Wealthy families are no longer asking whether to secure a second passport. They are asking which one. And in 2026, the Caribbean citizenship by investment programs are still wins on a metric that matters most for capital allocators: speed-to-citizenship per dollar deployed.
Five island nations, five distinct programs, one regional rulebook that just got tougher. This guide walks through every active program, the real numbers, the recent reforms, and the trade-offs that matter when you are writing the check.
Why the Caribbean Still Dominates the Second Passport Conversation in 2026
The Caribbean accounts for the lion's share of global citizenship-by-investment applications, and the trend keeps accelerating. U.S. nationals alone made up nearly a third of all global CBI applications processed by Henley & Partners in Q1 2026, with much of that flow moving toward the Caribbean. That is a roughly twenty-four-fold jump in American demand since 2018.
The Caribbean Five deliver a passport in months, not years
None tax foreign-source income, inheritance, capital gains, or wealth
All five are full CARICOM members — regional mobility on top of global mobility
But the landscape changed materially in 2024 and again in 2026. Pricing was harmonized, due diligence became stricter, biometrics are now standard, and two programs lost UK visa-free access. Those changes reward investors who understand the program details rather than chasing yesterday's headline numbers.
The Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Landscape: A Quick Map Before We Go Deep
What is Caribbean citizenship by investment? In plain terms, it is a legal route that grants you full citizenship of a sovereign Caribbean nation in exchange for a qualifying contribution to that country's economy. You do not have to relocate, you keep your existing citizenship, and the new citizenship passes to your descendants.
Five Caribbean countries that offer citizenship by investment remain active in 2026: St. Kitts and Nevis (the original, launched 1984), Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, and Saint Lucia. The five Eastern Caribbean states jointly set a regional minimum investment floor of US$200,000 effective July 1, 2024, and they have continued to coordinate standards since. There is no sixth Caribbean island in this category right now. Programs like Vanuatu exist outside the Caribbean and play by different rules.
St. Kitts and Nevis Citizenship by Investment: The Original, Still the Most Prestigious
St. Kitts and Nevis launched the world's first CBI program in 1984. It has held the number one spot on the CBI Index for five consecutive years. For high net worth investors, this matters because banks and immigration authorities recognize the program's age and integrity, which translates to fewer compliance friction points when you later open accounts, apply for U.S. or Schengen visas, or relocate businesses.
Non-refundable. Single applicant or family of up to four.
Plus $25,000+ government fee. Minimum seven-year hold for resale.
Also Public Benefit Option (PBO) for specific approved projects.
- ◆ Mandatory biometric data collection began April 14, 2026. Existing citizens must enroll by July 31, 2027.
- ◆ Age limit for dependent children raised to 30.
- ◆ Education requirement for adult dependents dropped; focus now on financial dependence.
- ◆ Stronger "genuine link" expectations signaled, including potential physical presence requirements not yet finalized.
Single applicants and small families who want the strongest brand recognition and the fastest processing, and who do not need visa-free access to China. The dependent age limit of 30 makes this a fit for parents with adult children in graduate school or early careers.
Antigua and Barbuda Citizenship by Investment: Best Value for Large Families
If you are bringing a multi-generational application, Antigua quietly outperforms the rest of the field. The University of the West Indies Fund option, designed specifically for families of six or more, includes a one-year tuition scholarship at UWI for one family member. That is a hard benefit you cannot get anywhere else in the region.
For family of up to four, plus $10,000 per additional dependent.
Processing fees included. Includes one-year UWI tuition scholarship — unique in the region.
Approved project. Five-year hold.
Or $400,000 joint with $5M minimum total project.
Antigua is the only Caribbean CBI program with a physical visit requirement. New citizens must spend at least five days in Antigua within the first five years to renew the passport. For some investors, that is a genuine constraint. For others, it is an excuse to visit one of the prettiest islands in the Caribbean.
Families of five to ten people, investors who want a real estate position they can actually use, and entrepreneurs who plan to incorporate a business in the country. The crypto-friendly regulatory environment is also a quiet draw for digital asset holders.
Dominica Citizenship by Investment: The Cheapest Established Program in 2026
Dominica is where the math gets interesting for solo investors and families of four or fewer. At US$200,000 for the Economic Diversification Fund (EDF) contribution, it remains the lowest entry point of any ECCIRA-regulated Caribbean CBI program in 2026.
Regional floor minimum.
Contribution doesn't increase past four. Only fees rise.
Approved project. Three-year hold — shortest in the region.
The UK revoked Dominica's visa-free access in July 2023. Dominica citizens now need a full UK visit visa. If UK access is in your top three priorities, Dominica is not your program.
Cost-conscious solo applicants, families of four or smaller, investors targeting the U.S. via E-2, and those who value China and Schengen access over UK access. The shorter three-year real estate hold is also attractive if you want to recycle capital faster than the rest of the region allows.
Grenada Citizenship by Investment: The Only Program with U.S. E-2 Eligibility and China Access
If your real goal is to live and run a business in the United States without going through the EB-5 queue, Grenada is in a category of one. It is the only Caribbean country with an active E-2 Investor Visa Treaty with the United States, signed in 1989 and operational ever since.
Non-refundable. Includes main applicant and up to four family members.
Approved tourism accommodation. Five-year hold.
Minimum.
You invest a minimum of roughly US$100,000 in a U.S. business (real-world cases typically run US$150,000 and up for credibility), file the E-2 application, and receive a five-year renewable visa. There is no cap, no lottery, and no decade-long queue like the EB-5 system. Total time from starting Grenada CBI to landing in the U.S. on an E-2 is typically eight to twelve months. Your spouse can work freely anywhere in the country, and your children attend U.S. schools as dependents.
Anyone whose endgame includes living, working, or schooling in the United States but who is not from an E-2 treaty country (India, China, Pakistan, Vietnam, South Africa, and many Middle Eastern nations all fall outside the treaty list). Grenada is the bridge.
Saint Lucia Citizenship by Investment: The Most Flexible Program, With a New 2026 Limitation
Saint Lucia entered the CBI market last among the five, in 2015, and it built the most flexible menu of any Caribbean program: four distinct investment routes, including a refundable government bond option you will not find elsewhere.
Non-refundable. Up to three dependents.
Approved projects. Five-year hold.
+ $50,000 government fee. Five-year hold. Fully refundable. Unique in the region.
$3.5M project min. Or $3.5M solo.
Saint Lucia lost UK visa-free access on March 5, 2026. The UK Home Office cited concerns about the CBI program's rapid growth and rising asylum claims. A six-week transition window ended April 16, 2026. Saint Lucian citizens now need a full UK Standard Visitor Visa, even for airport transit. If you applied for Saint Lucia citizenship before March 5 with UK access as your driver, your second passport just delivered less than promised. That is a real risk every investor should price into the decision.
Investors who want a refundable structure (the bond option), families who value flexible investment paths, and applicants who do not prioritize UK travel.
Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Comparison: 2026 At-a-Glance
| Program | Min. Donation | Min. Real Estate | Processing | Visa-Free | UK | E-2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. Kitts and Nevis | $250,000 | $325,000 | 3 to 6 months | ~153 | Yes (ETA) | No |
| Antigua and Barbuda | $230,000 | $300,000 | 4 to 6 months | ~155 | Yes (ETA) | No |
| Dominica | $200,000 | $200,000 | 3 to 9 months | ~140 | Visa req. | Yes |
| Grenada | $235,000 | $270,000 | 4 to 8 months | ~148 | Yes (ETA) | Yes |
| Saint Lucia | $240,000 | $300,000 | 3 to 9 months | ~145 | Visa req. | No |
The headline minimums are only part of the story. Add government fees, due diligence fees (US$7,500 per applicant 17+ in most programs), passport fees, oath fees, and legal fees, and your true all-in cost runs roughly US$15,000 to US$30,000 above the headline number for a single applicant, and significantly more for larger families.
Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Minimum Investment Amounts 2026: What Actually Hits Your Bank Account
When clients ask about Caribbean citizenship by investment cost, they usually quote the minimum donation. That number is misleading. Here is what a single applicant should actually budget on a clean file in 2026 under the donation route:
For a family of four, the spread widens. Dominica's EDF route runs about US$276,500 all-in, while St. Kitts can climb past US$300,000 depending on dependent ages. Why does this matter? Because some investors choose Dominica believing they will save US$50,000, only to find that family composition closes most of the gap. Total family cost (not headline minimum) is the right metric for serious budgeting.
Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Processing Time 2026: How Fast Can You Actually Get a Passport?
The fastest Caribbean CBI processing times in 2026 are running roughly three to six months for clean files across all five programs. St. Kitts and Nevis is the fastest performer when documentation is in order. Antigua has the longest current backlogs because of high application volumes from U.S. nationals.
But "processing time" only measures one phase. The full timeline from initial consultation to passport in hand typically looks like this:
Due diligence pre-screening
Document preparation
CIU submission and processing
Oath of allegiance
Passport issuance — couriered to you
Realistic total: six to nine months from your first call to picking up your passport, assuming clean documentation. Anyone promising 60 days end-to-end is either selling you something or working on an exceptionally simple file.
The 2026 Regulatory Reset: What Changed and What It Means for You
The five Eastern Caribbean states agreed in 2024 to a coordinated framework that has now matured in 2026. The most important elements:
The US$200,000 regional floor became binding July 1, 2024 — the baseline for every program
Mandatory virtual interviews for all main applicants and dependents 16 and over
Biometric data collection (fingerprints and facial recognition) rolling out across the region. St. Kitts leading from April 14, 2026.
Restricted nationality lists have tightened: Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Russia, Belarus, Yemen, and Sudan face outright bans or enhanced scrutiny in most programs.
A regional regulatory body for Caribbean CBI is being launched in 2026 to coordinate vetting standards.
The days of "fast and easy" are over. Expect more documentation, more interviews, and longer timelines than your friend who applied in 2022 experienced. But the programs are becoming more credible to banks, EU authorities, and U.S. immigration officers. Tighter screening protects the value of your passport. The reforms are a net positive for serious applicants and a net negative for those looking for shortcuts.
Caribbean Islands Citizenship by Investment: Choosing the Right Program for Your Situation
There is no universal "best" Caribbean program. The right answer depends on your specific goals.
St. Kitts and Nevis or Antigua and Barbuda
Dominica
Grenada (only E-2 option with UK access) or Dominica (E-2 eligible but no UK)
Saint Lucia's bond option or real estate routes with shorter holding periods
Antigua's UWI Fund
Dominica (three years vs. five elsewhere)
Grenada, Dominica, or Antigua. St. Kitts and Saint Lucia do not offer this.
Yes, in all five programs, though age thresholds vary. St. Kitts and Antigua require parents to be 55+. Grenada has no age threshold but requires financial dependence. Adding parents adds cost, typically US$25,000 to US$50,000 per parent depending on the program.
Caribbean Second Passport Tax Benefits: Why HNW Investors Care
Every Caribbean CBI country runs a similar tax framework: no tax on worldwide income, no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, no wealth tax, and no gift tax. Local-source income earned inside the country is taxed, but if you are not relocating, that does not affect you.
It does not change your tax residency. If you are a U.S. citizen, you still file with the IRS. If you are tax resident in the UK, India, or Canada, you remain so until you take additional steps to relocate physically. Caribbean citizenship is a tool that opens new tax residency options. It is not a tax residency in itself. The Caribbean passport is the mobility instrument. The tax planning is a separate workstream that requires a CPA or tax attorney in your home jurisdiction.
Working With a Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Agent: Why It Matters
By law, you cannot apply to any of the five Caribbean CBI programs directly. Every application must be submitted through a government-licensed authorized agent. This is non-negotiable across all five programs.
A competent Caribbean citizenship by investment agent does three things that protect you: pre-application due diligence (catching issues before the CIU does), document preparation (translation, apostille, source-of-funds files), and project vetting on the real estate side. The last point is critical. Not every "approved" project is built. Some have stalled. A good agent has actual sight of which developments are delivering and which are not.
At High Net Worth Immigration, we work exclusively with HNW families on Caribbean and global mobility planning. The investors we serve typically have multiple objectives layered into one application: passport optimization, U.S. or EU access pathways, tax residency planning, business structuring, and intergenerational planning. That is where authorized agent work becomes meaningful, beyond just submitting paperwork.
The Caribbean CBI Application Process: A Step-by-Step Walkthrough
The process is more standardized across the region than most people assume. Here is what every applicant goes through:
Goals, family composition, budget, and timeline discussed with your agent.
Agent runs preliminary background checks before submitting anything to the government. This catches issues that would otherwise cause rejection.
Passports, birth certificates, marriage certificates, police clearances from every country lived in for 12+ months in the past decade, medical reports (including HIV test in St. Kitts), source of funds, bank statements. Everything must be apostilled and translated where applicable.
Agent files on your behalf to the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU). All applicants 16+ participate in mandatory virtual interview.
Third-party firms run checks. Approval-in-principle typically comes three to six months in.
You make the donation or close the real estate purchase only after pre-approval. Your capital is protected.
Typically virtual. Passport is couriered to you.
Common Investor Questions We Hear at High Net Worth Immigration
Yes, in all five jurisdictions. Each program is established by national legislation and administered by a government Citizenship by Investment Unit. You are not buying a passport; you are making a qualifying economic contribution that qualifies you for citizenship by naturalization under the country's laws.
No. All five Caribbean CBI countries permit dual or multiple citizenship.
That depends on your home country. Some jurisdictions require disclosure of foreign citizenship (India, for example, prohibits dual citizenship for adults). Others do not. This is a question for your local attorney before you apply, not after.
Yes, but only under specific conditions: fraud in the application, material misrepresentation, criminal activity that brings the country into disrepute, or threats to national security. Citizenship obtained honestly with accurate documentation is permanent.
This is a fair concern given the regulatory turbulence. Existing applications are processed under the rules in effect at the time of submission, and existing citizens retain their status. Cyprus, Malta, and other historical programs that closed or paused did so on a forward-looking basis. The Caribbean Five remain fully operational in 2026.
Where the Caribbean CBI Conversation Goes Next
The next twelve to eighteen months will bring further changes. A regional Caribbean CBI regulator is being built. Mandatory residency requirements (currently postponed) may eventually be introduced. Application volumes from U.S. nationals will likely continue to grow, which will pressure processing times. Some programs may introduce annual quotas.
The practical implication for any investor on the fence: the cost and friction of Caribbean citizenship will likely rise, not fall, through the rest of the decade. Investors who act on a clean strategic plan in 2026 are pricing in today's rules. Those who wait are pricing in unknown future rules.
Your second passport is not an expense. It is a strategic asset. Make sure it earns its place in your portfolio.
Ready to Build Your Caribbean Second Passport Strategy?
The right Caribbean citizenship by investment program depends on factors no comparison table can capture: your family structure, your tax position, your business interests, where your children will study, and where you might live in five years. Choosing the wrong program is expensive in money and time. Choosing the right one is one of the most leveraged decisions a globally minded family can make. At High Net Worth Immigration, we work with families and investors who need to get this right the first time — including U.S. access pathways, EU mobility planning, and intergenerational wealth structuring. Let's have a confidential conversation.
