How a U.S. Citizen Starts a Business in Saint Barthélemy

Business in Saint Bart

A clear, no-fluff, step-by-step process

Below is the exact order of operations. Follow it in sequence and you avoid 90% of the mistakes foreigners make.


STEP 1 — Decide HOW you will operate (this determines everything)

Answer one question first:

Will you personally live and work in St. Barths?

  • YES → You must have a French long-stay visa/residence status that allows self-employment
  • NO → You can own the business, but you must appoint a local manager/operator

⚠️ Do not sign leases, hire staff, or import inventory until this is decided.


STEP 2 — Choose the business structure (before visas or registration)

Pick one of these (most common):

  • Single-owner limited company (most popular for foreigners)
  • Multi-partner limited company
  • Sole proprietor (rarely recommended due to liability)

Why this matters:

  • Determines how you pay yourself
  • Determines social contributions
  • Determines liability exposure
  • Determines banking approval odds

👉 If you plan hospitality, tourism, retail, or services: use limited liability.


STEP 3 — Secure a business address (required to register)

You must have one of the following:

  • Commercial lease
  • Office/storefront
  • Legal domiciliation service
  • Home address (only if allowed for your activity)

No address = no registration.


STEP 4 — Apply for the correct visa (ONLY if you will work on-island)

If you will physically operate or manage the business, apply for:

What you’ll need:

  • Business plan (simple but credible)
  • Proof of funds
  • Intended legal structure
  • Proof of address or lease intent
  • Clean background

🕒 This step often takes the longest. Start early.


STEP 5 — Register the business (official creation)

All businesses are registered through France’s single digital business portal.

You submit:

  • Passport
  • Company structure documents
  • Business address
  • Activity description
  • Ownership details
  • Manager details
  • Any required licenses (if regulated)

Once approved, your business legally exists.


STEP 6 — Check if your activity is regulated (don’t skip this)

Some businesses require extra approvals BEFORE opening:

  • Restaurants / food service
  • Alcohol sales
  • Tours, charters, transport
  • Construction / trades
  • Certain wellness services

If regulated:

  • Apply for approvals immediately
  • Expect inspections or certifications
  • Build extra time into your launch

STEP 7 — Open banking + payment systems

You will need:

  • Local or EU-compatible business bank account
  • Card payment processor
  • Accounting setup

Expect:

  • Extra scrutiny for U.S. citizens
  • Requests for source-of-funds
  • Proof of real economic activity

📌 Have clean documents and a clear revenue model.


STEP 8 — Register for social contributions (mandatory)

If you are:

  • A company director
  • Self-employed
  • Paying yourself a salary

You must register with the local social system and make ongoing declarations.

This is not optional, even if revenue is low.


STEP 9 — Budget and pay annual business taxes

Every business pays:

  • Annual local business contribution
  • Variable amount based on employees
  • Payroll charges if you hire

Missing deadlines causes penalties. Put these on autopilot.


STEP 10 — Hire staff (only after everything above is done)

Before hiring, you must have:

  • Active company registration
  • Payroll setup
  • Social declarations enabled
  • Proper contracts

St. Barths labor is premium-priced. Build it into your pricing.


REALISTIC TIMELINE (best-case)

  • Business planning: 2–4 weeks
  • Visa (if required): 1–3+ months
  • Registration: 2–4 weeks
  • Banking & payments: 2–6 weeks
  • Total realistic launch window: 2–4 months

COMMON FAILURE POINTS (avoid these)

❌ Registering before confirming visa eligibility
❌ Signing expensive leases too early
❌ Underpricing in a luxury market
❌ Assuming “Caribbean rules” apply
❌ Ignoring regulated activity approvals


SIMPLE SUMMARY

Decide if you’ll live/work there or just own

  1. Choose a limited-liability structure
  2. Secure a business address
  3. Apply for visa if working on-island
  4. Register the business
  5. Handle licenses if regulated
  6. Set up banking + accounting
  7. Register social contributions
  8. Pay annual business taxes
  9. Hire and operate

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