Why Grand Bahama Outpaced Nassau Over the Last Five Years — And Why No One Talks About It
I love The Bahamas — not only as a place to live, but as a strategic investment hub. I enjoy Nassau. I appreciate the Abacos and the many out-islands, each with its own character. But there are good reasons I chose to build my life and business on Grand Bahama. As a real-estate developer, I live off the story and the future upside. That’s why I took the time to compare The Bahamas’ two most important islands — New Providence/Nassau and Grand Bahama — across the last five years: absolute investment volumes, resilience, diversification, and tax advantages. And yes, I often meet Nassau residents who look down on Grand Bahama with a smirk. To me, that’s a classic capital-city syndrome. The numbers tell a very different story.
The hard numbers (Aug 2020 – Aug 2025)
Documented major projects ≈ $1.6B.
Active/approved pipeline: > $3B.
GBPA projection by end-2025: ≈ $5B.
Delivered/underway ≈ $970M.
Including announced capex (upper bound): ≈ $1.45B.
What makes the difference
Grand Bahama: diversified & resilient
- Tourism (Carnival Celebration Key, harbour waterpark)
- Maritime & industry (Grand Bahama Shipyard)
- Logistics (Container Port upgrade)
- Aviation (International airport rebuild)
- Energy (utility-scale solar)
- Retail (AML Foods expansion)
Nassau: primarily tourism-led
- Hotel expansions & renovations (Baha Bay, Sandals, Atlantis, British Colonial)
- Cruise port modernization
Resilience & the tax lens
Grand Bahama is powered by multiple independent value drivers — global shipping, energy, logistics, aviation, and tourism — making the island more shock-resistant over cycles.
Nassau remains more dependent on tourism. Both islands benefit from The Bahamas’ tax-free regime (no income, capital-gains, or inheritance taxes). Grand Bahama adds the Freeport special economic zone with customs and import advantages.
Criterion | Grand Bahama | New Providence / Nassau |
---|---|---|
5-year volume (documented) | ≈ $1.6B | ≈ $970M |
Pipeline / upper bound | > $3B (pipeline) · ≈ $5B by 2025 (projection) | ≈ $1.45B incl. announced capex |
Sector mix | Tourism, shipyard, airport, logistics, energy, retail | Primarily tourism/hotels, cruise port, renovations |
Resilience | Multiple independent value engines | Higher reliance on tourism |
Tax advantages | Nationwide tax-free + Freeport zone benefits | Nationwide tax-free |
Bottom line | Clear lead in volume & diversification | Strong, but less broad-based |
Tax-free rental income may be available under Bahamian law and program rules. All information without guarantee.
Sources & project links
Organized by island with short descriptions.
Grand Bahama
- Carnival Newsroom — Celebration Key
New destination hub (Phase 1 opening 2025), ~ $600M capex. - Royal Caribbean Group — GB Shipyard Expansion
New docks/yard expansion for large vessels, ~ $600M. - Eyewitness News — GBIA Redevelopment
International airport rebuild, ≈ $170–200M. - Freeport Container Port — News
Terminal/capacity upgrades, ~ $100M. - Bahamas.com — Freeport Harbour Waterpark
Leisure/waterpark project at the harbour, ≈ $80M. - Grand Bahama Power — Utility-Scale Solar
Renewable energy build-out, ≈ $15M. - The Tribune 242 — AML Foods Expansion
Retail/supermarket expansion, ≈ $3.5M. - Invest Grand Bahama — Project Map
Interactive map: > $3B active/approved pipeline.
New Providence / Nassau
- Nassau Cruise Port — News
Cruise port redevelopment, ≈ $300M. - Baha Mar — Baha Bay
Water park capex at Baha Mar, ≈ $200M. - Royal Caribbean — Royal Beach Club
Paradise Island beach club, ≈ $165M. - Nassau Paradise Island — British Colonial
Historic hotel relaunch/renovation, > $100M. - Atlantis Bahamas — News
Resort-wide transformation capex, ≈ $150M (completed). - Sandals Royal Bahamian — Renovation
Comprehensive refurbishment, ≈ $55M. - Travel Weekly — Atlantis Expansion
Announced additional investments, ≈ $475M (upper bound).
Looking to build a position on Grand Bahama? We’ll walk you through vetted, limited-availability projects.