Citizens of four Caribbean nations can now live and work freely across each other’s borders, following the launch of a landmark free movement agreement that went into effect Wednesday.
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Barbados, Belize, Dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines signed onto the pact, which allows their nationals to relocate indefinitely without visas or work permits. On arrival, travelers will have their passports stamped—or a digital record made—confirming their right to stay.
Officials say measures are already in place to allow migrants to register for education, health care, and other essential services. “If you can move for work, but your spouse or children cannot access education or health care, the right is hollow,” St. Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves said earlier this week.
Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley emphasized that safeguards are in place to prevent abuse of the system. “Any government may refuse entry to a person who poses a genuine threat to national security,” she said in a national address Tuesday night, noting that crime prevention remains a top priority.
Until now, free movement within the Caribbean Community (Caricom) was largely tied to economic purposes, such as allowing skilled workers to obtain jobs without a work permit. Nationals traveling outside those terms were typically allowed to remain in other member states for up to six months but without the right to work. The new agreement removes those restrictions among the four signatory nations, opening relocation for leisure and family life.
The deal was made possible by a March 2022 Caricom protocol that lets three or more member states deepen cooperation without requiring unanimous support. Jamaica has pledged to join the initiative but has not set a timeline.
A similar arrangement already exists within the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), which includes Dominica and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. However, this marks the first time Caricom members Belize and Barbados are part of such a free movement system.
Regional leaders have long sought full mobility across the Caribbean, seeing it as a step toward deeper integration. For now, the four-nation pact represents the most ambitious leap yet toward that goal.

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