At a Glance
The Yuna River in the Cibao and Eastern regions is currently experiencing significant flooding, with major overflows causing community isolation and infrastructure damage across several provinces including Duarte and Monte Plata.
Status & Severity
The river is currently in a Moderate to Major flood stage. While the Emergency Operations Center (COE) has begun to downgrade some alerts from the peak red status seen earlier this week, the Yuna remains a high-risk zone. Water levels in the lower basin are retreating slowly due to heavy sediment and downstream saturation.
Affected Communities & Regions
Duarte: Multiple communities remain isolated in the Bajo Yuna region due to the river’s expansion.
Monte Plata: Severe rural flooding reported near river junctions, impacting local road access.
Monseñor Nouel: Rescue operations were recently conducted after the Yuna swept through residential sectors in Bonao.
Sánchez Ramírez: Agricultural zones surrounding the river are heavily inundated.
Santiago Rodríguez: Maintains a yellow alert status as tributaries continue to feed high volumes into the main channel.
Local Landmarks & Interest
Juan Pablo Duarte Bridge: A critical monitoring point where authorities are tracking debris accumulation and flow velocity.
Bajo Yuna Rice Fields: This vital agricultural hub is currently under several feet of water, threatening the regional harvest.
Hatillo Dam: Hydrologists are managing controlled releases to prevent the reservoir from reaching critical overflow capacity.
Data Sources & Verification
Information compiled from the Emergency Operations Center (COE), the Dominican Institute of Meteorology (INDOMET), local station data in the Duarte Province, and verified on-the-ground visual reports from the Civil Defense.
Historical Comparison
This event is currently comparable to the significant flooding seen in April 2020, with over 30,000 people displaced nationwide. Check our archives for more Dominican Republic river data.
Regional Context
The current crisis underscores a growing trend in the Caribbean where natural weather patterns collide with human-altered landscapes. The severity of the Yuna’s overflow in urban centers like Bonao is not just a result of the April 2026 trough, but also a reflection of how local development affects drainage. For a deeper look at how infrastructure changes the way water moves through our communities, read The River Mixer’s Guide to Human-Driven Flooding: How Engineering and Urban Planning Shape Our Rivers.





