Time to Visit

The dry season from December through April delivers the postcard weather — sunny days in the low 80s°F (27–29°C), low humidity, and minimal rain. This is also high season, with polo matches in full swing and the marina at its liveliest. Shoulder months of May, June, and November offer better rates and still-excellent weather. Avoid September and October if possible — peak hurricane season and the most humid stretch of the year.

How to Get There

Casa de Campo has its own private airport — La Romana International (LRM) — just five minutes from the resort gates, with seasonal direct flights from New York, Miami, and a few European hubs. Most travelers fly into Punta Cana (PUJ) about 75 minutes east by car, or Santo Domingo (SDQ) about 90 minutes west. The resort arranges private transfers (roughly $180–$250 one-way), or you can pre-book a reputable car service. Once on property, your golf cart is your transportation.

Practical Tips

  • Book your golf cart-accessible villa or hotel room well in advance — the property has 1,700+ accommodations but high season fills up.
  • Bring resort wear — Altos de Chavón restaurants lean smart-casual at dinner.
  • Cash isn't really needed — most charges go to your room. Tip in U.S. dollars or pesos.
  • Buy the resort recreation package if you plan to use multiple amenities; à la carte adds up fast.
  • The sun is intense — even December mornings can burn fair skin in 20 minutes. Reef-safe sunscreen is appreciated.
  • Currency — U.S. dollars are accepted everywhere on property, but ATMs dispense Dominican pesos.

Local Insights

Visit Altos de Chavón on a weekday morning before the cruise-ship day-trippers arrive from La Romana port — you'll have the cobblestone streets nearly to yourself. For Teeth of the Dog, request a late-afternoon tee time so you finish the seaside back nine in golden light. And if you can swing it, time your visit with a polo match Sunday — even spectating is a quintessential Casa de Campo experience, complete with champagne divot-stomping at halftime.

Whether you come for the golf, the marina lifestyle, or simply to disappear into a perfectly manicured 7,000-acre bubble for a week, Casa de Campo La Romana delivers the kind of relaxed luxury that has kept guests returning for half a century.

Highlights

Play Teeth of the Dog golf, Pete Dye's coral-cliff masterpiece ranked the #1 course in the Caribbean.
Wander the cobblestone lanes of Altos de Chavón, a 16th-century-style Mediterranean village above the Chavón River.
Stroll La Marina Casa de Campo for Portofino-inspired dining, designer shopping, and superyacht spotting.
Watch a Sunday polo match on the resort's championship polo fields from November through May.
Spend a beach day at private Minitas Beach or charter a boat to Catalina and Saona Islands.

Location

Casa de Campo ResortView larger map

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