Most investors who research a second passport eventually ask the same question: can I get my money back? With a government fund donation, the answer is no. That capital is gone. But with Caribbean real estate under a Citizenship by Investment (CBI) program, the answer is a clear yes, and in some cases, your property generates rental income while you wait.
That combination, a second passport plus a recoverable, income-producing asset, is what separates the real estate route from every other citizenship option available today.
With a donation, you receive citizenship. Full stop. With approved Caribbean real estate, you receive the same citizenship plus an asset that earns rental yield during the holding period and can be sold afterward to recover most of your original capital. For disciplined capital allocators, that structural difference is decisive.
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When you donate to a national fund, you receive citizenship and a powerful passport. Full stop. The capital is non-refundable and produces nothing.
When you invest in approved Caribbean real estate, you receive exactly the same citizenship and passport, plus an asset that can generate rental yields during the holding period, and can be sold afterward to recover a significant portion of your original investment. For high-net-worth individuals who allocate capital with discipline, this structural difference is decisive.
Caribbean CBI real estate investments are directed exclusively into government-approved developments, typically luxury resorts, branded hotels, and premium villa communities. These are not speculative buys in an opaque market. They are curated, vetted projects tied to the Caribbean's primary economic engine: tourism. The Caribbean welcomed tens of millions of visitors annually before the pandemic disruption and has recovered strongly since. The demand side of this asset class is structural, not cyclical.
So which Caribbean countries actually offer this real estate plus ROI combination in 2026? Four stand out.
If your priority is getting capital back as quickly as possible, Dominica has the most investor-friendly structure in the Caribbean. The USD 200,000 minimum is the lowest real estate threshold across all five Caribbean CBI programs, and the three-year holding period before you can sell on the open market is the shortest available anywhere in the region.
Government-approved projects in Dominica include world-class eco-luxury developments like Secret Bay, a six-star all-villa resort recognized internationally for its sustainable design, as well as the InterContinental Dominica Cabrits Resort and Spa, Tranquility Beach Resort (a Curio Collection by Hilton), and several other branded hospitality developments. Investors typically acquire a qualifying share in these projects, with professional management handling day-to-day operations. Rental income from these holdings averages 2% to 5% per year, with high-performing projects in strong tourism quarters reaching the upper end of that range.
The United States downgraded B-1/B-2 visa validity for Dominican passport holders from ten years multiple-entry to three months single-entry beginning January 2026, and included Dominica in a broader immigrant visa freeze. These are material facts that HNW investors should weigh carefully with qualified legal counsel.
However, for investors whose mobility priorities are centered on the Schengen Area, the UK, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, and broader emerging market access, the Dominican passport remains highly functional and the program continues to be one of the most established and transparent in the world, operating without interruption since 1993. Dominica imposes no taxes on worldwide income, capital gains, inheritance, or wealth for non-residents, which strengthens the overall financial case.
Grenada holds a distinction no other Caribbean CBI program can claim: it is the only Caribbean nation with a bilateral E-2 Investor Visa Treaty with the United States. This single fact makes Grenada the most strategically valuable second citizenship in the Caribbean for a specific type of investor.
Once you hold a Grenadian passport, you may be eligible to apply for a US E-2 Treaty Investor Visa, which allows you to establish or acquire a business in the United States and live there with your family. Your spouse gains the right to work freely anywhere in the US. Your children can attend American schools and universities as dependents. For entrepreneurs and business families from countries that are not E-2 treaty countries, India, China, South Africa, and Vietnam among them, Grenada citizenship functions as a legal gateway to the US market that no other Caribbean passport provides.
The real estate investment itself starts at USD 270,000 for a qualifying share in a government-approved tourism development, with a five-year holding period. During that five years, approved projects typically produce rental yields of approximately 4% per annum. After the five-year hold, the property can be sold and your citizenship remains intact. There are no taxes on foreign income, dividends, royalties, capital gains, or inheritance under Grenada's tax framework, which makes holding and exiting the real estate position structurally efficient.
Approved developments for 2026 include luxury resort projects at Grand Anse Beach and other premium locations, all managed by international hospitality operators. For investors who want the US angle alongside a recoverable real estate asset, there is no comparable option in the Caribbean.
The application process takes approximately six to eight months, is fully remote, and includes your spouse, children under 30, unmarried siblings, parents, and grandparents.
Antigua and Barbuda has one of the most developed and transparent real estate markets in the Eastern Caribbean, and its CBI program reflects that. Government-approved CBI developments are exclusively luxury-grade, beachfront villas, branded resort residences, and serviced apartments within established international hospitality developments. All projects undergo rigorous vetting by the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) for construction quality, ownership structure, financial integrity, and legal compliance.
The minimum investment of USD 300,000 sits above Dominica and Grenada, but Antigua's tourism infrastructure and real estate fundamentals support stronger long-term capital appreciation and rental performance. The island has a well-established high-end travel market and benefits from consistent direct air links to North America and Europe. For investors who want not just citizenship and a short-term yield, but a real estate asset they would be genuinely happy to own, Antigua's approved project portfolio is the most compelling in the region.
The program allows inclusion of unmarried siblings alongside spouses, children under 30, parents, and grandparents over 55. This is one of the broadest family definitions among all Caribbean CBI programs, and for investors with complex family structures, that flexibility has real value.
After the five-year holding period, the property can be sold while citizenship is retained. And unlike some programs, Antigua approved real estate investments include private homes and luxury resort units, giving investors genuine flexibility in what they acquire.
Established in 1984, the St. Kitts and Nevis program is the longest-running citizenship by investment program in the world. For investors who place premium value on program credibility, institutional depth, and passport strength, no other Caribbean option matches it.
The real estate investment threshold was reduced in October 2024 from USD 400,000 to USD 325,000 for approved tourism developments, making the program meaningfully more accessible than it was previously. Investors can acquire shares in luxury resorts, including internationally branded properties and premium resort communities, and earn rental income of 4% to 5% annually during the holding period. After seven years, the property can be sold and citizenship is retained.
The seven-year hold is the longest in the Caribbean, and that is worth acknowledging honestly. For investors who want capital back in three or five years, St. Kitts is not the right fit. But for investors who are comfortable with a longer horizon and want the most reputable Caribbean passport available, the math works: seven years of 4% to 5% annual rental income meaningfully reduces the net cost of the citizenship, and the St. Kitts passport's access to 150+ countries commands a premium in the global mobility market.
From April 2026, the St. Kitts CBI program introduced mandatory biometric collection for all applicants, a development that strengthens the integrity of the passport and signals long-term program sustainability. Virtual interviews are mandatory for all main applicants and dependents aged 16 and above. These measures are not obstacles; they are the mechanisms that keep the St. Kitts passport valuable.
St. Kitts and Nevis imposes no personal income tax, no capital gains tax, no inheritance tax, and no wealth tax, making it one of the cleanest tax environments for HNW individuals globally.
★ indicates the strongest performer on that specific criterion
What all four share is the same core advantage: you are not just paying for a passport. You are acquiring a real, income-producing asset in one of the world's most desirable tourism markets, with the passport effectively priced into the deal.
One element that many comparative analyses underweight is the tax efficiency of Caribbean CBI real estate. All four programs operate within jurisdictions that impose no tax on:
Foreign income and worldwide income for non-residents
Capital gains
Inheritance and estate
Wealth tax
This means rental income generated during the holding period, and any capital gains at exit, are untaxed within the jurisdiction. For investors domiciled in high-tax environments, the after-tax return on Caribbean CBI real estate is structurally more attractive than the headline yield figures alone suggest. Investors should work with qualified international tax counsel to understand the full cross-border picture, as home-country tax rules vary significantly.
A question investors often have is how rigorous the vetting process has become. The honest answer is: substantially more rigorous than it was five years ago.
Following the 2024 Memorandum of Agreement among Caribbean CBI nations and the September 2025 ECCIRA agreement establishing the Eastern Caribbean Citizenship by Investment Regulatory Authority, all five programs now operate under harmonized due diligence standards. Background investigations are commissioned by the government and conducted by independent firms, including Exiger, S-RM, and BDO, across multiple jurisdictions.
Criminal history
Source of funds and wealth
PEP (Politically Exposed Persons) status
International watchlists and sanctions
Adverse media screening
Developer and project approval scrutiny for real estate
For legitimately wealthy individuals with clean backgrounds and well-documented source of funds, this process is straightforward. It does involve time and document preparation. Expect three to four months of document collection. But it is not an adversarial process. It is the mechanism that preserves the value of the passport you are acquiring.
Mandatory virtual interviews for all applicants aged 16 and above are now standard across the Caribbean, a development that adds a human verification layer and further protects the long-term reputation of these programs.
The difference between a well-structured Caribbean CBI real estate investment and a poorly structured one often comes down to who guides you through it. Program rules are precise, holding period calculations are specific, resale restrictions vary by whether the buyer is also a CBI applicant, and some approved project lists change over time. The wrong real estate selection can complicate an exit.
At High Net Worth Immigration, we work exclusively with HNW investors who approach Caribbean citizenship as a strategic capital decision, not a checkbox. Our role is to match the right program with the right investor profile, identify the real estate projects that align with your exit horizon and yield expectations, and manage the application process through to passport in hand.
If you are evaluating Caribbean citizenship as a genuine component of your wealth structure, it is a conversation worth having with a team that has done this before.
Yes. All four programs covered here permit the sale of the qualifying property after the relevant holding period, three years in Dominica, five years in Grenada and Antigua, and seven years in St. Kitts. The sale does not affect your citizenship. You keep the passport; you recover the capital. Rental income during the holding period reduces your net holding cost further.
In most cases, yes. Government-approved projects are professionally managed hospitality or resort developments. Investors typically receive a share of rental income proportional to their ownership stake, ranging from approximately 2% to 5% per year depending on the project and tourism performance.
Grenada, without exception. It is the only Caribbean program whose citizens are eligible for the US E-2 Treaty Investor Visa, enabling you to establish and operate a business in the United States.
Yes. All five Caribbean CBI programs are established by national legislation and administered by government-mandated Citizenship by Investment Units. They are regulated, audited, and internationally recognized pathways to citizenship, not gray market arrangements. The 2024 regional Memorandum of Agreement and the 2025 ECCIRA agreement have further strengthened compliance standards across all programs.
Processing times in 2026 range from approximately four to six months for St. Kitts and Nevis (currently the fastest in the region) to six to nine months for Dominica, Grenada, and Antigua. These timelines include due diligence, approval in principle, investment completion, and passport issuance.
Ready to evaluate your options? Contact High Net Worth Immigration for a confidential consultation tailored to your goals, family structure, and investment horizon.
If you want the shortest hold, Dominica gives you three years and a $200K entry. If you need the US market, Grenada is the only E-2-eligible Caribbean option. If your family is large and complex, Antigua's breadth of inclusion is unmatched. And if passport strength is non-negotiable, St. Kitts and Nevis has been the gold standard since 1984. At High Net Worth Immigration, we work exclusively with investors who treat Caribbean citizenship as a capital decision and expect to be matched with the right program for their specific exit horizon, yield expectations, and mobility needs. Book a confidential consultation today.