by Kevon K K Charles
Managing Partner, K C Legal Consultancy, Attorneys-at-Law; Senior Associate, Samuel Phillip & Associates, Grenada
For many people, purchasing property is viewed as a straightforward financial transaction. A buyer agrees to the purchase. Funds are transferred. The property changes hands.
Increasingly, however, the transaction does not end there. Questions are now routinely asked about where the money came from, how it was accumulated, and who is ultimately providing it. What many clients once considered a simple purchase process now involves a level of scrutiny that was not traditionally part of Caribbean transactions. And for some clients, that can come as a surprise.
“But It’s My Money!”
One of the more common reactions practitioners encounter is confusion. A client may say:
- I’ve been saving for years
- My family sent the money
- I sold land some time ago
- The funds came from abroad
From the client’s perspective, the explanation may appear perfectly reasonable.
The difficulty is that financial institutions and other regulated entities are now often required to go beyond the explanation itself. Increasingly, they must also be satisfied that the explanation can be supported. That distinction matters.
Source of Funds vs Source of Wealth
Although the terms are often used interchangeably, they are not always the same thing.
Source of funds generally concerns the immediate origin of the money being used for a transaction. For example, whether the funds came from a salary account, the sale of property, business income, or a loan facility. The source of wealth goes a step further. It considers how the person accumulated their overall wealth over time.
In practice, both questions may arise in property transactions, particularly where large sums, overseas transfers, or cash-intensive businesses are involved.
A familiar Caribbean scenario
A family member living abroad sends funds to assist with the purchase of property in Trinidad or Grenada. The arrangement itself is not unusual. In many Caribbean families, relatives overseas regularly contribute toward land purchases, construction, or family homes.
However, once the funds enter the banking system, questions may begin to arise.
- Who is actually purchasing the property?
- Who provided the funds? Can the transfer be properly explained and documented?
- Is the person sending the funds connected to the transaction?
None of these questions necessarily suggests wrongdoing. They reflect a compliance environment that now places increasing emphasis on transparency and verification.
The financial institution perspective
From the perspective of financial institutions, these checks are no longer optional.
Banks and regulated entities are often required to verify the legitimacy of transactions, particularly where the movement of funds appears inconsistent with a customer’s known financial profile or where cross-border transfers are involved.
This can result in requests for:
- bank statements
- proof of income
- sale agreements
- company documents
- gift letters
- and supporting information relating to overseas transfers
For clients, these requests can sometimes feel intrusive.
For institutions, they form part of a broader regulatory obligation.
A shift in expectations
What is becoming increasingly clear is that property transactions are no longer viewed solely as conveyancing exercises.
They also represent points of entry into the regulated financial system. As a result, practitioners are increasingly required to consider not only whether a transaction is legally valid, but whether it is capable of being properly explained and supported if questions arise later.
Closing Reflection
In the Caribbean, wealth has often moved through families in informal and deeply personal ways.
Modern compliance frameworks do not necessarily reject those realities. They do, however, increasingly require them to be documented. And for many transactions today, that may be the difference between a smooth completion and a very long delay.
This article forms part of a continuing examination of the evolving relationship between wealth, property, and compliance in the Caribbean.






















