
Barbados, Belize, Dominica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines Ready for Full Free Movement on 1 October 2025
Nationals of these four countries will not be limited to temporary entry of up to six months, or to work under the CARICOM skills regime.
Nationals from these four countries will be able to travel to any of these four countries to reside, work and remain indefinitely, with the right to access emergency and primary health care as well as public primary and secondary education for their children.
CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown, Guyana | Tuesday, 30 September 2025: Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Member States – Barbados, Belize, Dominica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines – will implement full Free Movement of their nationals among themselves from tomorrow, 1 October 2025.
This means that nationals of these four countries will not be limited to temporary entry of up to six months, or to work under the CARICOM skills regime. Nationals from these four countries will be able to travel to any of these four countries to reside, work and remain indefinitely, with the right to access emergency and primary health care as well as public primary and secondary education for their children.

The decision by the four Member States to implement full Free Movement ahead of the other Member States was approved by CARICOM Heads of Government during their meeting in July 2025. This arrangement falls under the Enhanced Cooperation Protocol to the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas which provides for groups of at least three CARICOM Member States to pursue deeper regional integration efforts among themselves, with the option for other Member States to join later.
The four Member States have been meeting to finalize common approaches and have confirmed that the necessary arrangements are in place to support the full free movement of their nationals among the four Member States as of 1 October 2025. Extensive preparations have been undertaken to ensure a smooth and secure rollout of full Free Movement among these four Member States. These include:
- Indefinite Stay at Entry: Nationals of the four participating Member States will receive a stamp or digital record of indefinite stay on arrival.
- Registration: Systems have been established to allow for registration of incoming nationals, enabling access to services such as education and healthcare, and allowing national agencies to plan for any increased demand.
- Security and Health Safeguards: Effective oversight measures are in place to ensure that individuals who pose a threat to national security, public health, or would become a cost to the public are either denied entry or subject to removal. These measures will be supported by the CARICOM Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS) which coordinates Member States’ security cooperation and administers the Advanced Passenger Information System (APIS), which mandates submission of passenger data before travel.
- Complaints Mechanism: Nationals who experience difficulties at ports of entry or after entry may use the CARICOM Complaints Procedure, which is already operational under the CSME. Forms are available at all ports of entry, and complaints will be reviewed within two weeks, with investigations completed within eight weeks, where necessary.
With systems in place and preparations complete, the four countries are ready to manage the new Free Movement arrangements effectively in the best interest of their citizens and the wider Region.
Existing Regime Remains for Other Member States
The other Member States that participate in the CSME and have not signed on to full free movement will continue to facilitate movement of their nationals under the existing regime for skilled workers, for the provision of services and the operation of businesses.
The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) was established on 4 July 1973 with the signing of the Treaty of Chaguaramas, which was revised in 2001 to allow for the establishment of a single market and economy. CARICOM comprises fifteen Member States and six Associate Members and is home to approximately sixteen million citizens, 60% of whom are under 30 years old. CARICOM’s work rests on four main pillars: economic integration; foreign policy coordination; human and social development; and security cooperation.
The members of CARICOM work together to create a Community that is integrated, inclusive and resilient; driven by knowledge, excellence, innovation and productivity; a Community which is a unified and competitive force in the global arena, where every citizen is secure and has the opportunity to realise his or her potential with guaranteed human rights and social justice, and contributes to, and shares in, its economic, social and cultural prosperity.
CARICOM remains one of the best examples of integration in the developing world.
The CARICOM Secretariat, the principal administrative organ of the Community, is headquartered in Georgetown, Guyana.
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Yes but the other countries don’t want to be all in. Selfishness is the problem. Black people need to stop putting blockage in their own path and come together as one, then and only then we will be able to function properly.
Congratulations 👏🎈 to these four islands for coming together I hope the others make the right choice. Over 50 years and these people still can’t get it together. It’s a damn shameful situation.
Blessed Love When Jah for you thats it! 4times attempt to BLOGGGG on FB
Blessed Love ..FULL FREE MOVEMENT takes effect October 1 2025 trust ALL DIASPORA LIVE
AFRICA UNITY>>
FIRST ,Blessed Love HONOR to “Full Free Movement takes place October 1, 2025 trusting All Diaspora will LIVE Africa Unity
RECEIVE
Empress Wispa
2hours ago
and then another share cannot show ATTACHMENT …”The Revolution will not be televised What does that mean?? GIL SCOTT HERON / please see youtube..ANTICONQUISTA
WISPA HENDRICKS facebook..page seals it ..
Blessed Love some shares are time sensitive ..I wanted to share ORIGINAL thought ..at library the wifi up and down but why print the RECOGNITION of FULL FREE MOVEMENT takes effect October 1, 2025 and yet FACE BOOK and your media house overloaded..TRust the BLOG and info is shared THANK you.. I am OVER JOYED but the truth be “it’s time to think about this nation was inclusive in truth..I stayed FOCUS and tried to bypass the SILENCE..thank you to share my REPLY>>
Blessed LOVE
This is such a welcome move. It brings back hope that CARICOM is still alive. But I’m saddened that its the small Islands leading the way. The big Islands like Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica will be the last to do so.