A Shanghai SaaS founder, age 41, USD 45M ARR, primary markets in North America and Europe, sent me a WeChat last week. The first line was direct: "Ken, I watched your earlier video on Grenada and E-2. I will never use E-2. So is Grenada still meaningful for me?"

It is a good question. Over the last 12 months, three of every five clients asking about Grenada come for E-2. The other two say "I might not use E-2, but I hear it is good value." Less than one in ten can articulate, in concrete terms, what Grenada will do for the next five years of their life.

And the policy clock is moving. Grenada has publicly flagged an April-June 2026 implementation phase that includes cost increases and a residency review. The Grenada you can buy after this window is not the Grenada you can buy before it. So today: a few things this passport quietly does for a cross-border SaaS founder, beyond the narrow E-2 lane.

What April-June 2026 really changes

As of May 2026, from the public direction and what I am cross-checking with two licensed peers, the moving pieces are these.

One. Pricing. The donation route to the National Transformation Fund (NTF) currently starts at USD 235,000. The real estate route requires a minimum project valuation of USD 270,000. Both are under upward pressure. Files lodged before the new framework formally takes effect are processed under existing rules, that is the textbook grandfathering window.

Two. Residency. As of May 2026, Grenada has the lightest residency footprint among the Caribbean Five. As regional regulation tightens, that footprint will likely fall in line with neighbors, somewhere in the 5-7 days over five years range. For founders running domestic businesses, that matters.

Three. Due diligence. Source-of-funds, tax records, and overseas asset disclosure all run deeper under the new framework. Files already in preparation gain by moving sooner.

What this passport does for a SaaS founder

Back to the Shanghai caller. E-2 is irrelevant for him, and that is a feature of his business model. SaaS runs from anywhere, no US operating entity needed. Beyond E-2, here is what I walked him through.

One. Schengen plus 180-day UK access plus Hong Kong plus Singapore, a complete travel base for North American and European go-to-market. His company runs four to five major industry events a year and 20-plus customer meetings. On a Chinese passport, Schengen visa cycles take 2-3 weeks per trip and UK visas require an interview. The time cost lands at 3-5% of front-line operating cost. A Grenada passport removes that line item.

Two. No foreign income tax, no inheritance tax. This is the one 90% of agents skip but matters most to a cross-border SaaS owner. SaaS revenue lands across many jurisdictions; where the holding sits and how profits repatriate is the headache that keeps finance teams up at night. A Grenada passport, combined with a real residency and a proper tax-residency plan, opens design space for the asset architecture. To be clear: this requires a real tax team. The passport alone does not buy you tax exemption.

Three. A working family Plan B for the next 5-10 years. SaaS founders are a high-cash-flow group with above-average sensitivity to geopolitical risk. The Grenada family inclusion, main applicant plus spouse plus children under 30 plus qualifying parents, covers four to six people in one file. If the macro picture shifts in five years, the entire family has a complete switch path.

Grenada 2026 numbers, as of May 2026

Core figures

ItemDetail
NTF donation routeUSD 235,000 minimum
Real estate routeUSD 270,000 minimum (approved projects)
Processing time3-6 months (post-reform timetable pending)
Visa-free count145 countries
Schengen / UK / US E-2 / ChinaSchengen yes / UK 180 days / US E-2 conditional / China 30-day conditional
Family coverageMain + spouse + children under 30 + qualifying parents
Foreign income taxNone

Who should chase the April-June window

One. Cross-border SaaS or remote-company founders with primary markets in North America and Europe who need Schengen and UK 180-day stability.

Two. Four-to-six-person families filing together (spouse, children under 30, qualifying parents) who want to lock today's family pricing.

Three. Owners already operating an offshore tax architecture who need a passport that fits that structure.

Who should not chase Grenada

One. Clients who think a Caribbean passport equals US residence. E-2 requires real US business binding. A passport-only E-2 application gets denied.

Two. Clients pitching themselves on the "China 30-day visa-free" line. That door only opens after renouncing Chinese citizenship, almost no mainland client will. The benefit is theoretical.

Three. Clients on a tight budget chasing the cheapest entry. For that profile, I push them straight to Sao Tome from USD 95,000.

Three things 90% of agents will not tell you

One. NTF USD 235K is not the all-in number. Add due diligence, government fees, legal, passport printing, the real four-person family landed cost runs USD 290K-325K.

Two. The real estate route sounds capital-recoverable, but the five-year exit risk is real, and whether you find a buyer at projected valuation is not guaranteed by the developer. Historical exit conversion for Chinese clients runs below industry average.

Three. The "China 30-day" benefit is conditional on renouncing Chinese citizenship. Most mainland clients will never use it. Selling that as a current convenience is repackaging a future right as a present feature.

Client case (anonymized, recent)

The Shanghai caller from the opening. He sent me his cap table, last 24 months of travel, and family detail. His pain points were specific. Too much travel time on the EU/NA circuit, concern about future tax-architecture compliance, and a desire to keep a Commonwealth education option open for his kids (10 and 12).

Ken's call: NTF donation. File before the April-June implementation. His primary markets sit in NA/EU, so Schengen + UK 180 days converts directly into operational time saved. His kids are 5-7 years away from going abroad; this passport covers the Commonwealth education window cleanly. E-2 is irrelevant for him, but the 145 countries plus zero foreign income tax base fits a global SaaS operator. I steered him away from real estate, he does not need a 5-year capital lock; NTF is the cleaner path.

What I tell clients about the window

Grandfathering windows are not "everyone should sprint." Over 11 years of policy windows, I have watched too many clients run for the last train into a passport that did not match their life, and then carry five years of management cost they did not need.

This is the line I repeat: not the most expensive, not the cheapest, only the most appropriate. The value of a window is not speed. It is letting the right client lock the right rules.

FAQ

Q: When exactly does the April-June 2026 framework take effect?

A: As of May 2026, the public direction is staged rollout between April and June, covering pricing and a residency review. No final cutoff has been gazetted, but the licensed-agent consensus is "earlier files, safer ground." For active preparations, lodge before end of June to anchor under the existing rules.

Q: Does a Grenada passport make a SaaS founder tax-free?

A: No. "No foreign income tax" is a Grenada tax-residency policy, not an automatic passport benefit. To convert it into real benefit you need a tax team and a complete tax-residency plan — not a passport swap.

Q: NTF donation or real estate?

A: NTF works for 90% of Chinese clients — clean, exit-free, fastest. Real estate looks "recoverable," but the 5-year exit risks (buyer, valuation, FX) often push the all-in cost higher than the donation route.

Q: Does Grenada E-2 get my child into US college?

A: E-2 is not a study visa. E-2 requires real US business binding for the principal applicant — investment, jobs, viability all reviewed. Children are dependents, not the purpose. If college access is the goal, F-1 is the direct answer. E-2 is not.

Q: Grenada or Saint Kitts?

A: For an E-2 lane, Grenada. For the most stable, longest-running program, Saint Kitts. For 4-6 person family value, Antigua or Saint Kitts. For tight budget and speed, Sao Tome from USD 95K. Match it to your markets, family, and 5-year plan. Not to a brochure.

Next step

If you finished this and you are still stuck across the eight options — that is normal. I take exactly this call from cross-border SaaS founders every week.

We have built a 26-page CBI Decision Map PDF for 2026 — flowchart by budget, goal, timeline, and family across all eight passports, with 5-axis scoring per passport, true total-cost breakdowns, and 7 traps to avoid.

WhatsApp +15595666666 with the word "Map." I send it personally. Free, no email needed.

If you already have a specific situation, message me on WhatsApp +15595666666 (note: "Decision Map") and I will spend 15 minutes with you on whether you should file, hold, or solve a different problem first. No fee. If it does not fit, I will say so.

Full library and 70+ approval cases: WWW.USA60.COM

Quick Card · Updated May 2026
· Grenada NTF donation: USD 235,000 from
· Real estate route: USD 270,000 from
· Files lodged before April-June implementation processed under existing rules
· 145 countries visa-free + Schengen + UK 180 days + no foreign income tax
· Author: Ken Huang · Los Angeles, California · 11 years in CBI · government-licensed for Grenada
· WhatsApp: +15595666666 (note "Decision Map") · Web: WWW.USA60.COM