A.D.M.
Twenty-two years in private-client legal practice, with a focus on residency, citizenship, and cross-border family governance. Qualified in England & Wales; previously with a Magic Circle firm's private-client group.
A private citizenship advisory firm serving ultra-high-net-worth families. Quiet, precise, and built around the counsel that matters most when sovereignty is being redefined for the next generation.
Founded in 2015, Privé Regalis has quietly advised clients across the Caribbean citizenship-by-investment landscape, building a practice defined by restraint, precision, and a deep bench of regulatory relationships.
We do not compete on volume, speed, or fees. We compete on the quality of counsel a family receives when making a generational decision.
Privé Regalis was established to serve a specific kind of client: the family that values discretion above all, that already works with private bankers and counsel of the highest calibre, and that expects citizenship strategy to be approached with the same seriousness as wealth structuring or estate planning.
Our practice is deliberately small by design. We maintain a limited number of active engagements at any given time, which allows every mandate to be managed personally by senior members of the advisory team. There are no junior caseworkers, no outsourced document-handling, and no templated advice.
We are independent. We hold no commercial interest in any programme, developer, or agent. Our recommendations are made on the merits of the jurisdiction and the fit for the family, not on referral economics. This structural independence is, in our view, non-negotiable.
The work we do sits at the intersection of private client services, regulatory navigation, and long-horizon family strategy. We are often engaged alongside a client's existing legal, tax, and wealth advisers, and we coordinate directly with those teams throughout the mandate.
We approach citizenship the way a private bank approaches wealth structuring: with research, restraint, and a long-term view. No pressure, no templates, no shortcuts.
Our advisory team combines private-client legal experience, regulatory work with Caribbean citizenship units, and decades of practice serving ultra-high-net-worth families. Photography is withheld at the team's request.
Twenty-two years in private-client legal practice, with a focus on residency, citizenship, and cross-border family governance. Qualified in England & Wales; previously with a Magic Circle firm's private-client group.
Fifteen years advising on Caribbean CBI compliance and source-of-funds documentation. Former counsel to a Citizenship Investment Unit. Deep expertise in FATF standards and enhanced due diligence preparation.
Chartered tax adviser with eighteen years of experience in international tax and pre-immigration planning. Coordinates closely with clients' existing advisers to ensure citizenship decisions integrate cleanly with broader family tax strategy.
The Caribbean CBI market is crowded with marketing-led agencies and offshore introducers. A private advisory practice is a fundamentally different proposition, here is why that matters.
A referral-fee agency has a commercial incentive to steer a client toward whichever programme or agent pays the highest commission. We hold no such arrangements, which means the recommended programme is the right programme, not the most profitable one for us to sell.
High-volume firms cannot afford to staff every file with a partner. We can. The advisor who first takes your call is the advisor who will personally oversee every document, every submission, every follow-up, through to the day your passport arrives.
Citizenship is one component of a family's broader strategy. Our practice is structured to coordinate with a family's existing private bank, solicitors, tax advisers, and trustees, not to replace them. We speak their language because we come from it.
We conduct our own internal due diligence before a single document is submitted to a Citizenship Investment Unit. If an issue exists in the source-of-funds trail or in an applicant's disclosure history, we want to identify and remediate it, not have it surface at the government due-diligence stage.
Second citizenship is rarely a short-term decision. Programmes, regulations, and geopolitical considerations shift over decades, and the value of a passport is measured over generations, not years. Our advice reflects that horizon.