Three quick tools — tax savings, cost of living, and a residency day tracker. No signup, no email wall. Once you have your numbers, Seb can tell you exactly how to make it happen.
*Illustrative only, using approximate top marginal rates. Does not account for citizenship-based taxation (U.S.), exit taxes, deductions, treaties, or your specific structure. Not tax advice.
The exact legal levers relocating founders use to keep more of what they earn once they move.
*Estimates based on general Grand Cayman market ranges (2025-2026). Actual costs vary by district and provider.
One overlooked detail that can save new residents thousands on the move itself.
Track physical days spent in Cayman toward your residency-by-investment requirement or your home-country day-count exit test.
*90 days is a commonly cited reference point (used illustratively). Actual thresholds depend on the specific residency program or your home country's statutory residence/day-count test — confirm exact figures with your advisor.
The avoidable mistakes that turn a smart move into an expensive one.
Seb has personally guided 100+ people through this exact move. Message him directly — no form required.
What these numbers can and can't tell you.
They're built on approximate top marginal rates and general 2025–2026 market data — useful for a fast gut-check, not a filing. Your actual numbers depend on deductions, treaties, structure, and your specific situation. Think of the calculators as a starting point for a conversation with Seb, not a substitute for one.
Cayman's economy runs almost entirely on financial services and tourism, and it's one of the higher GDP-per-capita economies in the Caribbean as a result. For current figures, the Economics and Statistics Office publishes official data. Practically, that concentration means Cayman's stability tracks global financial markets and travel demand, not a diversified local industry base.
It uses 90 days as a commonly cited reference point, but real thresholds vary by residency category and by your home country's own day-count or statutory residence test. Treat the tracker as a rough planning tool and confirm your specific number with whoever's handling your immigration application.
Before, ideally. Most people run the tax and cost numbers first, see whether the math works for their situation, and only then dig into which residency option fits. Picking a visa category before checking the numbers is how people end up disappointed.
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