Non-nationals buying property in Tobago - update
Posted: Tue Sep 08, 2009 8:30 pm
In yesterday's reading of the government's 2009/2010 budget, the Minister of Finance stated the following:
"Mr. Speaker, while the Government takes steps to attract foreign investment to spur economic activity in Tobago, we also recognise the need to discourage speculation that will artificially inflate the land prices on the island as well as protect the landownership rights of nationals of Trinidad and Tobago. Therefore, following extensive discussions with the Tobago House of Assembly and other stakeholders, six regions on the island have been designated as development areas: Arnos Vale and Culloden Estate, Bacolet Estate, Buccoo and Golden Grove Estate, Englishman’s Bay, Lowlands and Diamond Estate and Mount Irvine and Grafton Estate. These locations were selected because these are sites on which resort development is already permitted. The total area selected is approximately 0.05 percent of the land mass of the island.
Mr. Speaker, we have also reviewed the application conditions and procedures that govern the approval for licences for acquisition of land in Tobago. The application instructions which had previously contained twenty-three requirements have been reduced to a total of eleven. In addition, foreign investors will be granted conditional licences on satisfaction of predetermined criteria while awaiting regulatory approvals which will enable them to commence construction. The objective is to reduce the processing time for the grant of the licences. The full list of application documentation will be available to the public shortly."
So nearly three years after the government stated that non-nationals required a licence to purchase property in Tobago (thereby bringing non-national property purchases and non-national market dependent development projects to a screeching halt) and with no news since then about the application process and criteria, at last there has now been some visible progress.
There are now some defined areas in Tobago "where resort development is already permitted" for which licence applications will be entertained - that suggests that applications for areas not named eg Castara, Charlotteville and Parlatuvier will not be entertained. Unfortunately, no-one knows when the procedure and criteria will be published. Knowing the glacial speed that the government moves at, it's anyone's guess when the forms will be available and the process put in place. So as usual, don't hold your breath. Things will happen when they happen.
And in the meantime, if you are a non-national wishing to make a purchase in Tobago, don't make a commitment or make a deposit no matter what the owner or real estate agent tells you, until you are certain that the licence process has been fully operationalised - even then, make sure that there is a clause in the purchase agreement that allows for delays in the approval process to change the close date. Don't be caught with a 90 day close date in the purchase agreement, on the assumption that your licence application must be approved within that time. Hope this helps,
Clyde
"Mr. Speaker, while the Government takes steps to attract foreign investment to spur economic activity in Tobago, we also recognise the need to discourage speculation that will artificially inflate the land prices on the island as well as protect the landownership rights of nationals of Trinidad and Tobago. Therefore, following extensive discussions with the Tobago House of Assembly and other stakeholders, six regions on the island have been designated as development areas: Arnos Vale and Culloden Estate, Bacolet Estate, Buccoo and Golden Grove Estate, Englishman’s Bay, Lowlands and Diamond Estate and Mount Irvine and Grafton Estate. These locations were selected because these are sites on which resort development is already permitted. The total area selected is approximately 0.05 percent of the land mass of the island.
Mr. Speaker, we have also reviewed the application conditions and procedures that govern the approval for licences for acquisition of land in Tobago. The application instructions which had previously contained twenty-three requirements have been reduced to a total of eleven. In addition, foreign investors will be granted conditional licences on satisfaction of predetermined criteria while awaiting regulatory approvals which will enable them to commence construction. The objective is to reduce the processing time for the grant of the licences. The full list of application documentation will be available to the public shortly."
So nearly three years after the government stated that non-nationals required a licence to purchase property in Tobago (thereby bringing non-national property purchases and non-national market dependent development projects to a screeching halt) and with no news since then about the application process and criteria, at last there has now been some visible progress.
There are now some defined areas in Tobago "where resort development is already permitted" for which licence applications will be entertained - that suggests that applications for areas not named eg Castara, Charlotteville and Parlatuvier will not be entertained. Unfortunately, no-one knows when the procedure and criteria will be published. Knowing the glacial speed that the government moves at, it's anyone's guess when the forms will be available and the process put in place. So as usual, don't hold your breath. Things will happen when they happen.
And in the meantime, if you are a non-national wishing to make a purchase in Tobago, don't make a commitment or make a deposit no matter what the owner or real estate agent tells you, until you are certain that the licence process has been fully operationalised - even then, make sure that there is a clause in the purchase agreement that allows for delays in the approval process to change the close date. Don't be caught with a 90 day close date in the purchase agreement, on the assumption that your licence application must be approved within that time. Hope this helps,
Clyde