Grenada should be read through the rule, not the marketing shortcut. Multi-generation families often like Grenada, but if they stop at the family-of-four headline, parent, grandparent, or sibling costs can be missed. That may be a reasonable first thought, but it is not enough for a citizenship decision.
Start with the official point. As of May 29, 2026, The official IMA Grenada Application Guide page lists the NTF minimum contribution for a single applicant or a family of up to four at US$235,000. It also lists US$75,000 for a parent or grandparent below 55, US$50,000 for a parent or grandparent aged 55 and over, US$75,000 for a sibling, and US$25,000 for an additional spouse or dependant. This is the part that should come before the sales comparison, because it shapes cost, timing, documents, and post-approval responsibility.
Direct answer: what Grenada dependent fees changes
Grenada dependent fees matters only if it changes a real constraint in the applicant’s life. Grenada can offer useful family-structure flexibility for applicants who need to plan across generations. The other side is just as important: Flexibility does not mean free. Each extra category adds cost, documents, and a thicker dependency explanation. A passport route that looks good in a table can become awkward when it is tested against family members, business ownership, banking explanations, source of funds, project documents, or future exit plans. Passport-First analysis asks two questions in order: what constraint does the passport change, and what new obligation does the applicant accept for that change? If the second answer is vague, the first answer is probably being oversold.
Why this route is often misread
The common mistake is treating one clean number or phrase as the whole answer. “Business investment,” “enterprise project,” “public benefit,” “EDF,” “fixed capital,” and “family of four” all sound simple until the documents arrive. The official rule usually adds the real texture: who qualifies, when money is paid, what confirms the investment, what happens if exchange rates move, and which family member changes the budget.
I would ask the applicant to draw the family tree before asking for a quote. Once the tree is visible, it becomes much clearer who belongs in the core file, who is being added casually, and whose inclusion may be too expensive. That is why I prefer boring questions early. They save trouble later. Where did the money come from? Who exactly is included? What is being bought? Who confirms the investment? Can the applicant explain the route to a bank, a tax adviser, or an adult child several years from now?
Who may fit this better
This route is more likely to fit applicants who know the job they need the passport to do. The job might be business expansion, family consolidation, capital deployment, a cleaner backup nationality, or a specific travel or documentation issue. The applicant does not need the passport to solve everything. It just needs to solve the right thing without creating an obligation the family cannot manage.
It is less likely to fit applicants who want one label to carry the entire decision. A route can be “business-linked” and still unsuitable. It can be “family-friendly” and still expensive for the actual family. It can be “flexible” and still need careful evidence. List each person’s age, relationship, financial dependency, residence, documents, and police-clearance difficulty. The main trap is not one expensive person; it is an incomplete family budget.
Three checks before moving forward
First, put the official rule into the budget, not beside it. Include contribution, government fees, due diligence, payment timing, currency risk, project obligations, and future exit assumptions.
Second, map the people and money. For family files, draw the family tree. For business or investment routes, draw the ownership and fund trail. A structure that cannot be drawn clearly is usually not ready to be filed.
Third, test the future explanation. Imagine a bank or adviser asks why this passport was obtained and how the investment worked. If the answer is plain and factual, the route may be strong. If the answer depends on skipping details, the structure needs more work.
FAQ
Is Grenada the stronger option because the structure is more complex?
No. Complexity is not strength by itself. The option is stronger only if the structure fits the applicant’s real objective and evidence.
Should applicants compare by minimum amount first?
No. The minimum amount is only the entry point. Compare the full operating cost, documentary burden, timing, and future maintenance before ranking routes.
Why rely on official wording?
Because official wording is what shapes the file. Market summaries can help with orientation, but they should not replace the rule that will actually be applied.
If you are evaluating Grenada, the useful question is not which route sounds best in a chart. The useful question is whether it still makes sense inside your family, business, capital, and travel pattern over the next few years. More case-based analysis is available at WWW.USA60.COM. The official reference for this topic is available here: Grenada official reference.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.
One simple test helps: if the applicant cannot explain in two minutes why Grenada fits the family or business plan, the decision is probably not ready. The right route may have trade-offs, but those trade-offs should be easy to name.