(BARBADOS) Four Caribbean nations—Barbados, Belize, Dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines—have launched a full free movement agreement effective October 1, 2025, giving their citizens the right to live, work, and remain with indefinite stay across the four countries without visas or work permits. Officials describe the move as a pilot within the wider CARICOM project, using an existing legal tool to move faster than the full 15‑member bloc while keeping border safeguards in place.
The change is sweeping. On arrival, nationals of these four states now receive a passport stamp or digital record that confirms the right to indefinite stay, replacing the common six‑month entry limit that used to require extensions, work permits, or residency permits for longer stays.

It also extends to family life: spouses and children can relocate and access essential services, closing a gap that often left families juggling short stays and private fees. Governments have set up registration systems to enroll newcomers so they can access services and so ministries can plan for added demand in hospitals, schools, and housing.
Key Points at a Glance
- Effective date: October 1, 2025
- Who is covered: All nationals of Barbados, Belize, Dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines
- Main benefit: Right to indefinite stay from day one — no visa, no work permit, no residency permit
- Family access: Spouses and children can move and access services
- Services included: Emergency and primary healthcare; public primary and secondary schooling for children
- Legal basis: Enhanced Cooperation Protocol under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas
Policy Changes Overview
- Who is covered: All nationals of the four countries, not just skilled workers.
- What changes at the border: A stamp or digital entry record granting indefinite stay from day one.
- Services included: Access to emergency and primary healthcare and public schooling (primary and secondary) for children.
- Safeguards: Governments retain the right to refuse entry on grounds of national security, public health, or likelihood of becoming a public charge.
- Administration: Each country runs a registration system for incoming nationals to confirm status and connect them with services.
- Redress: A formal complaints process exists at ports of entry and after arrival, with forms available at ports and a set review path.
The legal basis is the Enhanced Cooperation Protocol under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas — a mechanism that lets at least three CARICOM members deepen integration together without waiting for all members to pass matching laws and systems.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, this pathway has become the main channel for moving stalled regional goals forward while keeping the door open to wider adoption later.
Security and Controls
Security agencies say controls remain active. Border screening continues through shared data systems coordinated by the CARICOM Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS), and countries will share information to spot high‑risk travelers.
If officers have reasonable grounds, they can still deny entry on security or health grounds, or if a traveler is likely to become a public charge. The agreement balances open movement with ongoing screening and information sharing.
Impact on Citizens and Governments
For workers:
– A nurse from Dominica can accept a job in Barbados and start right away without waiting months for a permit.
– A Belizean chef can move to St. Vincent and the Grenadines with family and enroll their children in public school from the next term.
– Freelancers and remote workers can settle, open bank accounts, and sign leases without permit uncertainty.
For families:
– The new setup recognizes family unity, allowing spouses and children to move together and access services that were previously difficult to secure under the older CSME model.
For employers and public services:
– Employers gain a larger talent pool (e.g., hotels can hire experienced staff across borders without permit caps).
– Registration systems help governments forecast needs for classrooms, clinic staffing, and housing stock, offering data to guide budget planning.
Broader Objectives and Context
Leaders hope that broader regional options—more jobs, more study paths, easier relocation near home—will help retain skilled professionals who otherwise migrate to North America and Europe. If the pilot runs smoothly, other CARICOM members may join, building toward earlier promises of wider free movement.
CARICOM’s long‑term aims under the Revised Treaty and the CSME framework are public and ongoing; the Secretariat maintains official resources on its integration agenda at the CARICOM Secretariat.
Historical and Regional Notes
- Dominica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines already had similar movement rights through the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS).
- This is the first time Barbados and Belize have joined a full free movement zone, expanding mobility rules beyond OECS and applying them to all citizens (with family members included).
Complaints and Redress
Officials stress that the complaints mechanism matters as much as the promise on paper. When travelers face problems at airports or seaports—confusion over documents, denial of entry, or trouble enrolling children in school—they can:
- Ask for and complete the complaint form available at the port of entry.
- Submit the form on the spot to create a paper trail.
- Follow the review process that aims to correct errors and guide training.
Advocates say this gives people a voice and helps catch where policy and practice do not match.
Core principles summarized:
– Travel and settle with proof of nationality (valid passport) and receive indefinite stay.
– Work is permitted from day one; no extra permit needed.
– Families can move together; children can attend public schools.
– Health needs covered at primary and emergency levels.
– Security checks and data sharing continue.
– Problems can be reported and reviewed through a set process.
Implementation and Practical Steps for Travelers
Practical steps remain straightforward:
– Carry a valid passport from one of the four Caribbean nations.
– Expect a stamp or digital entry note confirming indefinite stay.
– Complete the local registration step if requested.
– Keep records (registration, entry stamp/digital note) for school enrollment and clinic access.
– If a dispute arises at a port, ask for the complaint form and submit it on the spot.
What Governments Will Monitor
Key metrics to watch include:
– School enrollment changes
– Clinic and emergency service usage
– Job placements and labor market shifts
– Border refusals tied to security or health
– Localized pressure points (e.g., sudden housing demand in a district)
If systems hold, momentum may build for a wider regional zone modeled on this pilot. If pressure points emerge, ministries can adjust support and planning.
Final Takeaway
The launch marks a notable shift in Caribbean integration: rules designed for real families, real workers, and real life, providing open doors backed by planned registration, complaint mechanisms, and security checks. This four‑nation pilot aims to demonstrate a workable path forward for broader free movement across CARICOM.
This Article in a Nutshell
Beginning October 1, 2025, Barbados, Belize, Dominica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines will permit their nationals to live, work and remain indefinitely across the four countries without visas or work permits. Arrivals receive a passport stamp or digital entry record confirming indefinite stay and must complete local registration to access services such as emergency and primary healthcare and public primary and secondary education for children. The pilot relies on the Enhanced Cooperation Protocol under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas, preserves security and public‑health safeguards, and uses IMPACS‑coordinated data sharing. Authorities implemented complaint processes at ports to address denials or administrative errors. The pilot aims to retain talent, expand labor mobility, and provide a model for wider CARICOM adoption if successful.