Grenada Property Buyer’s Brief
Get clearer on what to buy, where, and what to walk away from... before you fall in love.
Buying property in Grenada can be emotional, especially if the move is tied to
return, family, freedom, land, legacy or a different kind of life. But emotion is not a buying strategy.
Before you start viewing homes, enquiring about land, or relying too heavily on agents, you need to understand what your budget can really do, which locations fit the life you are trying to build, what trade-offs are hiding beneath the dream, and which questions to ask before you get attached.
The Grenada Property Buyer’s Brief gives you independent, buyer-side clarity before you enter the market seriously.
At the Exodus Collective we neither work for the seller, the agent nor the developer. My role is to help you think clearly before you spend seriously.
This is for you if:
You are considering buying property in Grenada and want a clear read on your options before you start viewing, negotiating or making emotional commitments.
You may be weighing a home, land, rental-income property, multi-generational base, retirement property, part-time residence or future relocation home.
You may also be unsure whether your budget matches the life you are imagining or whether you should buy now, wait, rent first, build later, or narrow your search before going further.
What we cover:
Your buyer profile: lifestyle, family needs, timeline and long-term intentions
Budget reality check against the kind of property you want
Location guidance based on how you actually want to live
Land versus existing home versus rental-income potential
Property type trade-offs: gated community, rural land, fixer-upper, income property, family home or coastal location
Lifestyle considerations: schools, access, transport, services, privacy, community and maintenance
Questions to ask agents, sellers and developers before you go further
Red flags that may require legal, survey, planning or valuation advice
Whether your next step should be viewing, renting first, deeper due diligence or a full buyer advisory engagement
What you receive:
A focused buyer advisory call
A review of your budget, priorities and intended use
Location and property-type guidance
A clear view of the trade-offs in your likely search
Agent, developer and seller questions to use before committing
Red-flag checklist
Written Property Buyer’s Brief with recommended next steps
What this is not:
This is not estate agency, legal advice, valuation, surveying or conveyancing.
I do not replace your attorney, surveyor, valuer, architect or agent. Where specialist advice is needed, I help you understand what to ask, when to ask it, and who may need to be involved.
This is early-stage buyer clarity: the kind of grounded, local, independent perspective that helps you avoid wasting time, chasing the wrong property, or being steered by someone else’s incentives.
Best first step: Book this before you start viewing seriously, shortlist properties, approach developers, or let a dream purchase become an expensive assumption.
