January 2, 2026
- Updated article title to ‘Grenada Visa Guide 2026’ and added 2026-specific guidance
- Added visa-free entry details: over 100 countries allowed up to 90 days
- Included 2026 processing times and fees: tourist 5–15 business days, student/work 4–8 weeks, visitor fees $50–100, work/student $200–500+
- Added 2026 CBI thresholds and rules: $235,000 NTF donation, $270,000 real estate (5-year hold), physical-presence and biometric requirements
- Added overstay penalties and extension specifics: fines start at $50/day, tourist extensions up to 90 days, apply at Immigration Office
(GRENADA) Grenada keeps one of the Caribbean’s most open visitor policies in 2026: many travelers get visa-free entry for up to 90 days, while people planning to work, study, or stay longer must get permission in advance. For families and investors seeking a longer-term option, Citizenship by Investment (CBI) remains a legal route to a Grenadian passport, with stricter checks and new physical-presence rules.

Travel rules turn into real-life stress at airports and consulates, especially for people who assume a hotel booking equals entry. What matters most is your nationality, purpose of travel, and length of stay—not where you live now, not your residency card in another country, and not a school letter on its own.
The first decision: visa-free entry, a visa, or a work/study route
Grenada grants visa-free access to citizens of over 100 countries for tourism, business, or transit stays up to 90 days. The list includes travelers from the United States (🇺🇸), Canada (🇨🇦), the United Kingdom, European Union countries, and Australia. For these travelers, the “application” is mostly about arriving prepared, because admission still happens at the border.
Two common misunderstandings cause problems:
- Permanent residence is not citizenship. A U.S. green card holder still needs to follow Grenada’s rules based on their passport nationality.
- Study plans don’t erase visa rules. Students going to schools such as St. George’s University must meet visa requirements based on nationality, even with an acceptance letter.
To check whether your passport needs a visa, travelers often start with the Grenada embassy’s guidance, including the “who needs a visa” information posted by the Embassy of Grenada in the United States on its official site: Grenada Embassy guidance and consular services.
What border officers typically check during visa-free entry
Even with visa-free entry, Grenada’s officers can ask basic questions to confirm you are a genuine short-term visitor. Arrive with documents you can show quickly, including:
- A passport valid for at least six months beyond entry, with space for stamps
- Proof of where you will stay, like a hotel confirmation
- Evidence of sufficient funds and a return or onward ticket
- A simple itinerary that matches your stated purpose
For many visitors, that’s enough. But if you plan to job hunt, start paid work, or enroll in a program, you’re stepping outside what visa-free entry covers. VisaVerge.com reports that the sharpest problems often happen when travelers blur “business meetings” with “working,” because officers treat paid activity as a different category.
Important: a hotel booking alone is not proof you are eligible to enter for the purpose you state. Border officers focus on nationality, purpose, and length of stay.
A five-step visa process for people who are not visa-exempt
Grenada does not run a fully online visa system for standard travelers in 2026. Applications go through Grenadian embassies, consulates, or the Immigration Division. Expect to plan around mailing time, appointment availability, and document legalization.
- Confirm the correct category before you pay anything. Tourist and short business travel often fits visa-free entry, but study and employment do not.
- Complete the application carefully and consistently. Small mismatches across forms, passports, and letters slow decisions.
- Prepare core documents early. A valid passport, photos, itinerary, accommodation, proof of funds, and any invitation or school or employer letters matter.
- Add the “purpose-specific” clearances. Work, student, and CBI cases typically require police records and medical documentation.
- Submit through the correct office and track timing. Tourist and business visas often take 5–15 business days. Student and work cases commonly take 4–8 weeks.
Applicants planning winter travel should treat these timelines as minimums. A practical planning rule is to apply 2–3 months ahead when you have fixed flights or start dates.
Costs, timeframes, and what “approval” really means
Standard visitor visas are often priced around $50–100 for a single applicant, while student and work applications often run $200–500+, reflecting additional screening and sponsorship.
Grenada expanded background checks in 2026, which is reflected in longer file reviews—especially for first-time travelers and work-linked cases.
- Tourist permissions often cover 30–90 days.
- Work or student permissions commonly run up to 1 year and are renewable.
- Border officers make the final admission decision on arrival and can shorten a stay if answers don’t match documents.
Overstaying carries penalties. Grenada’s overstay fines start at $50 per day, and overstays can also trigger removal and future entry problems. Always track the date written or stamped in your passport, and request an extension before it expires.
Extending a stay inside Grenada without breaking status
If you enter lawfully and need more time, apply before your permission ends at the Grenada Immigration and Passport Office in St. George’s. Bring:
- Proof of funds
- An explanation for the extension
- Supporting documents such as updated accommodation bookings
Typical extension details:
- Tourist extensions are often granted up to 90 extra days
- Extension fees are commonly around $50–100
- Work permits are typically renewed annually, with renewals dependent on employer sponsorship and continued eligibility
Citizenship by Investment (CBI): the long-term pathway with 2026 compliance rules
For people with significant resources who want a durable status solution, Citizenship by Investment (CBI) offers a different track. Instead of applying for repeated visas, successful applicants become Grenadian citizens, with passport access and the right to live in Grenada.
Grenada’s updated 2026 CBI thresholds include:
- A $235,000 non-refundable donation to the National Transformation Fund (NTF), or
- A $270,000 real estate investment, held for 5 years
Common government-set and program fees (guide figures):
| Item | Typical amount |
|---|---|
| NTF donation | $235,000 |
| Real estate minimum | $270,000 (held 5 years) |
| Guide total cost (single applicant) | ≈ $246,500 |
| Guide total cost (family of four) | ≈ $262,000 |
| Application fee | $1,500 per person |
| Due diligence fee | $5,000–$7,500 per adult |
| Processing fee | $1,500 per adult |
Eligibility and dependent inclusion:
- Main applicant must be over 18
- Must show a clean criminal record
- Pass medical checks
- Prove lawful source of funds
- Dependents can include:
- A spouse
- Children under 30
- Parents or grandparents over 55
- Unmarried siblings over 18
Two 2026 compliance changes matter:
- New rule: 30 days of physical presence within five years after citizenship (must be completed to meet compliance)
- Biometric collection becomes part of the process, with implementation described as effective April–June 2026
Processing commonly runs 6–12 months, and interviews can be virtual.
ETIAS and onward travel: a 2026 issue for Grenadian passport holders heading to Europe
Grenada’s passport offers wide mobility, including access to the Schengen area under current short-stay rules. But from mid-2026, Grenadian citizens must obtain ETIAS authorization for many short trips to Europe, with a stated €7 fee.
Travelers can verify requirements through the European Union’s official travel portal: EU ETIAS official information and application guidance.
This change does not affect entry into Grenada, but it affects how Grenadians plan onward trips, including students, business owners, and families who rely on smooth regional travel.
A realistic planning checklist before you book flights
Strong applications look boring because they are consistent and complete. Focus on the basics:
- Match dates across documents. Your hotel, ticket, and letters should tell the same story.
- Show clear funds. Bank statements or sponsor letters should be readable and current.
- Stay inside your category. Meetings and conferences fit short business travel; paid work needs a permit.
- Plan for processing time. Visitor visas can move quickly, but work, study, and CBI cases take longer.
Key practical rules:
- Verify whether your passport is visa-exempt before booking non-refundable travel.
- Carry originals and clear copies of supporting documents for border checks.
- Apply 2–3 months ahead for study, work, or CBI processes; treat 6–12 months as realistic for CBI.
- Monitor passport stamps and extension deadlines to avoid overstay fines or removal proceedings.
Grenada maintains open visitor policies in 2026, granting 90-day visa-free access to many nationalities while enforcing strict rules for work and study. The article details the visa application process, costs, and extension procedures. It also highlights major updates to the Citizenship by Investment program, including new physical presence requirements and the impact of Europe’s ETIAS on Grenadian passport holders.
