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posted 3 hours ago
Last reviewed: 18 June 2026
Understanding how to buy property in Saint Kitts and Nevis is essential for any foreign individual, corporate entity or Citizenship by Investment (CBI) applicant preparing to transact in the Federation. Foreigners are permitted to purchase real estate on both islands, but most non‑citizen buyers must first obtain a Land Holding (Alien) Licence from the Government before title can be transferred. The conveyancing process involves several regulated stages, from title searches and licence applications through to stamping, registration and, where the purchase is linked to a CBI application, compliance with the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) reporting framework.
This guide sets out the complete procedure, the documents needed, the costs involved and the key 2026 rule changes that now affect timelines and due diligence obligations for foreign purchasers.
The answer to the most common question, can foreigners buy property in St Kitts and Nevis?, is yes. United States citizens, EU nationals, Commonwealth passport holders and all other foreign nationals may purchase freehold or leasehold property on either island. The requirement that distinguishes a foreign purchase from a domestic one is the Land Holding (Alien) Licence, sometimes referred to as the Alien Landholding License. This government‑issued permit authorises a non‑citizen to hold an interest in land.
Where the property is part of a CIU‑approved development, additional CBI due diligence and developer pre‑approval steps apply. In broad terms, the process involves the following stages:
The 2026 CBI regulatory updates have reinforced developer reporting obligations and tightened purchaser KYC requirements, adding extra steps and potentially extending processing windows. These changes are detailed in a dedicated section below.
Any person who is not a citizen of Saint Kitts and Nevis, and any company in which a non‑citizen holds shares, is required to obtain a Land Holding (Alien) Licence before acquiring an interest in land. This requirement applies whether the purchaser is buying a residential villa, a beachfront condominium, undeveloped land or a commercial property. The licence is granted by the Government and historically attracts a fee calculated as a percentage of the purchase price. Buyers should confirm the current licence fee with their local attorney, as the rate is commonly cited at approximately 10 per cent of the property value by industry sources, though the precise figure should be verified against the relevant legislation and CIU guidance.
If the property forms part of a CIU‑approved development and the buyer intends to use the purchase to qualify for citizenship, additional requirements apply. The development itself must be pre‑approved by the CIU, and the minimum investment threshold must be met. The CIU sets and periodically updates these thresholds, buyers and their legal advisers should verify the current minimum directly with the CIU before committing funds. The developer is also subject to reporting obligations to the CIU regarding each sale.
Foreign buyers may choose to acquire property through a locally incorporated or registered company. Corporate ownership can offer structuring benefits, including simplified future transfers and estate planning advantages. However, buying through a company triggers additional filings with the Registrar of Companies and may require separate KYC verification of beneficial owners. The Land Holding Licence requirement applies equally to corporate purchasers with non‑citizen shareholders.
| Buyer type | Land Holding Licence required? | CIU KYC required? | Additional notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foreign individual (non‑CBI) | Yes | No | Standard conveyancing process |
| Foreign individual (CBI applicant) | Yes | Yes | Must buy CIU‑approved development; minimum threshold applies |
| Foreign‑owned company | Yes | If CBI‑linked | Extra company registration and beneficial‑ownership filings |
| Citizen of St Kitts & Nevis | No | No | Standard domestic purchase |
The following six steps represent the standard conveyancing procedure for a foreign buyer. Each step identifies the responsible party, the typical duration and the key actions involved.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Instruct local lawyer & order title search | Buyer (via counsel) | 1–2 weeks to instruct; 1–2 weeks for title search |
| 2. Negotiate contract & pay reservation deposit | Buyer / Seller / Agent / Lawyer | 1–3 weeks |
| 3. Apply for Land Holding (Alien) Licence & CIU KYC (if applicable) | Buyer’s lawyer (files) / CIU (processes) | 4–12 weeks |
| 4. Exchange contracts, complete & transfer funds | Buyer / Conveyancer / Seller | 2–6 weeks after licence cleared |
| 5. Register title & pay stamp duty and transfer taxes | Conveyancer / Lands & Surveys / Revenue | 2–8 weeks |
| 6. Developer & CIU reporting / holding‑period compliance (CBI only) | Developer / CIU / Buyer | Ongoing per CIU rules |
Engage a local attorney with real‑estate and conveyancing experience before committing any deposit. Your lawyer will request the seller’s title documents and order a title search at the Lands & Surveys Department. The title search confirms the registered owner, identifies any encumbrances, mortgages, caveats or liens, and verifies the boundaries of the property. This step also involves a preliminary review of the proposed contract terms and the identification of any planning or zoning restrictions affecting the land. Allow 1–2 weeks to instruct counsel and a further 1–2 weeks for the title search to be completed.
Once the title search is satisfactory, your lawyer negotiates the purchase agreement. The contract should include conditions precedent protecting the buyer, at a minimum, a condition that the agreement is subject to the successful grant of a Land Holding (Alien) Licence and, for CBI purchases, a condition tied to CIU approval. An escrow arrangement for the reservation deposit is strongly recommended rather than paying funds directly to the seller or agent. This step typically takes 1–3 weeks depending on the complexity of the negotiation and the number of parties involved.
Your lawyer prepares and files the Land Holding Licence application with the relevant Government department. The application requires certified copies of the buyer’s passport, proof of address, proof of funds and the signed purchase agreement. If the property is a CBI‑eligible development, the buyer must simultaneously submit CIU KYC forms, police clearance certificates and financial references. Processing times vary, but industry observers expect the licence application to take between 4 and 12 weeks, with CBI‑related applications potentially at the longer end of that range following the 2026 regulatory tightening.
Once the Land Holding Licence is granted (and CIU approval confirmed where applicable), the parties exchange final contracts. The buyer transfers the balance of the purchase price, typically through an attorney’s escrow account, and the seller executes the deed of conveyance. The conveyancer arranges for the deed to be stamped and submits it for registration at the Lands & Surveys Department. This phase usually takes 2–6 weeks from licence clearance.
The conveyancer lodges the deed of sale with the Registrar of Titles. Stamp duty and transfer taxes must be paid before registration is completed. The precise rates are set by legislation and may be subject to change, buyers should confirm the current rates with their attorney. Once registered, title is formally vested in the buyer’s name. Allow 2–8 weeks for registration and revenue clearance.
For buyers who acquired property through the CBI programme, the developer is obligated to report the sale to the CIU. The buyer must also comply with the statutory holding period during which the property may not be resold without CIU consent. The holding period and reporting obligations are set by CIU regulations and should be confirmed against the most recent CIU developer rules. Failure to comply can affect the buyer’s citizenship status.
A complete and properly prepared document package is critical to avoiding delays at the licence application or registration stages. The following table sets out the documents typically required from the buyer, together with notes on who issues each document and the expected format.
| Document | Notes (issuer / format / validity) |
|---|---|
| Valid passport (buyer) | Issued by buyer’s national authority, certified copy required; passport should be valid for at least 6 months |
| National ID or proof of residence | Government‑issued ID or recent utility bill (certified copy) |
| Proof of funds / bank reference | Bank statement or banker’s reference covering the most recent 3 months; certification may be required for KYC/AML |
| Proof of source of funds | Buyer affidavit or supporting documentation (sale proceeds, investment statements); required for CIU KYC |
| Signed reservation / option agreement | Prepared by buyer’s lawyer; deposit and retention terms clearly stated |
| Signed purchase / sale agreement (final) | Drafted by buyer’s lawyer and executed by both parties |
| Title search report | Issued by Lands & Surveys / Registrar of Titles; confirms encumbrances and liens |
| Power of Attorney (if buyer acts by POA) | Executed before a notary or consular authority; apostille or consularisation may be required |
| Land Holding (Alien) Licence application forms | Issued by the Attorney General’s Chambers or Lands Department; completed by buyer’s counsel |
| CIU KYC forms (CBI purchases) | Citizenship by Investment Unit forms, police clearance certificates and financial references |
| Seller’s title deeds / deed of assignment | Originals produced at closing; issued by the Registrar or developer |
| Utility bills / local rates for the property | Confirm property location, services and absence of arrears |
| Mortgage documents (if financing) | Lender’s commitment letter and mortgage deed |
CBI applicants should note that the CIU may request additional documentation, including enhanced due diligence questionnaires and professional references, beyond the standard conveyancing package.
The total timeline from instructing a lawyer to holding registered title is typically between 10 and 30 weeks, depending on the complexity of the transaction and whether a CBI application is involved. The single largest variable is the Land Holding Licence processing period, which can range from 4 to 12 weeks.
Key contractual and statutory deadlines that buyers must observe include:
The most important practical rule: instruct a local lawyer immediately, well before paying any deposit. Early engagement allows the title search, KYC preparation and licence application to run in parallel, compressing the overall timeline.
The cost of purchasing property extends well beyond the agreed sale price. The table below summarises the principal fees and taxes that foreign buyers should budget for. All figures are indicative and should be verified with a local attorney before committing to a transaction.
| Item | Typical amount / estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Land Holding (Alien) Licence fee | Approximately 10% of purchase price | Commonly cited rate, verify against current legislation and CIU guidance |
| Stamp duty / transfer tax | Percentage of sale price (varies by value) | Payable on transfer; allocation between buyer and seller as negotiated |
| Conveyancer / solicitor fees | Typically 1–3% of purchase price | Covers drafting, title searches, registration and escrow administration |
| Registration fee (Lands & Surveys) | Fixed administrative scale | Payable on filing of the deed for registration |
| CIU / CBI application fees (if applicable) | Separate due diligence and processing fees per applicant | Set by CIU, verify current schedule at ciu.gov.kn |
| Developer fees (CBI projects) | Varies by development | May include administration, facilitation or reservation charges, review developer contract |
| VAT / local taxes on services | May apply to legal and agent fees | Confirm with local tax authority |
Illustrative example, US $400,000 purchase (non‑CBI): Land Holding Licence fee (approximately $40,000 at the commonly cited 10% rate) + solicitor fees (approximately $8,000 at 2%) + stamp duty (amount dependent on current rate) + registration fee. Total closing costs could represent 13–16% or more of the purchase price. For CBI purchases, add CIU due diligence and processing fees. These figures are estimates only and must be confirmed with your local attorney.
The Federation’s CBI framework has undergone significant regulatory updates that took effect in 2026. Industry observers expect these changes to have a material procedural impact on foreign property purchases, particularly those linked to citizenship applications. The principal changes reported by industry sources include:
The likely practical effect of these changes is that CBI‑linked transactions will require earlier engagement of legal counsel, more comprehensive document preparation and a longer overall timeline. Buyers should not rely on outdated threshold figures or holding‑period rules. The authoritative sources for verification are the CIU website and the Official Gazette of Saint Kitts and Nevis, where all legislative amendments are published.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dahlia Joseph Rowe at Joseph Rowe Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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